RestaurantsLondonCovent GardenWC2

survey result

Summary

£88
 ££££
3
Good
4
Very Good
5
Exceptional
* Based on a three course dinner, half a bottle of wine, coffee, cover charge, service and VAT.

“Proper old-school dining and a style of service rarely found nowadays” maintains the highest enthusiasm for London’s oldest restaurant: on this site in Covent Garden since 1798, and with “beautiful olde worlde decor” that looks like you’ve just “stepped back in time” to the era of Dickens, complete with “lovely wood panels and old paintings adorning the walls”. Of course the tourists flock, especially Yanks, and have for decades – get over it: it’s still an annual “tried and trusted” treat for many locals who “make an annual pilgrimage and hope the traditions remain for the next generation”. Its “seasonal, rich and wonderfully hearty British cooking” has proved of remarkably enduring quality over many years: “the beef pudding with an oyster? yes please, it’s is as good as it gets” (“superb, suet-encased, served with extra gravy”); and “the game in season is always good if a bit expensive” (e.g. “half a tender and flavourful roast partridge with bread sauce”). Top Tip – there’s also “a super bar upstairs that too many customers ignore”; “a favourite spot for a proper Black Velvet: that magical mix of champagne and Guinness devised during the time when Queen Victoria was in mourning”.

Summary

£85
 ££££
3
Good
3
Good
5
Exceptional
* Based on a three course dinner, half a bottle of wine, coffee, cover charge, service and VAT.

“Step back in time at London’s oldest restaurant” – on this site, in Covent Garden, since 1798 – “where the best of British resounds in its decor, menu and ambience”. “Sometimes derided for being outdated or a tourist trap” (“fellow guests were either Yanks or elderly Brexiteers”), it actually remains remarkably “popular with the locals” and its large fan club says “a visit should be on everyone’s bucket list”. Hollywood would be proud of the decor (“it looks like the kind of place you dine in before deciding to conquer a remote land in the name of the crown”) and – though some of its antique furnishings are vaguely “preposterous” – the “special time warp” that’s created is “enchanting”. The “classic” menu has a fair share of “old-school-boy favourites” featuring a good amount of meat and game; and although it is “expensive” and “won’t blow you away”, it is “done well”. “The wine list is OK if not great (sort of gentlemen’s club level) but at least the mark-ups are reasonable”. “Don’t forget to visit the hidden gem of an upstairs cocktail bar to get the full experience”. Top Menu Tip – “the old fashioned steak and kidney suet pudding with rich extra gravy in a silver boat. Crisp on the outside, meltingly soft on the inside with gloriously tender pieces of meat”.

Summary

£83
 ££££
3
Good
3
Good
5
Exceptional
* Based on a three course dinner, half a bottle of wine, coffee, cover charge, service and VAT.

“What’s not to like about the oldest restaurant in London?” – in continuous operation on the same Covent Garden site since 1798. Of course, it’s “popular with tourists”, but its “quintessentially British” style makes it an “old favourite” for many Londoners too, and it provides “a beautiful, traditional experience”. The atmosphere of the beautiful dining room is “exceptional” and the “old school cuisine, with an emphasis on meat and game”, is very dependable; and backed up by an “extensive, if quite expensive wine list”. Top Menu Tip – “lovely steak ’n’ kidney pie”.

Summary

£83
 ££££
3
Good
4
Very Good
5
Exceptional
* Based on a three course dinner, half a bottle of wine, coffee, cover charge, service and VAT.

“It could so easily be a tacky tourist trap and is a bit pricey”, but there remains a whole lot of love for this Dickensian landmark in Covent Garden (London’s oldest restaurant to operate continuously on the same site – since 1798). The “beautiful” period dining room is “steeped in West End history and character” and the menu is “proper old-school” too – “no surprises, nothing extraordinary, but well-cooked and professionally served” grills, game, pies and puds. “And they do wonderful cocktails upstairs” too in the “splendid bar”. Top Menu Tip – “well worth it for old favourites like steak ’n’ kidney pudding followed by sponge pudding”.

For 35 years we've been curating reviews of the UK's most notable restaurant. In a typical year, diners submit over 50,000 reviews to create the most authoritative restaurant guide in the UK. Each year, the guide is re-written from scratch based on this survey (although for the 2021 edition, reviews are little changed from 2020 as no survey could run for that year).

Have you eaten at Rules?

35 Maiden Ln, London, WC2E 7LB

Restaurant details

Yes
Highchair,Portions
10, 18
No shorts
133
Yes

Rules Restaurant Diner Reviews

Reviews of Rules Restaurant in WC2, London by users of Hardens.com. Also see the editors review of Rules restaurant.
Anna H
Always come here for grouse and it never di...
Reviewed 4 months, 7 days ago

"Always come here for grouse and it never disappoints. This Christmas lunch was rather less successful, seated upstairs in the cocktail bar. The chicken pie a bit soggy, steak anbd kidney pie similarly but smoked ell and potted shrimps lived up tp expectations. Friendly and competent service. . "

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Andy C
Bravo ...
Reviewed 4 months, 13 days ago

" Bravo "

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What the Newspaper Critics are saying

The Times

In his first review since joining the FT, Jay Rayner headed to London’s oldest restaurant, est. 1798 – a place where he has his own history. His late mother treated him lunch there almost 50 years ago, and he tasted his first oysters and Sancerre.

The restaurant has its own history, of course, but “has never been a prisoner of its history”.

“Rules bellows British, but in truth it has more in common with the great brasseries of Paris, places such as Bofinger and La Coupole, than it does with tatty pubs banging on about homegrown classics.” And, Jay added, a lot of the British dishes on the menu – Cornish crab salad, steak and kidney pudding – require “armfuls of French technique”.

“There are game chips, a fancy name for lattice crisps, hot from the deep-fat fryer. Anyone who does not love those has no business being in a restaurant”. To finish, a “glowing dome of steamed sponge pudding” that “manages to be both adult and childish. All the best desserts are.”

Jay Rayner - 2025-03-23

The Times

The Sunday Times unveiled Camilla Long, one of its heavyweight columnists, as its new restaurant critic this week – dispatching her for her first review, as custom apparently has it, to London’s oldest restaurant (est. 1798).

Rules is well-known to Camilla after possibly a hundred visits; it’s an institution she loves for a brand of confidence that is “so rare in restaurants as to be almost erotic”, and for a raffish atmosphere. There’s an upstairs cocktail bar, once “Edward VII’s sex lair”, and the feeling that the whole place is “a bit wayward and leery, about six months from needing a serious refit. But then, when you’re over two hundred years old, why make any effort? Bothering about loos is common, isn’t it?”

So what did she make of the victuals? “Acres of succulent brown food, game, shrimp, puddings. The main cooking method seems to be ‘imperial fug’. Potted shrimps are soft and silken in their pot — there’s a fat wodge of bread, more than enough to go around — and duck rillettes are gamey, spicy, fabulous, with a big earthy dollop of armagnac chutney. A roast crown of lean mallard is served pink, with salsify, mushrooms and quince. It’s fine. And then there is Rules’s — what’s the dumb phrase? — hero dish, steamed steak and kidney pudding.”

Camilla Long - 2026-02-08

Prices

Traditional European menu

Starter Main Pudding
£14.10 £33.00 £10.50
Drinks  
Wine per bottle £45.00
Filter Coffee £0.00
Extras  
Bread £0.00
Service 10.00%
35 Maiden Ln, London, WC2E 7LB
Opening hours
MondayCLOSED
Tuesday12 pm‑10 pm
Wednesday12 pm‑10 pm
Thursday12 pm‑10 pm
Friday12 pm‑11 pm
Saturday12 pm‑11 pm
Sunday12 pm‑10 pm

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