Hélène Darroze at The Connaught
Three Michelin stars in the panelled drawing room of Mayfair's most discreet hotel — the defining London fine-dining address.
London's Michelin-dense townhouse rectangle, Green Park to Bond Street
Mayfair is the Green Park-to-Bond Street rectangle that holds more Michelin stars per square mile than any other London neighbourhood. Three of the city's six three-star rooms sit inside its half-mile border — Hélène Darroze at The Connaught, Sketch's Lecture Room, Alain Ducasse at The Dorchester — alongside Gymkhana, BiBi, Umu, Veeraswamy, and the Connaught Bar's regular World's 50 Best Bars top placement. The Hermès money walks Mount Street between Scott's lunch and the Audley pint, and the discreet members' clubs and townhouse hotels are the spine the older Istanbul cosmopolitan returns to season after season. The gezgin books here, references it, and measures every other London hood against it.
16 places
Three Michelin stars in the panelled drawing room of Mayfair's most discreet hotel — the defining London fine-dining address.
Nineteen seats around a single counter, two Michelin stars, and a tasting menu that reads like a daily field report from British producers.
Angela Hartnett's one-star Italian on Queen Street — the civilised Mayfair lunch the neighbourhood's regulars actually keep.
Since 1742 — Jermyn Street oysters, game in season, and a clubland Britain that has stopped existing almost everywhere else.
Mount Street seafood and the city's most consequential lunch crowd — the Mayfair set-piece.
Hauser & Wirth's reimagined Mayfair pub — Sunday roast under a Phyllida Barlow ceiling
Piccadilly's grand café — the Viennese-Parisian brasserie that runs from breakfast to supper
JKS Restaurants' two-Michelin-star Indian on Albemarle Street — Trishna's older Mayfair sister and the standard against which the rest measure themselves.
Britain's oldest Indian restaurant — open on Regent Street since 1926 and now in its hundredth year.
Endo Kazutoshi's rooftop Japanese inside Raffles at the OWO — the operating Endo room while Endo at the Rotunda rebuilds after the 2025 fire.
Bruton Place Kyoto kaiseki — the discreet hidden door, the multi-course menu and the most considered Japanese dining in W1.
River Café DNA, hotel-restaurant comfort — Tuscan cooking on Park Lane
Mayfair mews chophouse since 1952 — beef Wellington and steak-and-kidney pie
Pierre Gagnaire's three-Michelin-star Mayfair drawing room — the most theatrical fine-dining address in W1.
Three Michelin stars on Park Lane — Ducasse's London flagship since 2010, run by Jean-Philippe Blondet.
Chet Sharma's one-Michelin-star Mayfair Indian — the JKS room that reframed regional Indian cooking in 2021.
1 place
5 places
The Mayfair townhouse hotel — three Michelin stars in the dining room, the world's best bar downstairs, and the address that defines W1.
The Brook Street Art Deco grande dame — afternoon tea in the Foyer, a Foyer Bar by Bryan O'Sullivan, and the most famous lobby in London.
The 2023 conversion of the Old War Office on Whitehall — Mauro Colagreco's Michelin-starred Saison, a Guerlain spa, and the most ambitious new opening in the city.
Corbin and King's 1920s-styled Mayfair townhouse — a 73-room Art Deco hotel with an Antony Gormley sculpture you can sleep inside.
London's oldest luxury hotel — 13 connected Georgian townhouses on Albemarle Street, a Michelin-starred Charlie's by Adam Byatt, and Rocco Forte stewardship.
3 places
Piccadilly's 1707 grocery — the food hall, the Diamond Jubilee Tea Salon, the hampers everyone takes home
Britain's oldest wine merchant — 3 St James's Street since 1698, Royal Warrants and a working cellar tour
Davies Street's fine-wine and rare-spirits cathedral — Coravin tasting bar at the back