



IDAM by Alain Ducasse holds a Michelin star and sits on the fifth floor of Doha's Museum of Islamic Art, pairing contemporary French tasting menus with views across the bay. Seasonal menus are finished tableside, and the room carries Philippe Starck's design signature. Operating Tuesday through Thursday and Sunday for lunch and dinner, it sits at the top of Doha's fine dining price tier.

Fine Dining at the Leading of Doha's Museum of Islamic Art
Doha's fine dining scene has matured considerably since the early 2010s, when international operators arrived to anchor a city still building its restaurant infrastructure. When a European house enters that kind of market, it typically faces a choice: adapt the format to local appetite or hold to a precise imported standard. IDAM by Alain Ducasse, which opened in 2013 inside the Museum of Islamic Art's fifth floor, took the second route, and that decision has aged into a credential rather than a liability. The restaurant now carries a Michelin star (awarded 2024), an 89-point La Liste ranking for 2026 (down from 91 points in 2025), and a place at number 349 on the Opinionated About Dining Asia ranking for 2025. In a city where high-end hotel dining is the default template, occupying a museum building on the Corniche is a structural distinction that shapes the dining experience before a menu arrives.
The Setting Before the Meal
The Museum of Islamic Art is one of the Corniche's most recognisable buildings, and the fifth floor puts guests above the bay rather than adjacent to it. The views over the water toward the city skyline operate as a kind of architectural pre-course: by the time you're seated, there's already context. Philippe Starck's interior design works against the obvious move. Rather than leaning into the Islamic geometry of the building's exterior, the room deploys high-backed leather chairs and a palette that feels closer to a Parisian salon, creating a deliberate contrast between container and contents. That tension, between French formal dining conventions and a landmark of Islamic cultural heritage, is the room's defining characteristic. It is not subtle, but it is considered.
The Corniche location means getting there requires planning. The Museum of Islamic Art sits on a dedicated headland, accessible by car along the waterfront promenade. Given the museum setting, arriving during gallery hours and spending time in the building before heading to the fifth floor is a logical sequence, particularly for lunch. Dress code is not published in available booking data, but the formality of the room and the Michelin-starred price tier signal that smart attire is the operating assumption.
The Format: Tasting Menus, Tableside Finishes
Contemporary French fine dining outside France has largely settled into a tasting menu format, a structure that suits the genre's preference for sequenced progression over à la carte improvisation. IDAM follows that model, with seasonal tasting menus at both lunch and dinner. Critically, the lunch menu runs shorter than dinner, which makes it the more accessible entry point both in time and, likely, in spend. For first visits, or for diners managing a full Doha day, lunch is the practical choice.
The tableside finishing element, confirmed across multiple award assessments, is worth noting for what it signals about service philosophy. In a dining tier where much of the technique is resolved in the kitchen and arrives plated, tableside work shifts part of the experience into the dining room, making service participatory rather than purely transactional. The format requires staff fluency with the preparations, and the award commentary consistently highlights the quality of that interaction. Dishes spanning lamb, quail, asparagus, and beetroot appear across review records, and dessert formats have included chocolate and orange ravioli, though menus change seasonally and current specific dishes require direct confirmation with the restaurant.
Where IDAM Sits in Doha's Fine Dining Tier
Doha's leading end of the dining market is compact but stratified. At the four-Qatar riyal tier, which represents the highest price band in the city, IDAM sits alongside Alba (Italian) and Hakkasan (Chinese). Below that, venues like Morimoto operate at the three-riyal tier, while Argan (Moroccan) and Bayt Sharq (Middle Eastern) cover the more accessible ranges. Baron (Middle Eastern) and Berenjak Al Maha Island represent distinct hospitality formats at different price points.
What distinguishes IDAM within that top tier is the combination of a named culinary house (the Ducasse operation), a starred validation (Michelin, 2024), and a non-hotel location. Most of Doha's comparable fine dining sits inside hotel properties, which brings certain operational advantages but also a sameness of context. A freestanding restaurant inside a cultural institution operates differently: the foot traffic, the ambient formality, and the departure structure are all distinct. For context on how the Ducasse format translates across other markets, Blue by Alain Ducasse in Bangkok occupies a similar high-end position in Southeast Asia's French fine dining tier.
The broader category of French contemporary dining in Asian and Middle Eastern markets has become increasingly competitive. In Hong Kong, Caprice, Épure, and Louise operate in a much denser peer set. In Bangkok, Le Normandie holds a long-established position. In Singapore, Lerouy represents the leaner, chef-driven end of the same category. IDAM occupies a different position from all of these, partly because Doha's fine dining density is lower, making the peer comparison less about competitive ranking and more about what the format means in a city with fewer reference points in the genre. In New York, Essential by Christophe and Restaurant Yuu show how the French contemporary format operates at the highest tier in a saturated market. IDAM's Michelin star, earned in a city with a much younger starred dining ecosystem, carries different weight in that context.
Planning the Visit: What to Know Before You Book
IDAM operates Tuesday through Thursday and Sunday, covering both lunch (12:30 PM to 2:00 PM) and dinner (7:00 PM to 9:00 PM). The restaurant is closed Friday and Saturday, which is the Gulf weekend. That schedule matters for trip planning: travellers arriving Thursday evening and leaving Saturday have a narrow window, and it closes entirely. Sunday reopening restores the option, but diners should note that dinner service ends at 9:00 PM, which is earlier than the late-night culture of many comparable Doha venues.
Booking a Michelin-starred restaurant in Doha operates differently from the same task in London or Tokyo. There is no published lead time in available data, and the seat count is not confirmed in the venue record. Given the museum location, the relatively limited service hours, and the small window of operating days per week, advance booking is advisable, particularly for dinner in peak season (October through April, when Doha's outdoor and cultural season runs at full capacity). The Google review score of 4.5 across 390 reviews reflects a consistent baseline of satisfaction, though a sample of 390 covers is modest relative to higher-traffic venues and should be read accordingly.
The La Liste score movement, from 91 points in 2025 to 89 in 2026, is a marginal shift rather than a significant repositioning, and the Michelin star awarded in 2024 represents the more definitive recent signal. The Opinionated About Dining ranking moved from 322 (2024) to 349 (2025), a slight regression, but both placements confirm that regional assessors regard the restaurant as operating within the top tier of its category across Asia and the Gulf. Chef Jeremy Cheminade leads the kitchen, carrying the Ducasse house standard into this specific context.
For visitors assembling a Doha dining itinerary, the full range of options across cuisines and price tiers is covered in our full Doha restaurants guide. Hotel recommendations are in our full Doha hotels guide, bar options in our full Doha bars guide, and cultural experiences in our full Doha experiences guide. Wine programming specifics are addressed in our full Doha wineries guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the vibe at IDAM by Alain Ducasse?
The room sits on the fifth floor of Doha's Museum of Islamic Art, with views over the bay that set the tone before the food arrives. Philippe Starck's interior design draws on European formal dining conventions rather than the building's Islamic geometry, producing a deliberate contrast. High-backed leather chairs, tableside service with verbal commentary on preparations, and a tasting menu format across both lunch and dinner put it firmly in the formal fine dining register. At the leading of Doha's price tier and holding a Michelin star since 2024, the restaurant prices against its peers in Doha's four-riyal bracket and against comparable French contemporary houses in the wider region.
What is the signature dish at IDAM by Alain Ducasse?
Menus are seasonal, so confirmed current dishes require direct contact with the restaurant. Award commentary across La Liste, Opinionated About Dining, and Michelin assessors has referenced preparations spanning lamb, quail, asparagus, and beetroot, with dessert formats including chocolate and orange ravioli. The tableside finishing element is the structural constant: it distinguishes how food arrives in the dining room and has been cited as a defining characteristic by multiple independent review sources. Chef Jeremy Cheminade leads the kitchen within the Ducasse contemporary French framework, which prioritises seasonal sourcing and technical refinement over theatrical novelty.
Cost and Credentials
A short peer set to help you calibrate price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| IDAM by Alain Ducasse | ﷼﷼﷼﷼ | Perched on the fifth floor of Dohas iconic Museum of Islamic Art MIA Idam is a meeting of minds between two titans of their respective fields legendary chef Alain Ducasse and visionary designer Philippe Starck Idam marked Ducasse's first foray into the Middle East and was a pioneering fine dining spot in the city when it opened its doors in 2013.; La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 89pts; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #349 (2025); La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 91pts; Take the lift to the top floor of the extraordinarily beautiful Museum of Islamic Art and wonder at the glorious views over the Bay – then head to this equally stunning restaurant. Relax in the high-backed leather chairs and choose one of the seasonal tasting menus (there is a shorter one at lunch). This is all about refined and sophisticated contemporary French dishes, with many of them finished tableside by the charming staff who talk you through the preparations. Whether lamb or quail, asparagus or beetroot, each component is exquisite in every sense. Desserts, such as chocolate and orange ravioli, are equally memorable.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #322 (2024); Michelin 1 Star (2024) | This venue |
| Argan | ﷼ | Moroccan, ﷼ | |
| Hakkasan | ﷼﷼﷼﷼ | Chinese, ﷼﷼﷼﷼ | |
| Jiwan | ﷼﷼ | Middle Eastern, ﷼﷼ | |
| Morimoto | ﷼﷼﷼ | Japanese, Sushi, Japanese Contemporary, ﷼﷼﷼ | |
| Alba | ﷼﷼﷼﷼ | Italian, ﷼﷼﷼﷼ |
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