Tasting menu€€1er
Circle is blind-tasting michelin star from chef bastian ruga at the former prairial address in the 1er, with no carte and a small dining room.
Why locals love it: Blind-tasting Michelin star from chef Bastian Ruga at the former Prairial address in the 1er, with no carte and a small dining room.
Tip: Book via the site three weeks ahead; Wed-Sat dinner only Word-of-mouth is the only marketing.
French bistro€€4e
L'Oiseau Perche on Rue de Cuire in Lyon's 4e is the lunch-only Croix-Rousse bistro with a short market-driven carte and a quiet neighbourhood crowd.
Why locals love it: Lunch-only Croix-Rousse 4e neighbourhood bistro, no website signage, walk-in chalkboard.
Tip: Arrive at 12:00 for a seat; closed weekends.
Bakery€€2e
Le 117 on Rue Mercier in Lyon's 2e is the small artisan-bread counter where the country loaf and long-fermented baguettes sell out by midday.
Why locals love it: Small Rue Mercier counter, no signage, locals only know.
Tip: Country loaf sells out by midday; arrive before 11:00 Word-of-mouth is the only marketing.
French regional€€6e
Le Bouchon Sully on Rue Sully in Lyon's 6e is Julien Gautier's 2014 labelled-bouchon with traditional Lyonnais specialities and a €21 lunch carte.
Why locals love it: On Rue Sully a block from the Tete d'Or park entry, well off the Vieux Lyon bouchon trail.
Tip: Closed Sunday; the lunch carte at €21 is the value play Word-of-mouth is the only marketing.
French regional€€
La Tete de Lard in Lyon's 1er near the Opera is the 2009 bouchon run by Bernard and Yoann Blanc, with checkered tablecloths, stone walls and a Label Bouchons.
Order: The brioche sausage with caramelised onions, then the blood sausage with apple.
Why locals love it: The Rue Desiree address is three blocks from the Opera but never on tourist maps; the dining room seats 40 and fills with Lyonnais office workers who treat it as their canteen.
Tip: Evening only Wed-Sat; two seatings at 19:00 and 21:30. Book a fortnight ahead.
Wine bar€€
Micro Sillon on Place Fernand Rey in Lyon's 1er is the natural-wine bar and cave a manger that lives on local reputation, with a chalkboard menu and a tight.
Order: Whatever the chalkboard shows; the natural-white by the glass is the opening move.
Why locals love it: Place Fernand Rey is a small square most visitors walk through without stopping; the 20-cover room inside does not advertise, takes no walk-ins and fills on word of mouth alone.
Tip: Closed Sunday-Tuesday; book ahead via Instagram; small room.