
These are the world's best restaurants – and two are in London
Maido, opened by Lima-born chef Mitsuharu 'Micha' Tsumura in 2009, took the top spot in the World's 50 Best Restaurants 2025, an annual ranking widely recognised as reflecting global fine dining trends. The list was revealed at a chef-packed ceremony at Turin's Lingotto Fiere convention centre on Thursday 19 June.
Skip to:
The World's 50 Best Restaurants 2025
The top five
Maido's win cements Nikkei cuisine – the fusion of Japanese techniques and Peruvian ingredients, rooted in the Japanese diaspora in Peru – on the global culinary stage. Chef-owner Tsumura, son of Japanese immigrants, showcases this heritage through a multi-course menu featuring dishes like squid ramen with Amazon chorizo, Peru's national dish ceviche, and nigiri.
As confetti showered the stage, the Maido team celebrated their popular victory. Tsumura called it 'the most beautiful thing that has happened in my life [...] a dream come true,' adding that Maido is about 'having fun' and 'democratising deliciousness.'
The win means long-standing Basque Country restaurant Asador Etxebarri remains in second place, with Quintonil (Mexico City) third, DiverXO (Madrid) fourth, and Copenhagen's Alchemist fifth.
Rankings are based on independently adjudicated votes from 1,120 restaurant experts, including chefs, restaurateurs and writers. Restaurants cannot be nominated or apply for inclusion; judges vote based on recent visits.
Maido succeeds Barcelona hotspot and 2024 number one Disfrutar, which joins the best of the best group of past winners, including Heston Blumenthal's Fat Duck (2005) and Lima's Central (2023) – making them ineligible for future World's 50 Best lists.
It was a strong night for Bangkok, with six of its restaurants on the list. Progressive Thai-Chinese venue Potong was the highest new entry at 13, and its chef-owner Pichaya 'Pam' Soontornyanakij won the best female chef award.
Ikoyi in central London, praised by The Telegraph as 'terrific' for its vivid, imaginative and immaculately cooked dishes, won the 'highest climber' award. The restaurant, which layers hyper-seasonal British ingredients with West African flavours, soared from 42nd place in 2024 to 15th. Chef and co-owner Jeremy Chan said, 'I'm very surprised and very grateful. I feel proud to represent British cuisine, produce and technique on the world stage.'
Kol, Mayfair's contemporary Mexican-British fusion restaurant by Santiago Lastra – hailed by The Telegraph as 'the most ambitious and exciting new booking in London' when it opened in 2020 – held onto its top 50 spot but slipped from 17th to 49th.
In the previously revealed top 100 ranking there was further UK success: Tomos Parry's Basque-inspired Mountain in Soho placed 74th, and the modern British Clove Club in Bethnal Green came in 86th. However, open-fire restaurant Brat and three Michelin-starred Core by Clare Smyth both dropped out.
Isaac McHale, chef-owner of The Clove Club, said London is 'a victim of its own success,' explaining that with so many great restaurants, visitors with limited time have fewer chances to vote for any one spot. In less saturated cities, he said, diners' attention is more focused.
Individual awards at the World's 50 Best ceremony also recognised Australian First Nations food and culture, a contemporary Egyptian restaurant near the Giza Pyramids and sustainability champions. But the final word went to chef Tsumura, whose persistence at Maido has paid off: 'Nikkei cuisine wasn't well known in the streets, and now it's known all over the world.'
The World's 50 Best Restaurants 2025
50. Restaurant Jan – Munich, Germany (new entry)
49. Kol – London, UK
48. Celele – Cartagena, Colombia (new entry and winner of sustainable restaurant award)
47. Vyn – Skillinge, Sweden (new entry)
46. Rosetta – Mexico City, Mexico
45. Arpège – Paris, France
44. La Cime – Osaka, Japan
43. Uliassi – Senegallia, Italy
42. Belcanto – Lisbon, Portugal
41. Kadeau – Copenhagen, Denmark
40. Septime – Paris, France
39. Mayta – Lima, Peru
38. Frantzén – Stockholm, Sweden
37. Orfali Bros – Dubai, UAE
36. Florilege – Tokyo, Japan
35. Nusara – Bangkok, Thailand (new entry)
34. Enigma – Barcelona, Spain (new entry)
33. Steirereck – Vienna, Austria
32. Piazza Duomo – Alba, Italy
31. Le Calandre – Rubano, Italy
30. Le Du – Bangkok, Thailand
29. Mingles – Seoul, South Korea
28. Lasai – Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (new entry)
27. Tresind Studio – Dubai, UAE (best restaurant in Middle East)
26. Mérito – Lima, Peru (new entry)
25. Odette – Singapore
24. Elkano – Getaria, Spain
23. Boragó – Santiago, Chile
22. Suhring – Bangkok, Thailand
21. Narisawa – Tokyo, Japan
20. Atelier Moessmer Norbert Niederkofler – Brunico, Italy (new entry)
19. The Chairman – Hong Kong
18. Reale – Castel di Sangro, Italy
17. Sorn – Bangkok, Thailand
16. Lido 84 – Gardone Riviera, Italy
15. Ikoyi – London, UK (highest climber award)
14. Plenitude – Paris
13. Potong – Bangkok, Thailand (highest new entry)
12. Atomix – New York, USA
11. Wing – Hong Kong (art of hospitality award)
10. Don Julio – Buenos Aires, Argentina
9. Kjolle – Lima, Peru
8. Table by Bruno Verjus – Paris, France
7. Sézanne – Tokyo, Japan
6. Gaggan – Bangkok, Thailand (best restaurant in Asia)
The top five
5. Alchemist, Copenhagen, Denmark
Theatrical cooking – and then some. Dinner at chef Rasmus Munk's restaurant is a multi-sensory experience unfolding over several mind-bending hours and 50 edible 'impressions'. A ticket will set you back 5,400 DKK (£618) – if you're lucky enough to get one.
4. DiverXO, Madrid, Spain
Visionary chef Dabiz Muñoz takes diners on a rollercoaster ride of unexpected flavours, blending his Spanish heritage with bold Asian influences. Dishes on the 15-course menu might include blue crab with kimchi ice cream and wild strawberries.
3. Quintonil, Mexico City, Mexico
Chef Jorge Vallejo celebrates Mexico with a creative spin on native ingredients, many of which are grown just steps from the restaurant. Bluefin tuna aguachile and duck tamales might feature, along with a touch of entomophagy – think tacos with chicatana ants.
2. Asador Etxebarri, Atxondo, Spain
It's 35 years since chef Bittor Arguinzoniz opened this now-legendary grill restaurant in his home village in the Basque Country. Diners flock here for a menu where exceptional local ingredients are kissed by flame – even the smoked milk ice cream with beetroot juice that rounds off the meal.
1. Maido, Lima, Peru
Nikkei cuisine from the global master of Japanese-Peruvian fusion. Chef Mitsuharu Tsumura's multi-course menu is led by fish, with dishes such as squid ramen with Amazon chorizo and nigiri made from the day's catch. A favourite in the gastronomic world – he won the World's 50 Best Chef's Choice Award in 2024 – he pairs inventive cooking with warm hospitality at his city-centre restaurant (fittingly, maido means 'welcome' in Japanese).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
15 minutes ago
- Reuters
Colombia's Ecopetrol posts Q2 profit down 46%
BOGOTA, Aug 12 (Reuters) - Colombia's state oil producer Ecopetrol ( opens new tab on Tuesday posted a 46% slump in its net profit for the second quarter of 2025, landing at 1.81 trillion pesos (around $450 million) while total sales dipped 9% to 29.67 trillion pesos.


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
For once Channel 4 has produced a brilliant drama
British women caught drug smuggling abroad tend to be of a certain type, if the news stories are anything to go by: 20-somethings with a better understanding of Snapchat filters than the penalties for drug trafficking, too dim to realise that extending a holiday from Ibiza or Thailand to Lima or Tbilisi might look the teeniest bit suspicious. But In Flight (Channel 4), a propulsive new thriller, chooses a different kind of protagonist. Jo (Katherine Kelly) is a hard-working flight attendant. Her world falls apart when her 19-year-old son is jailed in Bulgaria for a crime he swears he didn't commit, and two heavies turn up at her house to tell her that they will arrange for him to meet a grisly fate in prison unless she agrees to become a drugs mule. 'If you refuse our proposal, we'll kill your son. If you go to the police, we'll kill your son. If you talk to a lawyer, your boss, a friend, we'll kill your son. If you do anything other than exactly what we tell you to do, we'll kill your son.' Put this way, Jo doesn't look to have many options. What follows are six episodes of stress and suspense as she tries to escape from the trap. Cabin crew are unlikely to come under suspicion, so Jo is a canny choice. Most mules, she is told, get caught because they travel too often, they travel too light and they look guilty. On her first run, Jo is terrified, but before you can say 'Peru Two' she's become a dab hand at it. At the same time, she's desperate for a way out, enlisting the help of an old flame (Ashley Thomas), an ex-police officer who works for the Border Force. Six episodes of Jo becoming increasingly miserable or hysterical wouldn't make a great series, so writers Adam Randall (Slow Horses) and Mike Walden (Marcella) give her character inner reserves. Her immediate goals are to save her son from harm and turn the tables on her tormentors. Cormac (Stuart Martin) is the Northern Irish gangster who puts the frighteners on Jo. As luck would have it, he's pretty hot. Can you see where this storyline might go? If you're being threatened by someone from a murderous drugs cartel, it does soften the blow when they're handsome and the rendezvous can take place over drinks in the plush bar of a Bangkok hotel. Channel 4 doesn't have a great track record when it comes to drama, but this one is a cut above their usual fare and could sit just as happily on ITV primetime or Netflix. Although Netflix would definitely have thrown some more money at it – the production values are a bit cheap and dreary. For a series set in various international locations, you never get the sense that it's being filmed anywhere other than a cold European country. Kelly is great in the lead role, playing an ordinary person caught in an extraordinary situation. On the one hand, she's engaged in this high-stakes, life-or-death mission; on the other, she's maintaining a facade and joking around with colleagues (Ambreen Razia, as fellow flight attendant Zara, brings just the right note of normality). I'm sure we could nitpick about how likely all of this is – why don't the airport sniffer dogs find Jo out? – but just enjoy it for what it is: a lean and effective thriller.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Chevron-chartered tanker docks at Venezuela to load oil after new US license
HOUSTON, Aug 12 (Reuters) - A Chevron-chartered (CVX.N), opens new tab tanker docked at Venezuelan state company PDVSA's Jose terminal on Tuesday, positioning it to be the first to export crude to the United States under a new license Chevron received in July, LSEG tracking data showed. The U.S. Treasury Department late last month authorized Chevron to operate in the sanctioned OPEC nation again, export its oil and do swaps with PDVSA through a restricted license banning any payments to Venezuela's government. Chevron suspended loading of Venezuelan crude in April ahead of its prior license's expiration on May 27. The Bahamas-flagged tanker Canopus Voyager arrived in Venezuelan waters last week and will load Hamaca heavy crude, which is produced by a joint venture between Chevron and PDVSA. At least five other vessels that Chevron had used to transport Venezuelan crude to the U.S. were near or navigating toward the South American country's waters on Tuesday, the LSEG data showed. Vessel MediterraneanVoyager was near the Bajo Grande port in Venezuela's western region waiting for authorization to load Boscan heavy crude, while Nave Cosmos, Sea Jaguar, Ionic Anax and Nave Neutrino signaled Aruba, a popular location for ship-to-ship transfers of Venezuelan crude, the LSEG data showed. Chevron did not reply to questions about the tankers, instead saying that it conducts business in compliance with laws, and sanctions frameworks. PDVSA did not immediately reply to a request for comment.