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Modern French Fine Dining
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Paris, France

Akrame

CuisineFrench, Creative
Executive ChefAkrame Benallal
Price€€€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceFormal
NoiseQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Michelin
Opinionated About Dining
La Liste
Gault & Millau

A Michelin-starred address in the 8th arrondissement, Akrame operates behind a monumental coach gateway near La Madeleine, signalling its intentions through deliberate concealment rather than display. Chef Akrame Benallal's carte blanche format prioritises technical invention over convention, earning 85 points from La Liste in 2025 and a ranking of 94th in Opinionated About Dining's Classical in Europe list for 2024.

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Address
7 Rue Tronchet, 75008 Paris, France
Phone
+33 1 40 67 11 16
Website
akrame.com
Akrame restaurant in Paris, France
About

Behind the Gateway: Paris's Most Deliberately Discreet One-Star

The 8th arrondissement runs on visibility. Its grandes tables, from Pierre Gagnaire to the palatial dining rooms of the Triangle d'Or, present themselves with the confidence of institutions that have nothing to prove and nothing to hide. Akrame is a one-star Michelin restaurant in Paris's 8th arrondissement, where the entrance at 7 Rue Tronchet, a street that functions primarily as a pedestrian shortcut between the grands magasins and La Madeleine, is swallowed by a vast coach gateway. There is no neon, no chalkboard, no maître d' stationed at the kerb. The concealment reads less like shyness and more like a deliberate curatorial act: you either already know this address, or you are not quite the intended audience.

That posture is consistent with where Akrame sits in the Paris creative dining tier. This is not the category occupied by the three-star monoliths, Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, Kei, or the baroque grandeur of Le Cinq, where the room itself performs as much as the kitchen. It is, instead, part of a smaller cohort of one-star creative addresses in Paris that operate with a chef-led, format-driven identity: lower key on ceremony, higher on technical ambition. At this level, the competitive pressure comes not from the room's chandeliers but from the rigour of the plate.

Interior Logic

Inside, the space declares its references clearly. The interior is dominated by black, a chromatic choice that places it in conversation with the work of Pierre Soulages, the French abstract painter whose career-defining engagement with the colour the French language had to invent a word for, outrenoir, beyond black, produced some of the most consequential canvases in postwar European art. Whether that reference lands as art-world positioning or genuine aesthetic philosophy is a question each diner will answer privately. What it does, practically, is strip the room of distracting warmth and direct attention toward the table. A selection of photographs and sculptures provides relief without competing.

The format reinforces this stripped-back seriousness. The carte blanche menu, which La Liste's 2025 assessors described as a source of bold surprises, removes the conventional negotiation between diner and kitchen. You do not choose. The kitchen proposes. This is a format that has become increasingly common at the higher end of creative dining in Paris, Arpège operates on comparable principles of chef-led direction, and it shifts responsibility firmly onto the kitchen's ability to read its audience and sustain interest across multiple courses.

Critical Reception and Where It Places

Akrame's award record tells a specific story about its positioning. The Michelin star confirms consistent technical execution. La Liste's scoring is more granular: 85 points in 2025 against 82 in 2026 represents a modest compression rather than a collapse, and the designation as a Prestige category restaurant places it in La Liste's upper tier even as the score adjusts. For context, La Liste aggregates critical sources across multiple countries, meaning scores reflect broad international critical consensus rather than a single national guide's preferences.

The Opinionated About Dining data adds further texture. A 4.5 Google rating across 429 reviews adds a broader, less specialist signal pointing in the same direction.

Within the Paris creative tier, the peer comparisons sharpen the picture. Against three-star addresses like Le Pré Catelan or Pierre Gagnaire, Akrame occupies a different register: the same price bracket (€€€€), comparable technical ambition, but without the heritage weight or the institutional scale. That is not a disadvantage for every diner. For those who find the ceremony of Paris's palatial dining rooms more obligation than pleasure, a one-star creative address with a deliberate format and a focused identity can represent a more direct transaction between kitchen and table.

Chef Akrame Benallal and the Creative French Tier

Creative French dining in Paris draws on a wider international pool than it did a generation ago. The city's most-discussed creative kitchens now include practitioners trained in Japan, Spain, and North Africa as well as in the classic French brigade structure. Chef Akrame Benallal's kitchen sits within this broader pattern, and the La Liste commentary on first-class ingredients and inventive recipes points to a kitchen that prioritises produce quality alongside technical construction rather than treating them as separate concerns.

The parallel creative addresses worth considering for comparison extend well beyond Paris. France's broader fine dining geography includes addresses like Flocons de Sel in Megève, Mirazur in Menton, and the deeply rooted French classical tradition represented by Troisgros in Ouches, Auberge de l'Ill in Illhaeusern, and Bras in Laguiole. Against that national field, Akrame's Paris location and its tight urban-creative format occupy a distinct niche. Outside the capital, chefs working in comparable creative registers include Alexandre Mazzia in Marseille and Anne de Bretagne in La Plaine-sur-Mer, both operating with high degrees of personal culinary direction in formats that prioritise invention over convention.

Planning a Visit

Akrame operates Tuesday through Friday at both lunch and dinner, with service running 12:00 to 14:30 at midday and 20:00 to 21:30 in the evening. The kitchen is closed on weekends, which positions it primarily as a weekday address and, at lunch particularly, aligns it with a business and serious-diner audience rather than the weekend leisure crowd. The Rue Tronchet location places it within a few minutes of the Madeleine and Havre-Caumartin métro stations, making it straightforwardly accessible from most Paris arrondissements. The price range sits at €€€€, consistent with the city's Michelin-starred creative tier.

Signature Dishes
truffle milk vermicelliwatermelon Ricardchef's dessert
Frequently asked questions

Comparison Snapshot

Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Modern
  • Intimate
  • Sophisticated
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Sommelier Led
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleFormal
Meal PacingLeisurely

Dark, novel dining room with class and privacy, relaxed yet classy atmosphere facing a private courtyard.

Signature Dishes
truffle milk vermicelliwatermelon Ricardchef's dessert