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    Restaurant in Singapore, Singapore

    Thevar

    1,560Pearl Points

    Two stars, 40 seats, near-impossible to book.

    Thevar, Restaurant in Singapore

    About Thevar

    Thevar holds two Michelin stars and a near-impossible reservation queue for good reason. Chef Mano Thevar's Indian-Malay-meets-European tasting menu is among the most consistent in Singapore, with a drinks pairing program that earns its keep. Book at least a month out — midweek slots are your best shot — and add the pairing on your return visit.

    Two Michelin stars, a near-impossible reservation, and a drinks program that earns its own attention: Thevar is worth the effort — with conditions

    Thevar holds 40 seats. It carries two Michelin stars (2025), ranks #70 on Asia's 50 Best (2025), and sits at #63 on Opinionated About Dining's Asia list for the same year. If you've been once, you already know the booking problem: the next available date is rarely close. For returning diners, the practical question is whether the experience has deepened enough to justify the chase again. The short answer is yes — particularly if you time it right and treat the drinks pairing as a non-negotiable part of the meal, not an optional add-on.

    The Room

    The Mohamed Sultan Road address puts Thevar in one of Singapore's quieter dining corridors , a street better known for nightlife than serious tasting menus, which creates a useful contrast. The interior is compact and deliberately intimate. With a small seat count, the room never feels anonymous. Tables are close enough that you're aware of the pace of other diners' meals, which actually works in your favour: service is calibrated to the rhythm of the whole room, not just your table. For solo diners, the counter or smaller tables work well; for groups of four or more, the fit becomes tighter and the conversation dynamic shifts. The spatial experience rewards pairs most , two people get the full benefit of the counter-style attentiveness without the coordination overhead of a larger party.

    The Food and Drink Program

    Chef Mano Thevar's framework combines Indian flavours rooted in the Malay Peninsula with European technique , and after several years of refinement, the execution is confident enough that the concept no longer needs explaining. If you've visited before, the kitchen has not softened its approach. The format is a tasting menu, and the progression is structured to build across courses rather than deliver individual showpieces.

    Where Thevar has become more interesting for repeat visitors is in how the drinks program has evolved alongside the food. The pairing here is not a standard wine list applied to an Indian-influenced menu , it's a curated sequence that treats the spice register of each course as the primary variable. Wine selections account for the heat and acidity present in the cooking in ways that generic pairing menus rarely do. If you skipped the pairing on a first visit, this is the reason to add it on your return. The gap between drinking alongside the food versus choosing independently from a list is significant here, more so than at comparably priced Singapore restaurants.

    Cocktails at Thevar also merit attention as a standalone consideration. The aperitif and digestif moments in the meal are not afterthoughts , they're integrated into the arc of the experience. For diners arriving early (which you should, given that the room fills quickly and the kitchen's timing is precise), sitting with a pre-dinner drink at the bar is a better use of that window than arriving at the table early and waiting.

    Timing and Booking

    The booking difficulty here is classified as near impossible. That is not hyperbole for a venue at this level in Singapore. Reservations at Thevar require planning weeks in advance at minimum, and popular date-slots , Friday and Saturday evenings especially , move fast. If you are returning rather than visiting for the first time, the most reliable route is to book immediately after your current visit, while the experience is fresh and the next available date is as near as it will be. Midweek dinner slots are marginally easier to secure and offer a quieter room, which affects the pace of service in a positive way.

    For timing within the year, Singapore's consistent climate means there is no dramatic seasonal calculus, but the menu does evolve. Returning diners who visited in the first half of a given year will find enough movement in the menu by the latter half to make the repeat worthwhile without the experience feeling identical.

    How It Compares

    Thevar sits in a competitive tier of Singapore's serious dining options. For the innovative cuisine category across Asia, you can see how other two- and three-starred kitchens approach similar cross-cultural frameworks at venues like Vea in Hong Kong or MAZ in Tokyo. Within Singapore's own field, Meta and Labyrinth occupy adjacent territory in terms of ambition and price tier, while Cloudstreet and Araya offer comparable commitment to technique at the leading end. Chaleur is worth considering if your appetite is for something slightly less demanding in format. The wider Singapore dining picture is covered in our full Singapore restaurants guide.

    For innovative cooking in Asia more broadly, the Seoul scene , particularly alla prima, Soigné, and Evett , and Osaka venues including Fujiya 1935 and KAHALA represent the closest peer comparisons in terms of cross-cultural ambition and tasting menu format. Shimmonzen Yonemura in Kyoto takes a different angle on the same territory.

    If you're planning a broader Singapore trip, our Singapore hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide have the full picture.

    The Verdict

    Thevar at the $$$$ price point delivers two Michelin stars' worth of precision in a room that keeps the experience human-scale rather than ceremonial. The La Liste score of 91 points (2026) and consistent OAD top-70 Asia ranking across multiple years confirm this is not a one-cycle restaurant. For returning diners, add the drinks pairing, book midweek if you can, and arrive early enough to use the bar properly. The effort to secure a reservation is real , plan at least a month ahead.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Thevar?

    Dress as you would for any two-Michelin-star dinner: clean, considered, and not casual. Thevar's 40-seat room on Mohamed Sultan Road is intimate rather than formal, but the $$$$ price point and the calibre of the tasting menu set expectations. Smart dress is the safe read — trainers and shorts will feel out of place.

    Can Thevar accommodate groups?

    With only 40 seats in total, large groups are difficult to arrange and require advance coordination. Parties of two or four fit the format most naturally. If your group exceeds six, check the venue's official channels well before your intended date — at this booking difficulty level, last-minute flexibility does not exist.

    Is Thevar good for solo dining?

    Yes, but with a caveat: the counter or single-seat arrangement at a 40-cover room works better for solo diners than a full table booking, and availability is harder to secure alone. The tasting menu format suits solo dining well — it is structured, self-contained, and does not require a group to feel complete.

    Is Thevar good for a special occasion?

    Two Michelin stars, a #70 ranking on Asia's 50 Best (2025), and a room small enough to feel personal rather than ceremonial make Thevar a strong call for a significant occasion. The $$$$ price point is appropriate for a milestone dinner. Book as early as possible — reservations here are classified as near impossible to secure.

    What are alternatives to Thevar in Singapore?

    For European fine dining with comparable precision, Zén (three Michelin stars) sits above Thevar in formal weight. Jaan by Kirk Westaway offers a two-star experience with a distinct British-French identity. Waku Ghin is the choice if Japanese-European cuisine at the $$$$ tier is more relevant to your group. Iggy's and Summer Pavilion each serve different purposes — Iggy's for wine-led European dining, Summer Pavilion for Cantonese at a high level.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Thevar?

    At the $$$$ price point, Thevar's two Michelin stars (2025) and consistent OAD Top 70 Asia ranking across three consecutive years signal genuine kitchen consistency — not one-season momentum. Chef Mano Thevar's framework of Malay Peninsula Indian flavours applied through European technique is a specific proposition, not a generic tasting menu. If that format fits your preference, the case for booking is clear. If you want à la carte flexibility or a lighter spend, this is not the right room.

    Location

    16 Mohamed Sultan Rd, Singapore 238965

    Singapore, Singapore

    Compare Thevar

    Full Comparison: Thevar
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    ThevarInnovativeThevar offers a sophisticated culinary experience, redefining modern Indian cuisine by blending traditional Indian flavors from the Malay Peninsula with European techniques. Under Chef Mano Thevar's guidance, the restaurant crafts Indian-inspired dishes with a contemporary perspective, inviting diners on a sensory journey of unexpected flavor combinations and beloved Indian classics.; La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 91pts; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #63 (2025); World's 50 Best Asia's Best Restaurants #70 (2025); Chef: Mano Thevar document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function() { var el = document.getElementById("Achievements_chefs"); if (el && el.parentNode) { el.parentNode.removeChild(el); } });; Michelin 2 Stars (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #70 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #60 (2023)Near Impossible
    ZénEuropean ContemporaryMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Jaan by Kirk WestawayBritish ContemporaryMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Iggy'sModern European, European ContemporaryMichelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Summer PavilionCantoneseMichelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Waku GhinCreative Japanese, Japanese ContemporaryMichelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    How Thevar stacks up against the competition.

    Also Consider

    At the $$$$ tier in Singapore, Thevar competes most directly with Zén. Zén carries three Michelin stars and offers a more classically European tasting menu experience; it's the better choice if formal service depth and wine cellar breadth matter most to you. Thevar wins on distinctiveness of concept and on the specificity of its drinks pairing relative to the food — the Indian-influenced cooking creates a more unusual platform for pairing than Zén's Nordic-European frame. Both are near-impossible to book. If you can only land one reservation, your cuisine preference should be the deciding factor.

    Waku Ghin at $$$$ gives you a Japanese Contemporary experience in a grander, Marina Bay Sands setting — more theatrical, more expensive per head on the full experience, and with a different service register that leans toward ceremony. Thevar's room is more intimate and less formally staged. For first-time visitors to Singapore's top tier, Waku Ghin impresses on spectacle; Thevar rewards diners who want the meal to feel personal rather than produced.

    At $$$, Jaan by Kirk Westaway is the most accessible entry point into Michelin-starred Singapore dining, and significantly easier to book than Thevar. Iggy's at $$$ is the right call if you want a longer-established Modern European reference point with less booking friction. Neither matches Thevar on cuisine originality, but both are solid alternatives if your schedule won't support a month-out booking window. For a complete comparison of Singapore's top dining options, see our full Singapore restaurants guide.

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