This matters because travelers often assume Dubai's Michelin ceiling is lower than it actually is. The city now stands alongside Tokyo, Paris, and New York in having restaurants at the absolute highest tier of global gastronomy. That's not marketing. That's the guide.
One-star and two-star restaurants in Dubai
Two-star restaurants
Dubai's 2-star restaurants represent "excellent cooking, worth a detour." Three restaurants hold this distinction:
STAY by Yannick Alléno at One&Only The Palm delivers masterful French cooking with meticulous attention to detail. Located on The Palm Jumeirah, it offers a refined tasting experience that some critics call "almost faultless" in food execution — though the formal atmosphere divides opinion. Average spend: approximately 3,500–4,000 AED per couple with wine pairing.
Il Ristorante – Niko Romito at One&Only One Za'abeel is a modern Italian restaurant in Dubai with minimalist design and a private harbor view. Chef Niko Romito (whose Abruzzo restaurant holds 3 stars) brings creative Italian cuisine that respects tradition while pushing boundaries. The wine cellar is exceptional — their own Montepulciano blend offers strong value relative to the setting.
Row on 45 retained its 2-star status in the 2025 guide.
A quick practical example from our side. A guest once planned back-to-back luxury dinners on consecutive nights — one on the Palm, one in central Dubai — and chose a low, stiff sports coupe because it looked right on Instagram. Then came valet ramps, evening traffic, and fatigue. We switched the second night to a quieter premium sedan. Result: smoother arrival, less stress, better night. Glamour matters. Comfort matters more after 8 pm.
One-star restaurants
The 1-star category — "high quality cooking, worth a stop" — is where Dubai's diversity truly shines. Fourteen restaurants carry this distinction in 2025, spanning Indian, Japanese, Portuguese, Middle Eastern, British, Chinese, and international cuisines.
Standout 1-star picks:
Moonrise — A 12-seat rooftop chef's table led by self-taught Chef Solemann Haddad (born and raised in Dubai to a French mother and Syrian father). Expect Middle Eastern–Japanese fusion with dishes like pani puri grilled cheese and kubz with organic brown miso butter. Ranked No. 4 in MENA's 50 Best Restaurants.
Hōseki — A nine-seat Japanese fine dining omakase where each meal is designed based on the freshest ingredients and guest preferences. Minimalist space with sweeping city views at Jumeirah Bay Island.
Tasca by Jose Avillez — The only Michelin-starred restaurant in Dubai with an infinity pool, located at the Mandarin Oriental Jumeira. Perched on the sixth floor with Arabian Gulf views, expect Portuguese cuisine like Algarve prawn ceviche and Atlantic rice with blue lobster.
Dinner by Heston Blumenthal — Historic British cuisine reimagined through contemporary eyes, at Atlantis The Royal. Signature dishes include the famous Meat Fruit (mandarin and chicken liver parfait, circa 1500) and Tipsy Cake (spit roast pineapple, circa 1810).
Smoked Room — Chef Dani Garcia's "Fire Omakase" concept at St. Regis Gardens: intimate 14-seat space with dishes like sea cucumber with pesto and Cecina jelly, and sturgeon nitro tomato with horseradish cream and caviar.
Avatara — Vegetarian Indian fine dining by Chef Rahul Rana, exploring plant-based ingredients through a modern Indian lens without dairy or alliums. A 1-star experience that proves vegetarian cuisine belongs at the highest level.
Jamavar — Authentic Indian cuisine in the Dubai Opera district. Culinary Director Chef Surendar Mohan earned the star with dishes like the signature goat curry that was the deciding factor for inspectors. Also holds stars in London and Doha.
Manao — Opened by 30-year-old Chef Abhiraj Khatwani (born and raised in Dubai), serving an 11-course tasting menu of reimagined Thai classics. Earned its star just five months after opening. Winner of the Young Chef Award 2025.
11 Woodfire — Open-fire cooking using a hand-built wood-burning oven and forged-steel grill. Located in Jumeirah 1, the relaxed villa setting features standout dishes including beetroot with feta, berries and hazelnuts, and a signature potato mousseline with truffle.
That range — from a 12-seat rooftop to a villa with a wood grill — tells you something about how Dubai's Michelin scene works. It's not one mood. It's many.
Best Michelin-starred restaurants by cuisine
Choosing by cuisine is often smarter than choosing by star count alone. In Dubai, the best restaurants are not all chasing the same mood, and your ideal table may depend more on whether you want Indian precision, Japanese restraint, Portuguese warmth, French structure, or broader international fine dining.
Michelin star Indian restaurants Dubai diners look for
Dubai is, arguably, the global epicenter for Michelin-starred Indian cuisine. If you're searching for Michelin star Indian restaurants Dubai, the city delivers at every level:
Trèsind Studio (3 stars) — Chef Himanshu Saini's progressive Indian concept holds the highest Michelin rating possible, making it the first and only Indian restaurant in the world at this level. The Rising India tasting menu takes diners through India's four culinary regions with courses like medu vada with gorgonzola dolce and kimchi, ghee roast crab with burnt cinnamon, and a green plum aguachile pani puri. Interactive elements like the Sadya ceremony (celebrating flavors of first harvest) add storytelling depth.
Avatara (1 star) — Chef Rahul Rana offers a vegetarian Indian fine dining experience without dairy, alliums, or heavy carbs. The concept draws from religious rituals and highlights nutritional value, proving that plant-based Indian cuisine operates at the highest fine-dining level.
Jamavar (1 star) — Located in the Dubai Opera district, Jamavar delivers authentic Indian cuisine under Culinary Director Chef Surendar Mohan. The signature goat curry was specifically cited by Michelin inspectors as the deciding factor. With branches in London and Doha (both holding one star), this is established Indian excellence with global credibility.
Dubai Indian restaurants extend well beyond Michelin stars — the city's Indian fine dining scene remains central to its culinary identity at every level.
What do we recommend in practice? If your goal is to understand Dubai Indian fine dining rather than chase a star badge alone, book for the style of meal you want: theatrical tasting menu (Trèsind Studio), vegetarian precision (Avatara), or authentic regional mastery (Jamavar). Different night. Different expectation. Same city.
Japanese, French and international fine dining picks
For Japanese, French, and international fine dining, Dubai feels strongest when you choose for format and setting together. A sushi-led omakase, a French tasting room, and an international chef's-counter menu may all sit under the same broad fine-dining label — but they deliver very different nights.
Japanese:
- Hōseki (1 star) — Nine-seat omakase at Jumeirah Bay Island. As food writer Hani AlMalki describes it: "The closest thing to being in Tokyo that you can experience in Dubai. Ultra high-end sushi done to Japan standards."
- FZN by Bjorn Frantzen (3 stars) — While categorized as European, the menu integrates significant Japanese influences and techniques alongside modern European fine dining.
French:
- STAY by Yannick Alléno (2 stars) — Classical French tasting-menu pacing and ceremony at One&Only The Palm. Chef Alléno is a master of French cooking with an exacting team.
- La Dame de Pic Dubai (1 star) — Chef Anne-Sophie Pic's Dubai outpost brings her signature aromatic, precision-driven French cuisine.
Portuguese:
- Tasca by Jose Avillez (1 star) — Portuguese cuisine at the Mandarin Oriental with an infinity pool setting. The five-course Taste of Tasca menu with exclusive Portuguese wines takes you on a journey through Portugal, featuring Atlantic rice with blue lobster and spoon-tender veal cheeks.
Italian:
- Il Ristorante – Niko Romito (2 stars) — Modern Italian with minimalist design. Worth exploring alongside other Italian restaurants in Dubai for comparison.
British:
- Dinner by Heston Blumenthal (1 star) — Historic British recipes reimagined. The concept transports culinary discoveries from medieval Britain into modern fine dining.
International/Middle Eastern:
- Moonrise (1 star) — Chef Solemann Haddad's 12-seat rooftop fuses Middle Eastern flavors with Japanese techniques and European influences. Each course comes with a postcard featuring a custom story.
- Orfali Brothers (1 star) — Creative, boundary-pushing cuisine from the Syrian-born Orfali brothers.
A small insider note. The difference is visible before you sit down. In some places, the room leads and the kitchen follows. In better places — the ones worth returning to — you feel the kitchen's intention from the first bite.
Standout Michelin restaurants and dining experiences
The standout Michelin restaurants in Dubai are the ones where the meal feels designed, not merely expensive. That usually means a strong chef point of view, a clear tasting-menu logic, and a room that supports the kitchen rather than distracts from it.
Chef-driven concepts and signature tasting menus
Chef-driven Michelin restaurants stand out when the menu reads like a sequence, not a catalog. You notice it in the rhythm. Temperature. Portion size. Sauce work. The handoff between savory and sweet. Nothing random.
Chef Himanshu Saini at Trèsind Studio brings a 14-region journey through India with interactive elements — ornaments placed on the table represent each region visited. His botanic bar resembles a chemistry lab, making spirits through redistillation (including a Masala Chai spirit). The experience lasts roughly three hours, and honestly, you don't feel the time.
Chef Solemann Haddad at Moonrise, entirely self-taught during the 2020 pandemic, cooks around Dubai's food culture — a mix of Indian, Sri Lankan, and Pakistani influences filtered through his Franco-Syrian heritage. As Chef Himanshu Saini himself notes: "He brings back the nostalgia for people who have lived in Dubai for many years."
Chef Dani Garcia at Smoked Room delivers what he calls "Fire Omakase" — smokey notes threading through courses of sea cucumber noodles, dashi tomato snow with smoked mackerel, and dry-aged Kinki with seaweed emulsion. The intimate 14-seat semi-circular table faces an open kitchen where fire and grill are central.
Chef Jose Barroso at Tasca (alongside renowned José Avillez, awarded 3 Knives at The Best Chef Awards) brings Portugal to Dubai with signature dishes like the off-menu grilled Carabineiros prawns — "seriously the best prawns you'll ever have."
A practical test when comparing restaurants:
- Is there a tasting menu with a clear narrative?
- Does the kitchen have a signature style, not just luxury ingredients?
- Are diners choosing the restaurant for the cooking, not only the room?
That last question matters. Especially in Dubai.
Date night, hotel dining and special-occasion restaurants
For date night or a special occasion, hotel restaurants often make the evening easier. Valet is smoother. Arrival is calmer. The transition from lobby to dining room feels intentional. And if you're dressed for dinner in July, that blast of conditioned air after stepping out of the car feels almost ceremonial.
Top hotel-based Michelin restaurants for special occasions:
- Il Ristorante – Niko Romito (2 stars, One&Only One Za'abeel) — Sleek minimalism with harbor views. The calm Italian atmosphere works for both celebrations and intimate dinners.
- STAY by Yannick Alléno (2 stars, One&Only The Palm) — French grandeur suited to milestone celebrations. Expect 3,500+ AED for two with wine pairing.
- Dinner by Heston Blumenthal (1 star, Atlantis The Royal) — The theatrical concept and attentive service suit curious couples. The Meat Fruit alone becomes a story you tell afterward.
- Ossiano (1 star, Atlantis The Palm) — Dine alongside a dramatic aquarium with creative seafood and vegetarian menus. As one expert describes: "The setting is magnificent with huge windows looking into the aquarium."
- Tasca by Jose Avillez (1 star, Mandarin Oriental Jumeira) — The infinity pool and Arabian Gulf views make this hard to beat for daytime or sunset celebrations.
- Al Muntaha (1 star, Burj Al Arab) — Fine dining with panoramic views from the iconic sail-shaped hotel.