The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Want a table at Annabel’s? There’s now a website for that

Ed Cumming

- The New Yorker

talks to the people earning hundreds of pounds selling exclusive restaurant reservatio­ns nnabel’s, the private members’ club in Mayfair’s Berkeley Square, prides itself on being one of the most exclusive venues in London, if not the world. This is the watering hole of royalty and rockstars, where everyone from Mick Jagger to Princess Beatrice heads to wet their beaks. It is even said to be the only club Elizabeth II ever went to. Security is tighter than a Swiss bank vault.

Prospectiv­e members must apply with a letter of recommenda­tion from another member before their applicatio­n will be considered by a committee. Then there are the fees, which currently stand at £3,750 per year, plus a £1,850 joining list. It has been reported that more than 10,000 people are on the waiting list. The only way to access the club’s opulent rooms is to be a member, or the guest of one.

That is where Appointmen­t Trader, a website where you can buy and sell reservatio­ns, comes in. Since it was founded in 2021, the company has quickly grown in the US, especially New York, whose cutthroat restaurant culture makes London look like a parish tea party. Customers can bid on slots, which are priced according to demand. Bookings at the most in-demand spots at peak times can go for hundreds of dollars, or more, while the top resellers can make up to

A$70,000 a year. According to the site’s founder, Jonas Frey, London is quickly following New York’s lead. “New York was the market where it took off very quickly,” he says, speaking from his home in Miami. “But we had a lot of travellers coming from the US to London, so that’s when it started taking off there too. “We only work when there’s over-demand,” he adds. “Paris and London are kind of slow in the winter, but pick up like crazy in the summer.” If you are a visiting potentate, determined to check out all the best places in a short space of time, Appointmen­t Trader enables you simply to pay for it.

Appointmen­t Trader’s list of the

UK’s most in-demand restaurant­s is a pantheon of fancy spots: Core by Clare Smyth, Novikov, Sexy Fish.

More controvers­ially, the site also lists Annabel’s, depending on the day of the week. Reservatio­ns at Annabel’s are listed for anything between £92 and £214 for a prime weekend slot. The possibilit­y that they are available for sale is likely to alarm purists, accustomed to thinking everyone there is either a member or a guest of one. “What we’re rolling out for clubs like Annabel’s is that a member can sign up [to Appointmen­t Trader] and then you can bid to sit at a table with a member,” Frey says. You become the member’s “friend”, temporaril­y, for a fee, and they grant access.

One wonders why someone paying nearly £4,000 to be a member of Annabel’s would want to sell on their access for little more than pocket money, but Frey says it is surprising­ly common. “What’s funny about private clubs is you get wealthy people, but you also have people who want to look wealthy. They spend more money than they should. So they love it when they can get £1,000 here and there.”

“I spoke to a senior figure at Annabel’s on a Zoom call,” Frey laughs. “He hates me with a passion. He said if they ever find out who is doing this, [the member] is out.”

Annabel’s strongly rejects the idea that access can be bought in this way. “It is not permitted for any member to sell or offer for sale, directly or indirectly, any table, reservatio­n, proposal for membership, or access to the club in any manner whatsoever,” says Tom Pascall, the PR manager.

“It is not permitted for any person (whether a member or otherwise) to gain access to the club or to apply for membership via any third-party concierge service(s), or to assist any person to do the same.”

In one sense, Appointmen­t Trader is simplifyin­g a market that has always existed. Frey, a software engineer, was inspired to start the site in 2021 after finding himself unable to secure a booking to renew his driving licence. “I thought, ‘How is it possible that I can’t pay for a spot in line?’” he told

earlier this week.

“It’s just a market,” Frey says. “When we started, we got a cease-and-desist letter from practicall­y every large chain. They wanted to be taken off the site. They said we were just a bunch of hobos trying to make a quick buck.”

The platform takes 30 per cent of

Highly desirable: Novikov in Berkeley Street, Mayfair, is one of the leading restaurant­s whose bookings are being traded online

the transactio­n, but must contend with no-show fees, spoof reservatio­ns, fake credit cards and hostile restaurant­s. If the whole thing feels starkly mercantile, it’s also true that one way or another, popular restaurant­s have always been rationed. Some places do it by queue, or price, or whether you went to school with the maître d’, or tipped like a lottery winner last time.

“The old system was complicate­d and expensive because there was no competitio­n,” Frey says. “There were hustlers, but they would charge an arm and a leg for a reservatio­n. But our average take is $100 – it’s a young profession­al that wants to take a date out, or their boss.” In the internet era, new booking skills have emerged. Sites such as Resy and SevenRooms build comprehens­ive data on diners, which means restaurant­s can portion out access and special treatment. They might know if you prefer a certain kind

1.

Gymkhana, Albemarle Street, Mayfair. Suggested price range: £92-£256

2. Zuma, Raphael Street, Knightsbri­dge, £80-180

3. Core by

Clare Smyth, Kensington Park Road, Notting Hill, £92-£408

4. Novikov, Berkeley Street, Mayfair, £72-£220

5. The Fat Duck, Berkshire, £92-£172 of compliment­ary drink, but they will also know if you are stingy.

The Devonshire, in Soho, a pub with a restaurant above it by Piccadilly Circus, is perhaps the most popular new London opening of the past year. They reserve slots weekly, with new ones opening up on a Thursday. (Appointmen­t Trader lists The Devonshire, although confusingl­y gives the address of a pub of the same name in Balham, which is less likely to have a high resale demand for places.)

“Weird things are happening,” says Oisin Rogers, the co-owner of The Devonshire. “I was told that one of our tables appeared on eBay, which is bonkers. None of us have any experience of this. It’s quite an embarrassi­ng problem to have. Secondary markets are really out of our hands.” Frey, however, says other restaurant­s are taking a different view of the situation. “The funny thing is that restaurant­s all pretend as though they weren’t businesses, that they were some esoteric club that doesn’t need to make money,” Frey says. “But in the US we have restaurant­s that are on-boarded with us, and filling their own bids. They can monetise being oversold for Formula 1, that sort of thing. It’s beautiful, because you can’t tell online whether it is a reseller selling the table, or the restaurant itself.” It might not be long before restaurant­s in London, which like their US counterpar­ts operate on tight margins at the best of times, realise that they can make money from their popularity, as well as the prices on the menu. Maybe even Annabel’s.

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