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Contemporary French Fine Dining
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Lausanne, Switzerland

La Table du Lausanne Palace

CuisineModern French
Executive ChefFranck Pelux
Price€€€€
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceFormal
NoiseQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Opinionated About Dining
La Liste
Michelin

La Table du Lausanne Palace holds two Michelin stars and an 85-point La Liste ranking for 2026, placing it among the most decorated Modern French tables in the Lake Geneva region. Chef Franck Pelux leads a kitchen that works within the classical French tradition while sitting inside one of Lausanne's historic grand hotels. Service runs Wednesday through Saturday only, making forward planning essential.

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Address
Rue du Grand-Chêne 7-9, 1003 Lausanne, Switzerland
Phone
+41 21 331 32 15
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La Table du Lausanne Palace restaurant in Lausanne, Switzerland
About

The Grand Hotel Dining Room, Reconsidered

There is a particular logic to grand hotel dining in Switzerland that has little equivalent elsewhere in Europe. The country's most serious fine dining addresses have, for well over a century, been anchored inside palace hotels rather than in freestanding urban restaurants. The reasons are partly economic, partly social: the clientele that builds such hotels also builds such kitchens, and the result is a tier of destination dining that ties culinary ambition directly to the prestige of the building around it. La Table du Lausanne Palace, set within the Lausanne Palace at Rue du Grand-Chêne 7-9 in Lausanne, Switzerland, belongs to this tradition. The approach is established: a formal dining room, a structured meal, and a kitchen working in the classical French mode.

What gives the room its particular weight is not the hotel's age but what the awards record confirms about the kitchen's position. Two Michelin stars, held in both 2024 and 2025, place the restaurant inside a small group of Vaud-region tables operating at that level. These figures place it inside the top tier of Swiss fine dining, though not at the absolute apex of a national scene that includes addresses like Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier and Schloss Schauenstein in Fürstenau at the multi-star level. Within the Lausanne city boundary, the two-star standing is matched only by Pic Beau-Rivage Palace, which operates from the Beau-Rivage Palace in Ouchy at the creative end of the spectrum.

What a Structured Meal Here Actually Means

Modern French fine dining at this price and star level delivers a particular kind of eating experience: one where the kitchen's logic governs the pace, sequence, and proportion of the meal, rather than the diner assembling choices off a carte. The multi-course format is the standard vehicle for two-star cooking in this tradition, and it is worth understanding what that format commits you to. The kitchen under Chef Franck Pelux is working in the classical French register, which means technique, sauce work, and the French canon's grammar of flavour are the primary reference points, even where contemporary refinement is applied. This is not a cuisine that privileges provocation or concept over execution. The OAD classical ranking reinforces that orientation: the guide specifically tracks restaurants that maintain classical standards rather than chasing experimental formats.

In practical terms, this means the meal at La Table du Lausanne Palace rewards attentiveness rather than novelty-seeking. The room, the pacing, the formality of service, all are calibrated to a guest who understands the conventions of grand French dining and expects them to be observed precisely. Guests who find that format rewarding will find the investment proportionate to the experience. Those seeking a more experimental register should look at Pic Beau-Rivage Palace, which sits at the same price tier but under Anne-Sophie Pic's influence occupies a more contemporary creative position.

For comparison at the tier below, Le Berceau des Sens offers a Modern French format at €€€, making it the natural alternative for those at an earlier stage of engagement with Lausanne's fine dining scene. Jacques Restaurant covers French Contemporary territory at the same mid-tier price point. Both provide instructive reference points for understanding where La Table du Lausanne Palace sits in the city's broader hierarchy of French dining.

Lausanne in the Swiss Fine Dining Map

Switzerland's two-star and three-star restaurants are spread across the country in a way that reflects the nation's decentralised character. Basel has Cheval Blanc by Peter Knogl; Bad Ragaz has Memories; Vals has 7132 Silver; Lucerne offers Colonnade. Lausanne's position as the capital of French-speaking Switzerland means its leading tables operate within the gravitational pull of both French culinary tradition and the international clientele that the Lake Geneva corridor attracts: diplomats, international organisation staff, finance and tech visitors to the region.

That context shapes La Table du Lausanne Palace's positioning more than anything purely internal to the restaurant. The hotel's address at the top of the old city, the service register, and the French classical kitchen all point toward a guest who arrives knowing what grand hotel dining entails and expects the format to be executed at the level the stars suggest. In that sense the restaurant is serving the version of that dining that an established international audience expects to find in Lausanne.

Across the border, comparable Modern French two-star references include Sketch, The Lecture Room and Library in London and Schanz in Piesport, both operating in the classical-to-refined French register at equivalent award tiers. The international framing is relevant because La Table du Lausanne Palace's guest base skews toward travellers rather than local repeat diners, and the awards currency it carries translates directly across those audiences.

Planning the Visit

The restaurant operates Wednesday through Saturday, with lunch service from noon to 3 pm and dinner from 7 to 10:30 pm; it is closed Sunday through Tuesday. That four-day week narrows the booking window considerably compared with most city-centre fine dining addresses, and it is the single most important logistical constraint to factor into any trip that includes a meal here. Reservations at two-star level in Switzerland typically require advance planning of several weeks, and weekend dinner slots in particular fill ahead of time. Visitors combining a stay at the hotel with dinner have the natural advantage of in-house booking channels.

Google review data places the restaurant at 4.9 out of 5, a figure that is consistent with the experience of a formal, technically accomplished kitchen. The address places the restaurant in Lausanne's upper city, accessible from the main rail station by a short climb or funicular connection.

At €€€€ price positioning, the restaurant sits among Lausanne's highest dining spend tiers. Guests who want to extend a day in Lausanne beyond a single meal can refer to Au Chat Noir for classic cuisine at a more accessible price point, or L'Accadémia for Italian at a lower spend tier.

What People Recommend at La Table du Lausanne Palace

Guest and critical consensus centres consistently on the classical French execution and the formal service register. The two-star award and the OAD classical ranking both point toward a kitchen where sauce discipline and classical technique are the defining characteristics rather than the specific dishes on any given menu, which rotates seasonally. Chef Franck Pelux's kitchen draws on the French classical tradition, and the structured multi-course format is the primary vehicle through which that cooking is delivered. Those arriving with a specific interest in classical French cuisine at a high technical level will find both the critical record and the guest review data consistent with that expectation. For broader orientation on how this restaurant fits within the city's dining options, Le Berceau des Sens provides a useful lower-price-tier reference in the same culinary tradition.

Signature Dishes
tourteau gyozasœuf en meurettedampfnudeln aux poireaux
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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
  • Romantic
  • Intimate
  • Opulent
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Celebration
  • Special Occasion
  • Business Dinner
Experience
  • Hotel Restaurant
  • Terrace
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Sommelier Led
Sourcing
  • Local Sourcing
Views
  • Mountain
  • Skyline
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacityIntimate
Service StyleFormal
Meal PacingLeisurely

Luxurious and warm atmosphere with magnificent views over Lake Geneva, Lausanne rooftops, and mountains, complemented by silky smooth, attentive service.

Signature Dishes
tourteau gyozasœuf en meurettedampfnudeln aux poireaux