Restaurant in London, United Kingdom
Tamarind
190ptsMichelin-recognised Indian dining, minus the fuss.

About Tamarind
Tamarind is Mayfair's most consistent choice for classical Indian fine dining, holding a Michelin Plate (2024) and a 4.3 Google rating from over 1,200 reviews. At £££, it sits below the ££££ tier of European fine dining nearby but delivers technically precise tandoor cooking and region-spanning Indian menus. Moderate booking difficulty means you can plan without months of lead time.
Should You Book Tamarind?
Tamarind at 20 Queen Street in Mayfair holds a Michelin Plate (2024) and a Google rating of 4.3 across more than 1,200 reviews. Booking difficulty sits at moderate, which means you can usually secure a table with a week or two of notice on most days, though weekend evenings will reward earlier planning. If you are looking for refined, region-spanning Indian cooking in a room that takes the occasion seriously, this is one of the most consistent options in London at the £££ price point. If you have already been once and are weighing a return, the answer is yes — provided you go with a clear sense of what the kitchen does well.
The Kitchen and What It Does
Tamarind has been a reference point for Indian fine dining in London long enough that it has had to earn that position repeatedly, not simply inherit it. The Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 reflects a kitchen operating with technical discipline: tandoor work, spice-forward sauces balanced with restraint, and cooking that draws from multiple Indian regional traditions rather than defaulting to the crowd-pleasing North Indian register that most Mayfair venues lean on. Chef Karunesh Khanna leads the kitchen, and the cooking reflects a preference for precision over novelty.
For a returning guest, the thing to pay attention to is how the kitchen handles the tandoor. Smoky, char-edged protein — particularly prawns , comes through with a depth that is harder to replicate in conventional oven cooking. The chana pindi, a dry, spiced chickpea preparation rooted in Punjabi technique, is the kind of dish that reveals whether a kitchen respects its source material or softens it for the room. At Tamarind, it does not get softened. The malai naan, rich with cream and butter, is the indulgence the bread course should be at this price level, and it is worth ordering even if you are trying to pace yourself.
Compared to Amaya, which focuses tightly on live-fire grill cooking in a more open-kitchen format, Tamarind offers a broader menu sweep and a more formal dining room. Benares in Berkeley Square sits in a similar price bracket and has its own Michelin recognition, but the two restaurants have different emphases: Benares leans into contemporary plating and fusion touches, while Tamarind stays closer to classical Indian cooking with refined execution. If you want the more progressive end of Indian fine dining in London, look at Trishna in Marylebone, which focuses on coastal Indian cuisine and tends to attract a slightly younger, more experimental crowd.
The Room and the Experience
The Queen Street address in Mayfair sets the context clearly: this is a business-district fine dining room that handles corporate dinners, anniversary bookings, and serious date-night occasions with equal competence. The dining room is composed and unhurried, with service that is professional without being stiff. The calm, urbane register of the room means it works well for conversation-first dining, unlike louder Mayfair venues where ambient noise becomes the main event after 9 PM.
For a regular returning guest, the format that tends to work leading is a longer lunch rather than a rushed pre-theatre dinner. The kitchen has space to perform, and you have time to work through multiple courses without feeling the pressure of a two-hour turn. Hours run Monday through Saturday from noon to 10:15 PM and Sunday to 9:15 PM, which gives you flexibility across the week.
Price and Value
At £££, Tamarind is in the mid-to-upper tier for London Indian restaurants but sits a full bracket below the ££££ pricing of the city's European fine dining rooms like Restaurant Gordon Ramsay or CORE by Clare Smyth. That gap matters. You are getting Michelin-recognised cooking at a price point that makes a return visit feasible rather than a special occasion only. For the same Indian fine dining category in other cities, Trèsind Studio in Dubai and Opheem in Birmingham offer interesting comparisons , both operate at a high technical level, with Opheem in particular being worth the trip if you are benchmarking Indian fine dining across the UK.
The value question for a second visit comes down to what you order. A full à la carte meal with drinks lands at a meaningful spend, but the cooking justifies it if you are ordering the dishes the kitchen is leading at rather than playing it safe with familiar choices.
Booking and Logistics
Moderate booking difficulty means this is not a venue where you need to plan months ahead, but do not leave weekend bookings to the week before. Weekday lunches are the most accessible time slot and also arguably the most rewarding format for this kitchen. The address is 20 Queen Street, W1J 5PR, in the heart of Mayfair, well-served by Green Park and Bond Street tube stations. For a broader view of where Tamarind sits in the London dining picture, see our full London restaurants guide. If you are planning a wider London trip, our London hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide are worth checking alongside it.
For Indian fine dining at a more accessible price and a less formal register, Ambassadors Clubhouse and Babur are worth knowing. For UK fine dining comparison points outside London, Waterside Inn in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, and Moor Hall in Aughton illustrate how the broader UK fine dining tier is positioned. See also Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and hide and fox in Saltwood for further context on what the UK's recognised fine dining tier looks like across regions. London wineries are a less obvious pairing, but our London wineries guide covers the category if you are curious.
Quick reference: Mayfair Indian fine dining, £££, Michelin Plate 2024, open daily from noon, moderate booking difficulty, leading for weekday lunch or a considered dinner without a rush.
Compare Tamarind
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tamarind | £££ | Moderate | — |
| Restaurant Gordon Ramsay | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| CORE by Clare Smyth | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| The Ledbury | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library | ££££ | Unknown | — |
| Dinner by Heston Blumenthal | ££££ | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about Tamarind?
Tamarind at 20 Queen Street is a Michelin Plate (2024) Indian restaurant in Mayfair, pitched firmly at the fine dining end of the category. The room and service lean formal, so this is not a casual drop-in. First-timers should expect region-spanning Indian cooking with technical polish rather than a neighbourhood curry-house experience. At £££ pricing, arrive with an appetite and a reservation.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Tamarind?
Specific tasting menu pricing is not published in Tamarind's current data, so a precise value call is difficult to make. What the Michelin Plate (2024) does confirm is that the kitchen delivers at a level above casual Indian dining. If tasting menus are your format and you want Indian fine dining in central London, Tamarind is the credentialled option at this address. If you prefer à la carte flexibility, the menu structure suits that too.
How far ahead should I book Tamarind?
Booking difficulty is moderate, meaning you do not need to plan months out the way you would for a starred tasting-counter. That said, do not leave weekend dinner to the week before — Mayfair corporate and occasion dining fills tables mid-week too. A week to ten days ahead is a reasonable lead time for weekdays; two to three weeks for Friday and Saturday evenings.
What should I order at Tamarind?
Specific current menu items are not available in Tamarind's confirmed data, so dish-level recommendations would be speculation. What is documented is that the kitchen at Queen Street under chef Karunesh Khanna focuses on refined, region-spanning Indian cooking. When you book, ask the front-of-house team for the kitchen's current signatures — at a Michelin Plate operation, that question will get you a useful answer.
Is Tamarind worth the price?
At £££, Tamarind sits in the mid-to-upper bracket for London Indian restaurants but well below the ££££ pricing of the city's European fine dining rooms. The Michelin Plate (2024) and 4.3 across 1,200+ Google reviews suggest consistent delivery at that price point. For Mayfair Indian dining with formal service and a credentialled kitchen, the value holds up. If you want a lighter spend, you will find capable Indian cooking at lower price points elsewhere in London, but not with this level of room and service.
Is lunch or dinner better at Tamarind?
Tamarind runs the same hours Monday through Saturday from 12pm to 10:15pm, with Sunday closing slightly earlier at 9:15pm. Lunch works well here: the Mayfair location means the dining room is quieter at midday, and lunch is typically the better value entry point at most £££ London restaurants. Dinner suits occasion dining and corporate bookings. If price is a factor, check whether a set lunch is available when you book.
Hours
- Monday
- 12–10:15 pm
- Tuesday
- 12–10:15 pm
- Wednesday
- 12–10:15 pm
- Thursday
- 12–10:15 pm
- Friday
- 12–10:15 pm
- Saturday
- 12–10:15 pm
- Sunday
- 12–9:15 pm
Recognized By
More restaurants in London
- CORE by Clare SmythClare Smyth's three-Michelin-star Notting Hill restaurant is one of London's most credentialled tables, holding La Liste 98pts, World's 50 Best #97, and a 4.7 Google rating across 1,460 reviews. The à la carte runs £195 per head; the Core Classic tasting menu is £255. Book Thursday or Friday lunch for the best chance of a table — dinner is near-impossible without 6–8 weeks' lead time.
- IkoyiTwo Michelin stars, No. 15 on the World's 50 Best in 2025, and a dinner tasting menu at £350 per head before wine: Ikoyi is one of London's hardest bookings and one of its most credentialed. Jeremy Chan's West African spice-led cooking applied to British organic produce is genuinely unlike anything else in the city. The express lunch at £150 is the entry point if the dinner price is the obstacle.
- KOLKOL ranked #17 on the World's 50 Best Restaurants in 2024 and holds a Michelin star — the most compelling case for a progressive Mexican tasting menu in London. Booking opens two months out and sells out almost immediately, so treat it like a ticket release. If the dining room is full, the downstairs Mezcaleria offers serious agave spirits and kitchen-quality small plates as a genuine alternative.
- The Clove ClubHoused in the former Shoreditch Town Hall, The Clove Club holds two Michelin stars and has appeared in the World's 50 Best Restaurants list consistently since 2016. Isaac McHale's tasting menus draw on prime British ingredients — Orkney scallops, Herdwick lamb, Torbay prawns — handled with technical precision and a looseness that keeps the cooking from feeling ceremonial.
- The LedburyThe Ledbury holds three Michelin stars and the #1 Star Wine List ranking in the UK — making it the strongest combined food-and-wine destination in London at the ££££ tier. At £285 per head for the eight-course evening menu, it rewards occasions where both the kitchen and the cellar need to perform. Book months ahead: availability is near impossible, especially at weekends.
- Hélène Darroze at The ConnaughtThree Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 95 points make Hélène Darroze at The Connaught one of London's clearest cases for fine dining at the top price tier. The tasting menu builds intelligently across courses, the redesigned room is warm rather than stiff, and the service is precise without being suffocating. Book months ahead — midweek lunch is your most realistic entry point.
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