Nice Restaurants
Ranked by occasion suitabilityGet the complete city dining guide.
New openings, reservation tips, and editor picks — updated quarterly. Free to join.
$ under $40 · $$ $40–$80 · $$$ $80–$150 · $$$$ $150+ per person
Best for First Date in Nice
Nice offers an embarrassment of first-date riches. The city's intimate scale and inherent romance mean the question is not whether the evening will be beautiful, but which beautiful you prefer. Onice delivers the electricity of a Michelin-starred new opening in the historic port quarter — intimate, inventive, the kind of meal that fills the conversational gaps naturally. Restaurant JAN creates its own world: 24 seats, a genre-defying menu, and the sense that you've discovered something together. For something more relaxed but undeniably romantic, Le Bistrot des Serruriers in Vieux Nice offers warmth, candlelight, and niçoise cooking at prices that leave room for the bottle upgrade. On a warm evening, Le Plongeoir above the sea makes a first impression that requires no other effort. Explore all our picks for first date restaurants.
Best for Business Dinner in Nice
Nice has always had a dual identity — a pleasure city that nonetheless takes money seriously. The Promenade de Anglais corridor sees more deals quietly closed over dinner than most boardrooms manage in a month. Flaveur is the apex: two Michelin stars signal seriousness to any client, while the Tourteaux brothers' cuisine provides genuine conversational material. Le Chantecler at the Negresco carries institutional weight — walking into the hotel's Belle Époque grandeur tells your guest something specific about your judgement. For closing rather than impressing, Le Bistrot de JAN provides the starred kitchen's ethos in a more conversational setting. La Petite Maison remains the city's de facto power table — where the Côte d'Azur's establishment has always dined, and where being seen carries its own value. See all business dinner picks.
Dining in Nice — A Complete Guide
Nice occupies a singular position in the world's dining landscape — a city of 340,000 people that punches well above its weight in gastronomic ambition, anchored by a local cuisine (niçoise) so distinct and flavourful that it constitutes its own culinary tradition. This is not Provençal cooking transposed to the coast; it is something older, more particular, shaped by centuries of Sardinian, Italian, and Ligurian influence and the specific produce of this stretch of Mediterranean shoreline. The olives, the stockfish, the anchovies, the chickpea flour — these ingredients form a vocabulary that Nice's best chefs, from the humblest socca vendor to the Michelin-starred kitchen, speak fluently.
The city's dining geography divides neatly. Vieux Nice — the Baroque old town behind the Promenade des Anglais — is the epicentre of traditional niçoise eating. The narrow streets around Cours Saleya (the city's legendary flower and food market) are lined with restaurants of every level, from the unmissable La Merenda, where former two-star chef Dominique Le Stanc cooks market vegetables and slow-braised meats in a 25-seat room with no phone and no reservations, to Jacques en Terrasse with its theatrical terrace above the stalls. The port quarter, centred on the old harbour, has in recent years become Nice's most dynamic dining neighbourhood — Restaurant JAN established itself here first, and the starred newcomer Onice has confirmed the area's transformation.
At the summit, Nice now holds five Michelin stars. Flaveur, with two, remains the city's most intellectually serious kitchen — the Tourteaux brothers' approach to niçoise ingredients is creative without ever becoming abstract, and their dining room on rue Gubernatis is tight, focused, and charged with the particular energy of a room that knows it is operating at a high level. Le Chantecler, the Negresco's flagship, offers something different: the single star functions almost as an understatement for a dining experience in which the room, the service, the cellar, and Virginie Basselot's Mediterranean haute cuisine all operate in harmony. It is the most total evening in Nice — the kind that justifies travelling to the city expressly for the purpose.
The Riviera context matters for understanding Nice's dining culture. Monaco and its constellation of starred restaurants are forty minutes east; Cannes is thirty minutes west; and Mirazur in Menton — for years ranked among the world's very best — is the region's pole star. Nice exists within this rarefied regional context, and its chefs are aware of what they are competing against. The result is a dining scene of genuine ambition, one that has transcended its postcard reputation to become a serious destination for anyone who cares about eating at the highest level in France.
Frequently Asked
Dining in Nice
How many restaurants does Restaurants for Kings rank in Nice?
Our Nice editorial covers the city's top tier — Michelin-starred rooms, flagship chef-driven restaurants, iconic institutions, and the best new openings. Every restaurant listed has been personally reviewed by a named editor and scored on Food, Ambience, and Value.
How do I get a reservation at a top Nice restaurant?
For the highest-demand rooms in Nice, book 4-8 weeks in advance via OpenTable, Resy, Tock, or SevenRooms depending on the restaurant. For flagship tasting menus, reservations often open on the 1st of the month for the following month — set a calendar alert. Concierge services at Amex Centurion, Quintessentially, and top hotels can pull tables at shorter notice for $200-500.
What's the best restaurant in Nice for closing a business deal?
Our Nice editors rank deal-closing restaurants on the same criteria site-wide: acoustic privacy, power-table visibility, service pace, and discreet check handling. See our 'Best for Closing a Deal' section above for the current top picks in the city, with editorial scores and reservation difficulty ratings.
Which Nice restaurant is best for a first date?
First-date restaurants in Nice are scored on conversation-friendly acoustics, impression without intimidation, and menu flexibility. The city's top first-date rooms are listed in our 'Best for First Date' section — all have banquette or semi-private seating, under-75-dB acoustics, and service that retreats after ordering.
How expensive is fine dining in Nice?
Top-tier restaurants in Nice run $200-500 per person for a la carte at a flagship room; $350-800 per person for tasting menus at Michelin-starred or chef's-counter rooms. We score every restaurant on Value separately from Food and Ambience — a $680 tasting can score 10/10 on Value if the experience delivers at that price.
Does Restaurants for Kings take money from Nice restaurants to rank them?
No. We do not accept payment, PR hospitality, or sponsorships that influence rankings. Every restaurant in our Nice directory was visited anonymously and reviewed on the editor's own tab where possible. Any hospitality extended is disclosed on the individual restaurant page. Sponsored content is labelled separately and sits outside the editorial ranking grid.