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The Mediterranean • Eat & drink • New restaurant openings in Paris to watch in 2026
Paris in 2026 is running hot and tight: costs keep rising, margins are squeezed, so the openings that land tend to be smaller, chef-led and built around a clear idea, not a sprawling menu. The hype cycle is brutal and bookings go fast. This edit tracks the debuts in Paris, France worth your appetite.
Top photography courtesy of Matthieu Salvaing and Club Bus Palladium
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Pigalle’s Bus Palladium has always been more useful after dark, and the reboot keeps that instinct alive. The restaurant-bar puts chef Valentin Raffali on a product-led French menu that reads sharp without going formal: white asparagus with flouve, amberjack with sorrel, barbecue red mullet with tartare sauce, Lozère lamb and a morel vol-au-vent. Drinks and small plates carry the room towards club hours. Then the revived Bus Palladium club picks up the 1965 rock-and-nightlife mythology with concerts, parties and Lionel Bensemoun steering the programme. The 35-room five-star hotel Bus Palladium sits above for those who want the full descent.
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Mineral obsession gives Quartz Café its own charge in Paris’s 7th arrondissement, where architect and designer Sophie Dries has built a speciality coffee spot that feels more design-world hideout than standard caffeine stop. The room is tiny and standing-only, with pleated café curtains, a Corten steel floor, metallic details and a red plywood bench outside. Baristas work with beans from Paris roaster Partisan, matcha from Kyoto via Komā and pastries by Toutia that lean into cocoa, sesame, yuzu and other earthier notes. Even the water gets the full treatment, filtered and remineralised through dolomite containing quartz.
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Green is the brief and Café Lacoste commits. In Paris’s 8th arrondissement, this is Lacoste’s first standalone café in the city, built with Riccardo Giraudi’s Giraudi Group, and it leans into tennis codes without doing costume. The room is compact at around 100 square metres with about 65 seats, so it works best as a quick stop between errands, not a three-hour camp-out. Coffee comes from Paris roaster Brûlerie de Belleville. Order the L’Eau de Croco – coconut water, matcha, ginger – then move on to the club sandwich.
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Paris’s first arrondissement gets loud in the right way at Kubaba, the 2026 Levantine restaurant from Benjamin Cohen and Julien Casbas of Dalia Group. Near Place du Marché Saint-Honoré, it spreads across 360 square metres, three floors and a former butcher’s shop, with architect and designer Laleh Amir Assefi pushing the room into leopard carpet, tapestry, dark wood and khaïma tent drama. Order malka bread with cardamom-pistachio butter, tahini miso and zhoug, then halloumi-spinach cigars, carrots with labneh, tanjia-style veal, vegetable pastilla or pistachio cake. The 140-seat scale keeps the room busy.
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A few blocks from the Eiffel Tower orbit, Kalve’s Paris shop is Latvia’s specialty roaster doing what it does best: a tight bar, calm service and coffee that doesn’t need extras. It’s the brand’s 11th location, designed by Field Studio with a moody, mineral interior concept Kalve calls ‘Archive of Lost Plants’. Espresso is the default order, then switch to filter if you want to taste what the roastery is chasing. Beans are on the shelf for home brewing, so you can keep the habit going once you leave the neighbourhood.
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In Paris’s 18th arrondissement, Chez Elisa keeps it tight with a short, rotating menu that reads bistro, then quietly swerves. Starters run from vichyssoise to fish rillettes with toast and pickles, or oeufs cocotte with ham and Comté. Mains go comforting: pulled beef bourguignon with gnocchi, a stew of beans and shellfish, or fried rice done classic or vegetarian. Desserts stick the landing with tiramisu, apple crumble or chocolate mousse. Everything is house-made, with ingredients chosen responsibly.
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