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    Restaurant in Munich, Germany

    Tohru in der Schreiberei

    1,780Pearl Points

    Munich's hardest table. Plan months ahead.

    Tohru in der Schreiberei, Restaurant in Munich

    About Tohru in der Schreiberei

    Munich's most credentialled tasting menu, Tohru in der Schreiberei holds three Michelin stars and a 95-point La Liste score for 2026. Chef Tohru Nakamura's Modern German-Japanese kitchen is a full-evening commitment at €€€€, suited to serious occasions and planned well in advance. Near-impossible to book short notice — reserve as early as possible.

    Who Should Book Tohru in der Schreiberei — and When

    If you are planning a serious anniversary dinner, a once-a-year splurge, or a meal you want to measure against the leading tasting menus in Europe, Tohru in der Schreiberei is the right call in Munich. Chef Tohru Nakamura holds three Michelin stars as of 2025, and the restaurant ranked 141st in Europe on Opinionated About Dining in 2024 before climbing to 158th in 2025 — a counterintuitive shift in ranking that reflects how competitive the top tier of European fine dining has become, not a signal of decline. La Liste, which aggregates critic scores globally, rated it 95 points in 2026, up from 90.5 in 2025, placing it firmly among Germany's elite tables. The restaurant also carries the Les Grandes Tables du Monde distinction for 2025. Book this if the occasion demands something that can hold its own against Aqua in Wolfsburg or Schwarzwaldstube in Baiersbronn in terms of credentialled ambition.

    The Space and What to Expect as a First-Timer

    The address is Dienerstraße 20, in Munich's historic Altstadt, close to the Marienplatz. The name refers to the Schreiberei, a historic civic building that once housed Munich's municipal scribes , the dining room sits within that structure, and the physical setting carries the weight of that context without leaning on it theatrically. For a first-timer, the spatial experience matters here: expect an intimate, formally arranged room rather than a sprawling banquet space. The layout suits couples and small groups leading. A meal like this rewards unhurried attention, so plan to arrive for the evening service (Tuesday through Saturday, from 7 pm) with nothing scheduled after , the kitchen is not running a one-hour turnaround. The restaurant is closed Monday and Sunday, so mid-week evenings and Fridays are your options. For a significant occasion, Thursday or Friday dinner gives the meal a natural occasion weight without the sometimes-pressured energy of a Saturday service at a room this decorated.

    The cuisine is Modern German-Japanese , Nakamura's dual heritage is the structural fact of the cooking rather than a marketing concept. At this level of Michelin recognition, expect a tasting menu format with multiple courses, serious wine pairings, and a pace that uses the full evening. First-timers should know: this is not a venue you drop into for a quick dinner at €€€€ price range. You are committing to a full-evening format, and the value calculation only makes sense if you treat it as the main event of a trip rather than one stop among several.

    Booking: Near Impossible Without Planning Ahead

    Getting a table at Tohru in der Schreiberei is classified as near impossible at short notice. Three Michelin stars in a city where fine dining competes seriously for a limited pool of premium covers means availability evaporates quickly. There is no publicly listed phone number or website in Pearl's current data, so your most reliable approach is to search directly for their booking platform or contact through third-party reservation systems as soon as your travel dates are confirmed. Do not assume you can book within a week of your intended visit , for a Friday or Saturday evening, you are likely looking at weeks or months out depending on the season. If you arrive in Munich without a reservation, redirect to Alois - Dallmayr Fine Dining or Atelier as credentialled alternatives at the same price tier.

    On the Question of Delivery and Takeout

    Tohru in der Schreiberei is not a delivery or takeout venue in any meaningful sense. The editorial angle here is worth addressing plainly: a three-Michelin-star tasting menu built on the intersection of Modern German and Japanese technique does not translate to a takeout format. The cooking at this level depends on timing, temperature, plating precision, and the physical environment of the dining room working together. Any off-premise version of this experience would be a fundamentally different , and lesser , proposition. If you are looking for premium food that travels well in Munich, this is not the right venue to consider. The case for Tohru in der Schreiberei begins and ends with the in-room experience on one of its five service evenings per week. Compare this to something like CODA Dessert Dining in Berlin, where the format is similarly experience-dependent and equally unsuited to off-premise consumption.

    How It Sits Among Germany's Three-Star Tier

    Within Germany's constellation of three-star kitchens, Tohru in der Schreiberei occupies a distinctive position by virtue of its German-Japanese identity. Vendôme in Bergisch Gladbach and Restaurant Haerlin in Hamburg represent the classic European fine dining end of the German three-star spectrum. Tohru sits in different territory: the cross-cultural framing of the cuisine gives it a conceptual sharpness that appeals to diners who have eaten widely at this tier and want something that does not replicate the French-rooted playbook. If you have eaten at Atomix in New York City and appreciated what serious Korean-inflected tasting menu cooking looks like, the structural logic of Tohru's German-Japanese approach will feel familiar in ambition, even if the flavour vocabulary is different. Le Bernardin in New York City offers a useful contrast: classically anchored, technically flawless, and less interested in the dual-heritage question that defines Nakamura's work. ES:SENZ in Grassau is worth knowing about if you are travelling Bavaria more broadly and want a comparison point closer to Munich.

    For Munich-based alternatives at the same price tier, see the full comparison section below. To plan the rest of your trip, Pearl's Munich restaurants guide, Munich hotels guide, Munich bars guide, Munich wineries guide, and Munich experiences guide cover the broader picture. Also consider JAN and KOMU if you want credentialled Munich dining at a slightly more accessible booking difficulty.

    The Verdict

    Book Tohru in der Schreiberei if you are serious about the meal, have planned ahead, and want Munich's most credentialled tasting menu experience. With a 4.4 Google rating across 331 reviews, three Michelin stars, and a 95-point La Liste score in 2026, the room has earned its standing. The occasion has to be right , this is not a casual dinner , but for the diner who approaches it correctly, it delivers at the level the credentials promise.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Tohru in der Schreiberei good for a special occasion?

    Yes — it is one of the strongest cases for a special occasion meal in Germany. Three Michelin stars, a La Liste score of 95 points in 2026, and Les Grandes Tables du Monde membership make it a credible anchor for an anniversary, milestone birthday, or once-a-year splurge. Book well in advance: tables at this level in Munich do not open at short notice. The price range is €€€€, so factor that in when deciding between this and a less demanding option like Tantris.

    Is Tohru in der Schreiberei good for solo dining?

    It can work for solo diners, but the tasting menu format means you are committing to a long, multi-course experience at €€€€ pricing, which is a considered choice when dining alone. The key question is whether the counter or table setup accommodates solo guests comfortably — that detail is not confirmed in the venue record, so call ahead when booking. For solo fine dining in Munich, Atelier is worth comparing depending on availability and format preference.

    Does Tohru in der Schreiberei handle dietary restrictions?

    Kitchens operating at three-Michelin-star level routinely accommodate dietary restrictions when notified at the time of booking, and Tohru in der Schreiberei's German-Japanese tasting menu format gives the kitchen the structure to adapt. check the venue's official channels when making your reservation to confirm what is possible — specific menu details are not published in the venue record. Do not arrive expecting last-minute adjustments at this price point.

    What should a first-timer know about Tohru in der Schreiberei?

    You are booking a tasting menu experience at a three-Michelin-star address in Munich's Altstadt (Dienerstraße 20), not a à la carte restaurant. Dinner service runs Tuesday through Saturday from 7 pm; the venue is closed Sunday and Monday. Reservations need to be secured well ahead — weeks to months depending on the date. Budget at the €€€€ level and treat this as a planned evening rather than a spontaneous booking.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Tohru in der Schreiberei?

    If you are benchmarking against Europe's top tasting menus, the credentials support the price: three Michelin stars (2025), a La Liste score of 95 points (2026), and a ranking of #158 on OAD Europe (2025) place it among a small number of German kitchens operating at this tier. The German-Japanese identity under chef Tohru Nakamura gives it a distinct position relative to peers like Atelier or Alois - Dallmayr Fine Dining. At €€€€, it is not a casual test — go with a clear intention and a reservation confirmed well in advance.

    Location

    Dienerstraße 20, 80331 München, Germany

    Munich, Germany

    Compare Tohru in der Schreiberei

    Full Comparison: Tohru in der Schreiberei
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Tohru in der SchreibereiModern German - Japanese, Modern CuisineLa Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 95pts; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #158 (2025); La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 90.5pts; Les Grandes Tables Du Monde Award (2025); Chef: Tohru Nakamura document.addEventListener("DOMContentLoaded", function() { var el = document.getElementById("Achievements_chefs"); if (el && el.parentNode) { el.parentNode.removeChild(el); } });; Michelin 3 Stars (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Europe Ranked #141 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); Michelin 2 Stars (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top New Restaurants in Europe Highly Recommended (2023)Near Impossible
    TantrisModern French, French ContemporaryMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Alois - Dallmayr Fine DiningCreativeMichelin 2 StarUnknown
    AtelierCreative FrenchMichelin 2 StarUnknown
    AcquarelloItalian - Mediterranean, ItalianMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    Les DeuxContemporary French, Modern FrenchMichelin 1 StarUnknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Tohru in der Schreiberei and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    How Tohru in der Schreiberei Compares in Munich

    Munich's €€€€ fine dining tier is genuinely competitive, but Tohru in der Schreiberei sits at the top of it by raw credential count. Three Michelin stars separate it from every other entry on this list: Tantris, Alois - Dallmayr Fine Dining, Atelier, and Les Deux all operate at a high level, but none carries the same density of international recognition. If the goal is to eat at Munich's most formally validated restaurant on a significant occasion, Tohru is the unambiguous choice. The trade-off is booking difficulty: near impossible at short notice, versus Tantris or Alois, which are serious but more practically accessible.

    For diners who want a tasting menu format but find Tohru unavailable, Atelier at the Bayerischer Hof is the closest structural substitute in terms of creative ambition and formal setting. Alois - Dallmayr Fine Dining is worth considering if you want the prestige address — Dallmayr is one of Munich's most recognised institutions — with slightly more booking flexibility. Acquarello serves a different purpose: if your table is split between tasting menu devotees and guests who prefer à la carte Italian, Acquarello resolves the tension more gracefully than a full-commitment multi-course format.

    Les Deux is the most approachable entry point in this peer group for a first visit to Munich's top tier — Contemporary French, well-reviewed, and less operationally demanding to book. But if you are choosing between Les Deux and Tohru for a milestone meal and can secure the reservation, Tohru's three-star standing is the clearer choice. The gap in formal recognition is real, and it shows in the experience. For the broadest view of what Munich's restaurant scene offers at every level, see Pearl's full Munich restaurants guide.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    7 pm–12 am
    Wednesday
    7 pm–12 am
    Thursday
    7 pm–12 am
    Friday
    7 pm–12 am
    Saturday
    7 pm–12 am
    Sunday
    Closed

    Recognized By

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