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Stage22 is Rīga's only Michelin Plate-recognised Japanese restaurant, operating from within the Kempinski Hotel on Aspazijas bulvāris. Three consecutive Michelin Plate listings (2024–2026) position it at the upper end of the city's formal dining tier, where Japanese cuisine has few serious rivals. For visitors comparing options across Rīga's premium restaurant circuit, it occupies a distinct category.

Japanese Precision Inside a Grand Boulevard Address
Aspazijas bulvāris runs along the edge of Rīga's Old Town, a wide, tree-lined avenue where the city's most formal architecture faces the canal parks. The Kempinski Hotel sits on that boulevard at number 22, and the address alone signals a certain kind of dining proposition: one that draws on international hotel infrastructure but operates, in the case of Stage22, within a culinary tradition that has little else to compare itself against in this city. Japanese cuisine at this price point and with this level of recognition is rare in the Baltic capitals. Stage22 is, by measurable record, the only Michelin Plate-listed Japanese restaurant in Rīga.
That detail matters more than it might first appear. Rīga's premium dining circuit has developed quickly over the past decade, with creative and modern cuisine formats leading the charge. Restaurants like JOHN Chef's Hall (Modern Cuisine) and Max Cekot Kitchen (Creative) operate at €€€€ and have anchored the city's reputation for chef-driven, ingredient-focused cooking. Stage22 sits at €€€, one bracket below those rooms, but occupies a different competitive set entirely: it is not competing with Rīga's modern European tasting menus so much as it is serving as the city's primary address for Japanese-format dining at a serious level.
How the Menu Is Built — and What That Architecture Says
Japanese restaurant menus, even outside Japan, tend to communicate a philosophical position through their structure before a dish arrives at the table. The decision between omakase and à la carte, between a narrow seasonal card and a broad multi-section menu, signals how the kitchen understands its role and its audience. In hotel-based Japanese restaurants operating in European cities without a deep pool of Japanese culinary infrastructure, the menu architecture often becomes a negotiation: how much fidelity to Japanese format, how much accommodation to local dining habits.
Stage22's menu specifics are not available in verified form for this editorial, so the dish-level detail sits outside what can be responsibly stated here. What the Michelin Plate — awarded in 2024, 2025, and 2026 , does confirm is that the kitchen has maintained a consistent standard that Michelin's inspectors have found worth noting across three consecutive guides. In Michelin's framework, the Plate designation marks cooking that uses quality ingredients prepared with care: it is a quality signal, not a starred endorsement, but its consistency across three years is a more meaningful indicator than a single year's listing. It suggests a kitchen that has not peaked and slipped, but has held.
For a city where Japanese dining is otherwise represented at the more accessible end of the market , Shōyu operates at €€ and occupies a different register entirely , Stage22's three-year Michelin record is the clearest available credential for what the menu is doing structurally. Hotel-based Japanese restaurants in European capitals that carry Michelin recognition over multiple years tend to run tightly edited menus: fewer sections, higher ingredient investment, a kitchen that has made deliberate choices about which techniques to pursue rather than broadening the offer for volume.
The Rīga Fine Dining Context
The city's formal dining scene has organised itself around a small number of addresses, and within that group the price tiers do meaningful work. The €€€€ rooms , JOHN Chef's Hall, Max Cekot Kitchen, and others in that bracket , set a particular ceiling. Stage22 at €€€ occupies the tier below, alongside other recognisable names in Rīga's premium circuit. That positioning makes it accessible relative to the most expensive tables in the city while still operating well above the mid-market. Across the broader Michelin-recognised dining landscape in Latvia, Stage22 is one of several addresses worth noting alongside 3 Chefs (Modern Cuisine), B7 (Modern Cuisine), and Biblioteka Number One in Riga.
Latvia's restaurant recognition has expanded beyond the capital in recent years. Plates and recommendations now reach addresses like 36.Line in Jurmala, Akustika in Valmiera, H.E. Vanadziņš in Cēsis, MO in Liepaja, and Pavāru māja in Līgatne, which broadens the frame for what Latvian cuisine at a serious level looks like. But within Rīga itself, the concentration of recognised addresses on and near Aspazijas bulvāris and the Old Town core remains the centre of gravity. For visitors whose reference point for Japanese cuisine is a city with deep Japanese dining infrastructure, it is worth calibrating: Rīga is not Tokyo. For a comparison point on what Japanese precision at the highest level looks like in a city that has developed it over generations, Myojaku in Tokyo or Azabu Kadowaki provide a different frame of reference entirely. Stage22 operates within European hotel Japanese dining conventions, which is its own tradition and should be approached on those terms.
The 4.4 rating across 194 Google reviews is consistent with what a hotel-based restaurant with a serious but not stratospherically priced menu tends to accumulate: a genuine audience rather than a fanatic one, and a level of satisfaction that does not spike or collapse with individual experiences.
Planning a Visit
Stage22 sits inside the Kempinski Hotel at Aspazijas bulvāris 22, which means the entrance and pre-dinner logistics benefit from the hotel's infrastructure: a lobby to arrive into, staff familiar with international guests, and the general reliability of a property maintaining standards across all its outlets. For non-hotel guests, the address is direct to reach from the Old Town on foot. Booking is advisable, particularly on weekends, though the absence of publicly visible booking data suggests that seats are managed through the hotel's reservation system rather than third-party platforms. Pricing at €€€ places a meal per person in the mid-to-upper range for Rīga dining without reaching the ceiling of the city's most expensive rooms. For the full picture of what Rīga's dining, bar, and hotel scene offers across all categories, see our full Rīga restaurants guide, our full Rīga hotels guide, our full Rīga bars guide, our full Rīga wineries guide, and our full Rīga experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the must-try dish at Stage22?
Stage22 holds a Michelin Plate awarded across 2024, 2025, and 2026, which in Michelin's framework signals careful ingredient selection and consistent kitchen craft. Specific menu items and dish details are managed by the restaurant directly and are leading confirmed at the time of booking, as Japanese menus at this tier typically rotate with seasons and supplier availability. The Michelin recognition across three consecutive years is the most reliable indicator that the kitchen's core output is worth ordering across the menu rather than directing attention to a single dish. For up-to-date menu information, contact the Kempinski Hotel directly or enquire when making a reservation.
At a Glance
A short peer set to help you calibrate price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Notes | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Stage22 | This venue | €€€ |
| JOHN Chef's Hall | Modern Cuisine, €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Max Cekot Kitchen | Creative, €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Le Dome | Seafood, Modern Cuisine, €€€€ | €€€€ |
| Shōyu | Japanese, €€ | €€ |
| Snatch | Italian, € | € |
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