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CuisineNordic , Modern Cuisine
Executive ChefRúnar Pierre Herivaux
LocationReykjavík, Iceland
Michelin

ÓX holds a Michelin star for the second consecutive year, placing it firmly in Reykjavík's upper tier of modern Nordic dining. Located on Laugavegur, the city's main thoroughfare, it operates under chef Rúnar Pierre Herivaux and draws on Iceland's larder through a contemporary lens. A 4.8 Google rating across 158 reviews points to consistent execution at the €€€€ price point.

ÓX restaurant in Reykjavík, Iceland
About

Where Laugavegur Meets the Nordic Fine-Dining Tier

Laugavegur 55 sits in the middle of Reykjavík's most-walked street, a stretch that covers everything from fast-casual lamb soup to vintage record shops. The building's address alone tells you nothing about what's happening inside. That gap between the ordinary exterior and what ÓX actually delivers is something Reykjavík's starred tier does well: the city has little appetite for the kind of theatrical entrances that signal ambition before you've eaten a single course. The room earns its credentials quietly, through what arrives at the table.

That reticence is characteristic of how Reykjavík's serious modern dining scene has developed. Unlike Copenhagen, where restaurants have historically used dramatic interiors to underline their New Nordic credentials, Reykjavík's top-end places tend to let the food carry the statement. DILL established this register early; Brút and Hosiló have reinforced it. ÓX operates in the same mode, with a 4.8 Google rating from 158 reviews suggesting that the approach is landing consistently with the people who make it through the door.

The Nordic Larder and What ÓX Does With It

Modern Nordic cuisine, in its serious form, is not a single thing. The smørrebrød tradition that defined Scandinavian lunch culture for generations — rye bread loaded with cured fish, pickled vegetables, and cold cuts — represents one pole: preservation-focused, labour-intensive, rooted in making winter ingredients last. The tasting-menu format that has dominated fine dining from the region since the mid-2000s represents another: still drawing on the same larder, but working it through contemporary technique and a more formal service arc.

ÓX, classified as Nordic and Modern Cuisine, operates in the space where these two traditions inform each other. Iceland's position at the edge of both the Atlantic and the Arctic means its larder is distinctive even within the Nordic region: lamb grazed on highland herbs, cod and haddock from cold-water fisheries, skyr and other fermented dairy products that predate Scandinavian dairy trends by centuries, Arctic char from glacial rivers. The preservation instinct that produced smørrebrød is also present in Iceland's hákarl and hangikjöt traditions, and a chef working seriously with Icelandic ingredients has to decide how much of that heritage to carry forward literally and how much to carry forward as a sensibility.

Chef Rúnar Pierre Herivaux's position at ÓX places him in a specific subset of Reykjavík's dining scene: the group of chefs working at €€€€ price points with enough creative latitude to make editorial decisions about what Icelandic cuisine means in a contemporary context. Matur og Drykkur works this question from a more traditionalist angle, leaning into historical recipes and older preservation methods. ÓX, with its Michelin recognition, operates closer to the forward-facing end of that spectrum.

Michelin Recognition and What It Signals in Reykjavík

Iceland entered the Michelin Guide relatively recently in the context of Michelin's broader European footprint, and the Reykjavík starred tier remains small. Holding a star in consecutive years , which ÓX did in both 2024 and 2025 , is meaningful not just as a credential but as evidence of consistency. A single year of recognition can reflect a restaurant at a peak moment; two consecutive years suggests the kitchen is producing at that level as a baseline.

In terms of peer set, ÓX's positioning at €€€€ with a star aligns it with the handful of other Reykjavík restaurants operating at the leading of the city's fine-dining bracket. DILL is the most established name in this tier; Hosiló and Brút occupy adjacent price points. Across the Nordic region, the single-star modern cuisine format is competitive: FAGN in Trondheim and Matbaren in Stockholm operate in comparable creative registers, and the benchmarks for what Michelin expects from a starred Nordic table are well-established. ÓX meeting those benchmarks for two consecutive years positions it as a reliable option in a city where the fine-dining tier is both small and increasingly internationally scrutinised.

Outside the Nordic frame, the starred-tasting-menu format in major cities has become a distinct category with its own travel logic: diners plan trips partly around tables. Atomix in New York and Lazy Bear in San Francisco represent what that planning looks like in the American context. Reykjavík draws a different profile of advance-booker, typically combining the starred table with landscape itineraries , the Moss restaurant at Grindavík has exploited exactly this dynamic. ÓX on Laugavegur serves a slightly different visitor: someone staying in the city centre, anchoring an evening around a serious dinner rather than building a trip around a destination-within-a-destination.

Setting ÓX in the Wider Reykjavík Dining Map

Reykjavík's restaurant scene punches considerably above its weight for a capital city of roughly 130,000 people. The density of serious cooking relative to population is partly explained by Iceland's high per-capita income, partly by a tourism sector that has transformed the city's hospitality economy over the past fifteen years, and partly by the fact that Icelandic chefs trained abroad have returned to cook with ingredients unavailable anywhere else.

The street-level character of the scene varies significantly by neighbourhood and price point. At the accessible end, 3 Frakkar represents the kind of no-frills seafood cooking that makes Reykjavík worth eating in even before you reach the starred tier. The gap between that register and what ÓX is doing is wide in terms of format and price, but both draw on the same core ingredients. The Icelandic tradition of treating seafood as workaday rather than precious runs through all price points, which means a diner moving between 3 Frakkar and ÓX in the same trip is experiencing two ends of a coherent culinary culture rather than two unrelated things.

For visitors building a longer Reykjavík dining itinerary, the full picture is available through our complete Reykjavík restaurants guide. Those extending beyond food can find accommodation options in our Reykjavík hotels guide, and the city's bar scene , which has its own serious cocktail and natural-wine contingent , is covered in our Reykjavík bars guide. For a broader sense of what the city offers beyond restaurants, our Reykjavík experiences guide and wineries guide round out the picture.

Planning a Visit

ÓX is located at Laugavegur 55, 101 Reykjavík, placing it squarely on the main shopping and dining artery and walkable from most central accommodation. The €€€€ price designation puts it at the leading of Reykjavík's pricing bracket, consistent with what a two-course-plus tasting format at a Michelin-starred table costs across Northern Europe. Given the consecutive Michelin stars and a Google score of 4.8 from 158 reviews, booking well in advance is the sensible approach; tables at this tier in Reykjavík do not absorb last-minute demand as easily as larger cities might suggest. The restaurant's specific booking method is not confirmed in our database, so checking directly through the venue is the reliable route. Seasonality matters in Iceland more than in most European cities: summer brings extended daylight and peak tourist volumes, which means competition for reservations increases significantly from June through August. Visiting in the shoulder months of April, May, or September offers somewhat easier access to the city's leading tables alongside a less crowded city overall.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the signature dish at ÓX?

ÓX holds a Michelin star for 2024 and 2025, confirmed through Michelin's published listings, and operates in the Nordic and Modern Cuisine category under chef Rúnar Pierre Herivaux. The restaurant's specific signature dishes are not confirmed in our database, and we do not speculate on menu composition. What the awards record and cuisine classification together imply is a kitchen working with Icelandic ingredients , the cold-water fish, highland lamb, and fermented dairy that define the local larder , through a contemporary technique set. For specific dish information, the venue itself is the authoritative source. Readers interested in comparable creative registers across the Nordic region can also look at DILL and FAGN in Trondheim for context on how starred Nordic kitchens in this tier typically construct their menus.

What's the leading way to book ÓX?

At the €€€€ price point with two consecutive Michelin stars, ÓX sits in the bracket where advance booking is the only reliable strategy. In Reykjavík's small starred tier, the pool of tables at this level is limited, and demand from both locals and international visitors , Reykjavík receives disproportionately high visitor numbers relative to its size , means that turning up without a reservation is not a viable plan. The specific booking platform or contact method for ÓX is not confirmed in our database. The practical approach is to go directly to the restaurant's own channels as early as possible, particularly if your travel dates fall between June and August. For context on comparable booking disciplines at starred tables, Host in Dublin and Le Bernardin in New York illustrate how advance planning at this tier works in other markets.

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