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Franco Japanese Fusion
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CuisineModern Cuisine
Price€€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceUpscale Casual
NoiseQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Michelin

Among Paris's mid-tier modern cuisine tables, Ilô at 6 Rue Castex in the 4th arrondissement has earned consecutive Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025 while holding a 4.9 Google rating across 192 reviews, a combination that positions it well above its price point. The €€€ format delivers the kind of focused, technically aware cooking that the Michelin Plate recognises without the €€€€ commitment of the city's starred rooms.

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Address
6 Rue Castex, 75004 Paris, France
Phone
+33 1 44 54 06 61
Ilô restaurant in Paris, France
About

What the 4th Arrondissement Asks of a Modern Cuisine Table

The Marais has long occupied a complicated position in Paris dining. The neighbourhood draws high foot traffic from the Place des Vosges crowd, attracts a younger international clientele through its gallery and fashion corridors, and sits close enough to the Île Saint-Louis that well-funded tourists drift in looking for something credible. The result is a district where restaurants face unusually divergent pressure: price down to capture volume, or hold a serious culinary line and trust that the right diners will find you. Most compromise somewhere in the middle. Ilô, at 6 Rue Castex in the 4th, sits closer to the second position, two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) and a 4.8 Google score across 228 reviews suggest it has found an audience that values the work on the plate.

The Room and the Approach

Rue Castex runs between the Boulevard Henri IV and the Place de la Bastille, not a prime tourist artery, which tells you something about how Ilô came to be the kind of place it is. The street sits at the eastern edge of the Marais, where the neighbourhood's self-consciousness about being fashionable gives way to something quieter. Restaurants on this stretch don't rely on passing trade. They earn their tables through word of mouth and, increasingly, Michelin recognition. The room itself reads as compact and considered, consistent with the modern cuisine format that the Michelin Plate category rewards: technically attentive cooking that demonstrates training and intent, without the ceremony of a starred room.

In Paris, that middle tier, Michelin Plate recognition, €€€ pricing, modern cuisine framing, is more competitive than it looks from the outside. The city has dozens of tables operating in that band, and the ones that sustain a 4.9 Google rating alongside Michelin acknowledgement are doing something right beyond consistency. For a venue on a low-visibility street in a neighbourhood full of alternatives, those numbers represent genuine earned affinity rather than location-driven traffic.

What You're Paying For, and What You're Not

The value argument for Ilô runs through a specific comparison. Paris's three-Michelin-star tier, tables like Paul Bocuse - L'Auberge du Pont de Collonges, Auberge de l'Ill, or in Paris proper, operations like Alléno at Pavillon Ledoyen and L'Ambroisie, carry €€€€ pricing and the full infrastructure of a grand dining experience: large brigade, deep wine list, formal service architecture, and a room designed to signal the occasion. That is one kind of transaction. The €€€ modern cuisine room offers a different one: fewer covers, tighter focus, cooking that is often more personal in its execution, and a bill that doesn't require a dedicated budget line. The trade-off is less ceremony, fewer service staff, and a wine program that typically runs shorter. What you keep is the technical work on the plate and a room where the energy is closer to concentrated than theatrical.

Ilô sits squarely in that trade-off, and for the right diner, someone who wants Michelin-acknowledged cooking without the formality or the cost of a starred room, it represents a coherent offer. The €€€ band in Paris roughly corresponds to menus in the €50 to 90 range, depending on format and wine, which positions Ilô below comparable technically-oriented tables like Accents Table Bourse or Anona that carry Michelin stars and the pricing that follows.

Ilô in the Broader Paris Modern Cuisine Conversation

Modern cuisine as a Michelin category covers a wide range of approaches, it is more a statement of intent than a description of technique. In practice, Paris's Michelin Plate modern cuisine tables tend to share a few characteristics: a shorter, more frequently rotated menu, a preference for seasonal French product, and a kitchen that is working toward a starred recognition it may or may not achieve. Some of these tables are in a holding pattern; others are genuinely building something. The sustained dual recognition at Ilô, Plates in both 2024 and 2025, and the high volume of positive guest reviews suggest the latter. Michelin Plates are not loyalty awards; they signal that the inspector found the cooking worth recommending even without the precision or consistency to award a star. Two consecutive inclusions is a meaningful data point.

For context on how French modern cuisine looks at the higher end of the national register, the contrast with Mirazur in Menton, Flocons de Sel in Megève, or Bras in Laguiole is instructive, those are destination rooms with international profiles and full-star recognition. Ilô is the neighbourhood end of the same culinary tradition: technically serious, Michelin-acknowledged, but built for a local and savvy-visitor clientele rather than destination pilgrimage. That is not a lesser ambition; it is a different one.

Within Paris itself, the comparable set includes Amâlia and Auberge de Montfleury, as well as tables on the higher end of the spectrum like 114, Faubourg. Each occupies a different position in the city's dining hierarchy; Ilô's position in the 4th at €€€ with a Michelin Plate puts it in a specific bracket: serious cooking at a price point that doesn't demand advance budget planning.

Planning Your Visit

Address: 6 Rue Castex, 75004 Paris. Nearest Metro: Bastille (lines 1, 5, 8) is a short walk east. Price tier: €€€, typically corresponding to €50 to 90 per person with wine, though exact menu pricing should be confirmed directly with the restaurant. Reservations: Booking in advance is advisable given the 4.9 Google rating and likely limited cover count characteristic of this format; contact the venue directly for current availability. Dress: Smart casual is consistent with the modern cuisine format at this price tier in Paris; no formal dress code information is published. Leading timing: As with most Parisian rooms of this type, midweek dinner reservations tend to be easier to secure than weekend slots.

Signature Dishes
parmesan_ice_creamcod_with_mushroomscaramelized_pork_belly

The Quick Read

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

At a Glance
Vibe
  • Intimate
  • Cozy
  • Minimalist
  • Elegant
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Sake Program
  • Sommelier Led
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleUpscale Casual
Meal PacingLeisurely

Cozy and intimate with minimalist decor that highlights the vibrant dish presentations in a small 16-seat space.

Signature Dishes
parmesan_ice_creamcod_with_mushroomscaramelized_pork_belly