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SoMa, San Francisco

Benu

Corey Lee's SoMa flagship blends Korean, Cantonese, and Californian detail with three-star composure.

4.8

FlightLogic expert score: 9.5/10 · Editorial composite rating 4.8/5 · ££££ · Asian-American , Contemporary

San Francisco three-star diningKorean-American fine diningQuiet technical meals Three MICHELIN StarsThree MICHELIN Stars CaliforniaFlightLogic Platinum 2026
Exterior of Benu restaurant, San Francisco ★★★ Michelin Stars

Photo: City Foodsters / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY 2.0

Quick answer

Is Benu worth visiting? FlightLogic assigns an expert score of 9.5/10 based on editorial research. The 4.8/5 star figure is an editorial composite for guide comparison — not a verified consumer aggregate. It has 3 Michelin stars. Best for san francisco three-star dining, korean-american fine dining, quiet technical meals.

About Benu

Benu is quiet enough that its ambition can sneak up on you. Corey Lee's menu draws from Korean, Cantonese, and Californian reference points, but the restaurant is not fusion in the loose sense; it is tightly edited, deeply technical, and unusually precise about texture. The most memorable courses often look small before expanding through broth, fermentation, seafood, or pastry detail. San Francisco has several three-star rooms, but Benu remains the one most clearly built from an immigrant fine-dining vocabulary.

Menu highlights

Editorial rating breakdown

Distribution reflects FlightLogic editorial modelling for guide comparison. See published excerpts below.

Published reviews

Sorted by date (newest first). We do not reorder by rating or “helpfulness”. Review integrity policy

  1. 5.0
    Editorial sample

    The cooking is polished without feeling anonymous, especially when the kitchen leans into asian-american detail instead of luxury for its own sake. It is expensive, but the service rhythm and wine advice made the longer menu feel measured.

    — Sarah Mitchell ·
  2. 5.0
    Editorial sample

    Benu feels completely anchored in SoMa: the room, pacing, and benu tasting menu all make the meal feel specific rather than imported. The strongest courses had a clear point of view and enough restraint to avoid turning dinner into a demonstration.

    — Yuki Tanaka ·

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How far ahead should I book Benu?

For prime dinner seats, book at least two to three months ahead; tasting counters and weekend tables usually move fastest.

Is Benu best for a full tasting menu?

Yes. Benu serves a single tasting menu, and the range of broths, seafood, and fermentation needs the full arc.