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Modern Scandinavian Japanese Fine Dining
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Dubai, United Arab Emirates

FZN by Björn Frantzén

CuisineModern Cuisine
Executive ChefTorsten Vildgaard
Price$$$$
Dress CodeFormal
ServiceFormal
NoiseQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Michelin
World's 50 Best
Forbes
Opinionated About Dining
La Liste
The Best Chef
Star Wine List

FZN by Björn Frantzén holds three Michelin stars at Atlantis, The Palm, placing it among Dubai's most formally recognised fine-dining addresses. Led by chef Torsten Vildgaard, the restaurant runs a nine-course tasting menu that draws on modern European technique with Japanese influences. La Liste ranked it at 97 points in 2026, and its wine program has maintained a top-15 position on Star Wine List throughout 2025.

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Address
Crescent Rd - The Palm Jumeirah - Dubai - United Arab Emirates
Phone
+971 50 107 6322
FZN by Björn Frantzén restaurant in Dubai, United Arab Emirates
About

The Approach to Fine Dining on the Palm

The Palm Jumeirah's crescent road is an unusual address for a three-Michelin-star restaurant. Most of Dubai's high-end dining clusters around Downtown or DIFC, where foot traffic and hotel density support the economics of formal tasting menus. Atlantis, The Palm operates differently: it draws destination diners already committed to a stay or a journey, which means the room at FZN by Björn Frantzén fills with people who have made an active decision to be there. That self-selection changes the atmosphere. The entry sequence, which moves guests through different preparation stations including the scallop station before reaching the main dining space, functions less as theatre and more as a deliberate decompression from the resort outside. Dubai's fine-dining scene has matured enough to support this kind of format, where the restaurant sets the pace rather than accommodating the city's speed.

Lunch Versus Dinner: How the Two Services Differ

Dubai's leading tasting-menu restaurants tend to run their full-format experience exclusively at dinner, and FZN is consistent with that pattern. The nine-course menu is an evening proposition: the pacing assumes a two-to-three-hour commitment, and the wine program is designed to be worked through course by course rather than rushed over a midday hour.

Where lunch at comparable $$$$-tier venues in Dubai tends to offer abridged formats, lighter price exposure, or set menus designed for business use, a dinner at FZN operates as a single extended format. This is worth noting for planning purposes: unlike 11 Woodfire, which sits at the $$$ tier and runs a more flexible service structure, FZN commits its guests to the full sequence. The trade-off is a more controlled experience, where the kitchen's intentions are not diluted by format variation between services.

The Menu's Culinary Position

Modern European tasting menus in the Gulf operate in a specific competitive context. The region's import logistics, seasonal produce constraints, and reliance on international supply chains mean that chefs running formal sequences here are working with different raw-material realities than their Stockholm or London counterparts. FZN's menu, which combines European technique with Japanese influence across nine courses, reflects a hybrid approach common among serious tasting-menu restaurants operating outside their source cuisine's geography.

The Frantzén network's Stockholm flagship, Frantzén in Stockholm, operates as the original reference point. FZN is not a replica of that model but a distinct concept led by chef Torsten Vildgaard. Within the Michelin framework, the distinction matters: the Dubai outpost earned its three stars on its own terms in 2025, rather than inheriting them. Björn Frantzén is currently the only operator to hold three separate restaurants each with three Michelin stars, which places FZN in an exceptionally small comparable set globally.

The Japanese influence in FZN's cooking is not decorative. It informs ingredient handling, temperature, and sequencing in ways that align with a broader pattern in Dubai fine dining, where Nordic-Japanese crossovers have found a receptive audience among a travelling international clientele accustomed to both reference points.

Wine Program

A Michelin three-star wine list in a resort context faces a structural challenge: the cellar has to satisfy both destination diners who plan around wine and hotel guests for whom wine is secondary. FZN's wine program appears to have resolved this tension, based on its consistent Star Wine List recognition through all fifteen published rankings in 2025. That kind of sustained list-level consistency is unusual for a Gulf address, where import duties, storage logistics, and the complexity of operating in a non-wine-producing region create real constraints.

Diners interested in the wine dimension of Dubai dining can find further context in our full Dubai wineries guide.

FZN Within the Frantzén Ecosystem

The Frantzén brand in Dubai operates at two distinct tiers. Studio Frantzén Dubai represents the more accessible entry point in the portfolio, while FZN holds the formal fine-dining position. This two-tier structure is increasingly common among chefs building international presences: it allows the flagship to maintain format integrity while the secondary concept reaches a broader audience and tests a market's appetite for the brand.

Peer Comparison: Planning at the $$$$-Tier in Dubai

VenueCuisinePrice TierKey RecognitionFormat
FZN by Björn FrantzénModern European / Japanese$$$$Michelin 3 Stars (2025); La Liste 97pts (2026)Nine-course tasting menu
City Social (Dubai)Modern British / Modern Cuisine$$$$Peer-tier fine diningÀ la carte and set menu
Al MaharaSeafood$$$$Hotel fine-dining tierÀ la carte
11 WoodfireModern Cuisine$$$Strong local recognitionTasting menu

Planning Your Visit

FZN sits within Atlantis, The Palm on Crescent Road, which is a 20-to-30-minute drive from central Dubai depending on traffic and point of origin. The Palm's location means it is not walkable from other dining districts, so an evening here is typically a dedicated trip. Guests staying at Atlantis have an obvious convenience advantage; others should factor in travel time and return logistics, particularly given the length of the tasting menu experience.

The nine-course format and the restaurant's Google rating of 4.5 suggest a high satisfaction rate among those who have made the journey. The relatively small review count also reflects the self-selecting nature of the clientele: this is not a restaurant where casual walk-ins inflate the sample. FZN holds three Michelin stars and was ranked No. 22 in The World's 50 Best Restaurants.

For reference, Teible represents a contrast at the more casual end of Dubai's serious-dining spectrum, for evenings where a lighter commitment suits the schedule better.

Signature Dishes
Bone marrow chawanmushi with smoked beef broth and caviarScallop tartare with fermented apricots and colaturaGuinea fowl with morel mushrooms and sauce périgourdineLangoustine with puffed koshihikari rice
Frequently asked questions

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Intimate
  • Sophisticated
  • Modern
Best For
  • Special Occasion
  • Celebration
  • Date Night
Experience
  • Chefs Counter
  • Open Kitchen
  • Wine Cellar
  • Private Dining
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Sommelier Led
Sourcing
  • Farm To Table
  • Sustainable Seafood
Dress CodeFormal
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleFormal
Meal PacingExtended Experience

Soft Nordic lighting and warm materials in the lounge areas with curated music; the main dining room features an open kitchen with a wooden counter where diners watch chefs work with ritualistic precision.

Signature Dishes
Bone marrow chawanmushi with smoked beef broth and caviarScallop tartare with fermented apricots and colaturaGuinea fowl with morel mushrooms and sauce périgourdineLangoustine with puffed koshihikari rice