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    Restaurant in Moscow, Russia

    White Rabbit

    730Pearl Points

    Book early. The views and the pedigree deliver.

    White Rabbit, Restaurant in Moscow

    About White Rabbit

    White Rabbit is Moscow's most internationally decorated restaurant, holding a World's 50 Best Top 25 placement and an 88.5-point La Liste score. Chef Vladimir Mukhin's tasting menu moves through historic Russian ingredients — sea buckthorn, Borodinsky bread, swan liver — in a glass dome above the city. Book four to six weeks out minimum; demand is consistent and walk-ins are not realistic.

    White Rabbit, Moscow: Is It Worth Booking?

    Getting a table at White Rabbit is genuinely difficult. With consistent placement in the World's 50 Best Restaurants — peaking at #13 in 2019 and still ranked #25 as recently as 2021 — demand has never softened. Book at least four to six weeks out for dinner, longer for a Friday or Saturday sitting. If you are visiting Moscow specifically to eat here, plan your trip around the reservation, not the other way around. The effort is justified: this is one of the few Russian restaurants with a sustained international track record, and the tasting menu format means the kitchen is cooking at full intention every service.

    What to Expect on Your First Visit

    White Rabbit sits under a glass dome on the upper floor of a skyscraper at Smolenskaya Square, and the 360-degree city views are immediate on arrival. For a first-timer, the visual setting can be disorienting in the leading sense: you are in a formal tasting-menu restaurant that also happens to feel theatrical. Settle in quickly, because the food is the real case for being here.

    Chef Vladimir Mukhin has spent years researching historic Russian ingredients and preparations, then reframing them through contemporary technique. The tasting menu moves through Russia's culinary history as a structured arc: early courses tend to anchor in preserved, fermented, and foraged flavors , the sour sharpness of sea buckthorn, the dense, malt-forward character of Borodinsky bread , before shifting into richer, more composed plates as the meal progresses. The progression is deliberate. This is not a showcase of international fine-dining technique applied to local ingredients; it is a considered argument about what Russian cooking can be when approached with genuine research. Dishes using ingredients like swan liver are designed to provoke as much as to satisfy, and that combination of provocation and precision is what has earned White Rabbit its place in the World's 50 Best multiple years running, as well as an 88.5-point score from La Liste in 2025 and 85 points in 2026.

    White Rabbit was also featured in Chef's Table (Volume 3, Episode 2), which explains a portion of its international profile. That exposure has added tourist diners to what was already a reservation-pressured room, so first-timers should expect a mixed crowd: serious food travelers alongside Moscow regulars. The room handles both without feeling like either a tourist trap or an insular local institution.

    The glass dome setting shifts meaningfully through the day. Lunch , available Friday, Saturday, and Sunday , offers natural light across the city panorama and tends to run at a slightly different pace than the dinner service. Dinner, running Wednesday through Sunday from 17:00, is the higher-demand sitting and the format where the tasting menu's full arc lands with the most weight. See the lunch versus dinner question in the FAQ section for a direct comparison.

    Practical Details

    White Rabbit is open Wednesday and Thursday evenings (17:00–23:00), Friday and Saturday for lunch (12:00–13:30) and dinner (17:00–23:00), and Sunday for lunch only (12:00–15:00). It is closed Monday and Tuesday. Phone and online booking details are not listed in Pearl's current database , check directly via the restaurant's official channels. The address is Smolenskaya Square, 3, Moscow, 121099. Google reviewer rating: 4.4 from over 3,400 reviews.

    For broader Moscow dining context, see our full Moscow restaurants guide. If you are planning a longer trip, our Moscow hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of your itinerary.

    For tasting-menu dining elsewhere in Russia, Birch in St. Petersburg and Bourgeois Bohemians are worth knowing. Beyond Russia, if the format of a chef-driven tasting menu built around a specific national culinary identity interests you, Atomix in New York is the closest structural parallel in terms of research-led cultural tasting menus at the highest level.

    How It Compares

    Quick reference: Smolenskaya Square, 3, Moscow, 121099. Open Wed–Thu 17:00–23:00; Fri–Sat 12:00–13:30 and 17:00–23:00; Sun 12:00–15:00. Closed Mon–Tue. Booking: contact directly. Google rating: 4.4 (3,410 reviews).

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can White Rabbit accommodate groups?

    White Rabbit is a tasting menu format under a glass dome, which limits flexibility for larger parties. Small groups of 2–4 are the natural fit for the counter-style experience. If you're planning for 6 or more, check the venue's official channels well in advance — the space and format are not designed around communal group dining. Private arrangements, if available, would need to be confirmed with the venue.

    How far ahead should I book White Rabbit?

    Book as far ahead as possible — ideally 4–6 weeks minimum, and longer during peak travel periods. White Rabbit has held a place in the World's 50 Best Restaurants every year from 2015 through 2021, peaking at #13 in 2019, which means demand from international visitors is consistent. Friday and Saturday lunch slots (12:00–13:30) are the shortest service windows and likely the tightest to secure. Wednesday and Thursday evening openings give you slightly more lead time to work with.

    Does White Rabbit handle dietary restrictions?

    Chef Vladimir Mukhin's tasting menu draws on researched Russian ingredients — Borodinsky bread, sea buckthorn, swan liver — so the menu is structured and ingredient-led rather than modular. Dietary restrictions should be communicated at the time of booking. Significant restrictions (shellfish allergies, strict vegetarian requirements) are worth flagging early, as the format offers limited a la carte flexibility.

    Is lunch or dinner better at White Rabbit?

    Dinner is the stronger case if you're visiting for the full experience: longer service windows (17:00–23:00 Wednesday through Saturday) versus the tight 90-minute Friday and Saturday lunch sitting (12:00–13:30). That said, the 360-degree glass dome views over Moscow may read differently in daylight, which makes Sunday lunch (12:00–15:00) worth considering if your schedule allows. For a first visit without time pressure, choose an evening.

    Can I eat at the bar at White Rabbit?

    The venue database does not confirm a standalone bar or counter walk-in option. Given White Rabbit's consistent World's 50 Best ranking and the tasting menu format, walk-in access is unlikely to be reliable. Plan to book in advance through the restaurant directly.

    Location

    Smolenskaya Square, 3, Moscow, Russia, 121099

    Compare White Rabbit

    White Rabbit vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    White RabbitModern RussianLa Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 85pts; Chef's Table, Volume 3, Episode 2. Located under a glass dome on a skyscraper in Moscow, White Rabbit offers breathtaking 360-degree views of the city. Chef Vladimir Mukhin is a leader in the 'New Russian' culinary movement, researching ancient Russian recipes and ingredients and giving them a modern, inventive twist. The tasting menu takes diners on a journey through Russia's history, showcasing traditional products like Borodinsky bread, swan liver, and sea buckthorn in contemporary, artistic presentations.; La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 88.5pts; World's 50 Best Restaurants #25 (2021); World's 50 Best Restaurants #13 (2019); World's 50 Best Restaurants #15 (2018); World's 50 Best Restaurants #23 (2017); World's 50 Best Restaurants #23 (2016); World's 50 Best Restaurants #23 (2015)Near Impossible
    SelfieModern EuropeanUnknown
    Twins GardenModern EuropeanWorld's 50 BestUnknown
    ArtestRussian CuisineUnknown
    САВВА - Savva - Hotel MetropolRussian EuropeanUnknown
    VarvaryRussian CuisineWorld's 50 BestUnknown

    Comparing your options in Moscow for this tier.

    Also Consider

    White Rabbit is the hardest table to get in Moscow's fine-dining tier and, on the strength of its international rankings, the most credentialed. If your priority is a tasting menu built around a specific culinary argument — in this case, a research-led case for modern Russian cooking — nothing else in the city matches its track record. Twins Garden is the closest structural peer: also a high-concept tasting-menu restaurant with international recognition, but oriented around molecular technique and twin-chef theatrics rather than historical Russian ingredients. If tasting-menu format appeals but you want a different creative premise, Twins Garden is the alternative to consider.

    For Russian cuisine without the tasting-menu commitment, Varvary and Artest both work in the same culinary territory with more flexibility in format and booking lead time. Savva at the Hotel Metropol suits diners who want Russian-European cooking in a historic hotel setting with easier access and a more conventional menu structure. For groups or diners who want modern European cooking without the White Rabbit booking pressure, Selfie is the most bookable option at a comparable quality tier.

    The honest read: if you are in Moscow for a serious meal and the tasting menu format works for your group, White Rabbit is the correct booking. If you need more flexibility on timing, group size, or dietary accommodation, the effort-to-reward ratio shifts toward Twins Garden or Varvary depending on how much you want Russian versus European emphasis. White Rabbit is not the most accessible choice, but it is the one with the most sustained evidence behind it.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    Closed
    Wednesday
    17:00-23:00
    Thursday
    17:00-23:00
    Friday
    12:00-13:30 17:00-23:00
    Saturday
    12:00-13:30 17:00-23:00
    Sunday
    12:00-15:00

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