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A cellar restaurant on Pembroke Street Upper that has quietly become one of Dublin's most loyally attended dining rooms. Dax holds consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and draws a French-influenced menu built around prime Irish produce — Wicklow Gap sika deer, Celtic Sea scallops — served beneath the vaulted Georgian foundations of Dublin 2. Roughly eighty percent of the dining room, on any given night, is made up of regulars.

Down the Steps into Dublin 2
The approach tells you something about what follows. A Georgian townhouse on Pembroke Street Upper, a short walk from Fitzwilliam Square, gives no particular announcement of itself at street level. You descend. The basement dining room arrives as a compression of leather upholstery, white tablecloths, and a particular kind of noise — the clamour of a room where most of the people present have been before and have every intention of coming back. That return rate, cited in Michelin's own notes on the restaurant, sits at around eighty percent. It is an unusual figure for any dining room, and an instructive one: Dax earns its loyalty through repetition rather than spectacle.
Dublin's Georgian quarter has accumulated several serious restaurants across the past two decades, and the competition in this part of Dublin 2 has sharpened. Glovers Alley and Chapter One by Mickael Viljanen occupy the upper tier with Michelin star recognition, while allta and Variety Jones have built credibility further along the price spectrum. Dax positions itself within that field at the €€€ price point — below the starred tier in cost, but with consecutive Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025 placing it firmly within the recognised dining bracket. Across Ireland, comparable French-influenced rooms with this kind of consistent recognition include Campagne in Kilkenny and Liath in Blackrock, both of which share the same commitment to French culinary frameworks applied to Irish seasonal produce.
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Get Exclusive Access →A French Influence, an Irish Larder
The menu at Dax operates within a French culinary tradition , the classical quality of the room's décor extends to the cooking , but the sourcing is emphatically local. Wicklow Gap sika deer and Celtic Sea scallops appear as primary ingredients, a pattern consistent with how the better Irish kitchens have evolved: French technique as the grammar, Irish produce as the vocabulary. That combination is now well-established at restaurants like Aniar in Galway and dede in Baltimore, but Dax arrived at this approach with the kind of longevity that makes it a reference point rather than a trend follower. The dishes are described in Michelin's notes as simple yet flavourful, which in practice means restraint in composition and confidence in the quality of the primary ingredient. A scallop from the Celtic Sea does not need elaboration. It needs a kitchen that knows when to stop.
This is not a destination for the kind of elaborate multi-course architecture that has defined newer Irish tasting menu formats , Terre in Castlemartyr or Bastion in Kinsale represent that direction. Dax is a restaurant in the older European sense: a proper dining room where the food is the point, the format is familiar, and the craft is in execution rather than concept. That positioning is not a limitation. For a significant portion of Dublin's dining public, it is precisely what they are looking for.
The Room as a Collaboration
The Michelin entry for Dax names both the kitchen and the front of house, which is a less common occurrence than it should be. Chef Graham Neville and sommelier and host Olivier Meissonave are identified as distinct contributors to what makes the room work. This is worth pausing on. Restaurants at this level in Dublin often succeed or fail on the coherence between kitchen ambition and floor delivery. Dax operates as a room where both sides of that equation are apparently in alignment , the food has a clear register, and the service holds it.
Meissonave's presence in the dining room is part of the reason the loyalty numbers read as they do. High repeat rates in restaurant dining typically signal one of two things: a neighbourhood local with limited alternatives, or a room where the human element of the experience is consistent enough to draw people back by name. Dax sits in the latter category. The cellar setting reinforces this dynamic , the room is contained, the tables are close enough that the atmosphere builds, and the service operates at a register that suits the physical scale of the space. Larger, more formal rooms can feel impersonal at similar price points. Here, the constraint is an asset.
For those planning a wider Dublin dining circuit, D'Olier Street and Chapter One by Mickael Viljanen represent the higher-end alternatives within walking distance or a short cab ride. For context on the broader city dining scene, see our full Dublin restaurants guide. Dax occupies a different register , less event dining, more embedded into the rhythm of how Dubliners who take food seriously actually eat out over the course of a year.
Planning a Visit
Dax is located at Pembroke Street Upper, Dublin 2, a walkable distance from Fitzwilliam Square and the surrounding Georgian terraces. The price point (€€€) places it mid-to-upper range for the city, accessible without the commitment of a full fine-dining event. Given the reported repeat rate and the compact basement format, booking ahead is advisable , this is not a room with excess capacity, and walk-in availability is unlikely on busier evenings. Meissonave's involvement on the floor suggests a wine list that rewards conversation: asking for a recommendation is the practical approach rather than navigating the list independently. For accommodation options near Dublin 2, see our full Dublin hotels guide. If you are building a longer stay around eating and drinking, our Dublin bars guide and Dublin experiences guide cover the surrounding options. For those looking beyond Dublin, our Dublin wineries guide is also available.
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