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Best Chinese Restaurants in London 2026 — Worth the Booking

At a glance

London's best Chinese cooking sits at A. Wong in Pimlico — two Michelin stars and the only Cantonese-leaning tasting menu in Britain priced like a Mayfair haute room. Runners-up: Hakkasan Mayfair, Mott 32, Park Chinois, Hutong at The Shard.

London does not have a Chinatown problem. It has a price-tag problem. Cantonese cooking in the city splits cleanly between the £15 dim-sum baskets of Lisle Street and the £200 tasting counters of Mayfair, and most of the rooms in the middle are confused about which one they are. The nine below are not confused.

Andrew Wong won London's second-ever Chinese Michelin star in 2017, kept it, then added a second in 2021 and still holds them in the 2025 guide — which means Britain's most ambitious Chinese cooking is happening four stops down the Victoria Line, not in Mayfair. The other eight rooms below earn their place by being honest about their register: Hakkasan and Park Chinois are evening-out destinations rather than serious eating, Bao is the £15 gua bao that Erchen Chang made famous in 2015, and Imperial Treasure Waterloo Place is the only restaurant in Britain that cooks Singaporean roast meats to Cantonese standards. Anything not on this list is the kind of Cantonese restaurant that uses MSG as a personality.

Nine Chinese Restaurants in London Worth Booking

Chef: Andrew Wong
Signature: The 'Collections of China' tasting — Xinjiang lamb skewer, Sichuan mala dumplings, Cantonese char siu with kombu
Neighbourhood: Pimlico, Wilton Road
Price: £180 tasting menu (£280 with paired wines)
Rating: 9.6/10
Proof point: Two Michelin stars (2021, retained 2025); first Chinese restaurant outside Asia to win two

Andrew Wong inherited the building from his parents in 2012, kept the green-tile facade, gutted everything inside it, and started cooking the regional Chinese tasting menu nobody else in Britain was willing to attempt. The dining room seats forty, the kitchen counter seats six, and the tasting menu travels through eight provinces of China in fourteen courses without ever feeling like a museum visit.

The signature is the 'Collections of China' tasting at £180 — a Xinjiang cumin-lamb skewer cooked over coals at the counter, Sichuan dumplings dressed in mala chilli oil that arrives hot enough to bloom the Sichuan peppercorn, then a Cantonese char siu glazed with kombu and aged for thirty-six hours. The wine pairing at £280 leans Riesling and Burgundy whites rather than the more obvious German Spätlese route, and the sommelier Veronica Cha will talk through it without performing.

Two Michelin stars (won 2021, retained in the 2025 guide), #40 in the World's 50 Best 2024, and a Three AA Rosettes rating that has held since 2018. The booking window opens ninety days out via Tock and the counter seats go in the first twenty minutes.

VerdictBritain's most serious Chinese kitchen, two stars in Pimlico, the only counter in London worth a ninety-day wait — book it.

Read the full A. Wong review ›

Chef: Tong Chee Hwee (group executive), Andrew Yeo (Mayfair head chef)
Signature: Crispy duck salad with pomelo, pine nut and shallot; jasmine tea-smoked Peking duck
Neighbourhood: Mayfair, Bruton Street
Price: £130–£180 a la carte before wine; £98 Signature menu
Rating: 8.4/10
Proof point: Michelin star at Hanway Place 2003–2018; Hakkasan Group operates 12 restaurants globally as of 2026

Hakkasan opened on Hanway Place in 2001, won a Michelin star in 2003, lost it in 2018 after the Tao Group purchase, and reopened the Mayfair branch on Bruton Street in 2010 as the louder, later-into-the-night sibling. The dining room is the same dark lattice screens, the same red lacquer, the same DJ booth audible from 9pm onwards — and that is the point. This is a Cantonese kitchen attached to a nightclub, and judged on that brief it works.

Tong Chee Hwee built the original menu — the crispy duck salad with pomelo and pine nuts, the silver cod with champagne and Chinese honey, the jasmine tea-smoked Peking duck at £92 for the whole bird. Andrew Yeo runs the Mayfair pass now and the cooking has not slipped; the dim sum at lunch is still some of the best in central London. The Signature menu lands at £98 per person and is the right entry point if you are not ordering by the whole bird.

The wine list runs to 600 bins with a serious Burgundy section, and the cocktail program by group bar director Mike Burns leans toward shochu and rare Chinese spirits like Moutai. Reservations open 60 days out on Resy and the prime 8.30pm slots disappear in under five minutes for Friday and Saturday.

VerdictThe Mayfair Cantonese-nightclub hybrid done right, twenty-five years in, still the best Peking duck in W1 — book it for a group dinner that needs to go past midnight.

Read the full Hakkasan Mayfair review ›

Chef: Lee Man-Sing (executive chef, group), Christopher Tang (London head chef)
Signature: 42-day apple-wood roasted Peking duck with caviar; Iberico pork char siu
Neighbourhood: Mayfair, 100 Stratton Street
Price: Peking duck £128 for the whole bird (48-hour pre-order); £120–£180 a la carte
Rating: 8.6/10
Proof point: Opened London 2023 as the Hong Kong original's first European outpost; the Hong Kong flagship held a Michelin star 2017–2020

Mott 32 opened on Stratton Street in early 2023 as the Hong Kong group's first European site, taking the basement of the old Trader Vic's and turning it into the most ambitious new Chinese opening London had seen since A. Wong added its second star. The kitchen is led by Christopher Tang under group executive Lee Man-Sing — the same team that built the 2014 Hong Kong original at the Standard Chartered tower.

The 42-day apple-wood roasted Peking duck at £128 is the only one in London that requires a 48-hour pre-order, and the requirement is honest: the duck is hung, air-dried and basted in stages that cannot be compressed. The first service is the breast carved at the table over wood charcoal with caviar; the second is the leg minced into lettuce cups; the third is a clear consommé from the carcass. There is also a serious Iberico char siu at £42 that is closer to a Tokyo yakitori than a Mayfair starter.

The dining room runs to 130 covers underground, designed by Joyce Wang with brass and dark walnut. Reservations open on SevenRooms 30 days out — the duck slots between 7pm and 9pm go in the first hour for any Thursday or Friday.

VerdictThe 42-day Peking duck is the only one in London worth pre-ordering — reserve it two weeks out for a serious birthday or a closing-deal dinner.

Read the full Mott 32 review ›

Chef: Lee Che Liang
Signature: Black truffle xiao long bao; tea-smoked Wagyu beef rib
Neighbourhood: Mayfair, 17 Berkeley Street
Price: £140–£200 a la carte; £160 Imperial tasting menu
Rating: 7.8/10
Proof point: Opened by Alan Yau (Hakkasan, Yauatcha founder) in 2015; live jazz program in the Salon since 2017

Park Chinois is Alan Yau's last major London project — the man behind Wagamama, Hakkasan and Yauatcha opened it on Berkeley Street in 2015 and built it around a 1930s Shanghai supper-club brief. The ground floor is the Salon with the dim sum cart and the jazz quartet; the basement is the Club Chinois with the bigger tasting menu and the £200 wine pairings. The Salon is the room you want.

Lee Che Liang's kitchen produces the £45 black truffle xiao long bao that is genuinely worth the price — eight grams of Burgundy black truffle inside a soup dumpling with a pork-and-shrimp filling, served in a bamboo steamer with a slick of Sichuan vinegar. The tea-smoked Wagyu beef rib at £88 is the other order; the cut is M9+, the smoke comes from a blend of Pu-erh tea and longan wood, and the texture sits between brisket and prime rib.

The wine list runs to 900 bins under sommelier Tatiana Daniel and leans heavily Burgundy. Reservations open 60 days out on OpenTable and the Salon books faster than the basement. Dress code is enforced — jacket required for men after 7pm, which is rare for London Cantonese.

VerdictAlan Yau's last project, the truffle xiao long bao is the dish the rest of London copies — book the Salon for a birthday you want to remember.

Read the full Park Chinois review ›

Chef: Fan Yang
Signature: Red lantern Iberico char siu; soft-shell crab with red Sichuan chilli oil
Neighbourhood: London Bridge, The Shard L33
Price: £90–£130 a la carte; £75 set lunch
Rating: 7.6/10
Proof point: Opened 2013 in The Shard at level 33; sister to the original Hutong in Hong Kong's Tsim Sha Tsui (2003)

Hutong sits on the 33rd floor of The Shard with the city's best Cantonese view — north-east across the river, the dome of St Paul's at eye level, the Gherkin and the Walkie-Talkie close enough to read the floor lights. The view is the brief, and the kitchen does not try to compete with it. Fan Yang's cooking is northern Chinese with Sichuan accents, and the menu is honest about being a high-altitude dim sum bar with serious mains.

The signature is the red lantern Iberico char siu at £36 — pork shoulder lacquered with maltose, fermented red bean curd and Chinese cinnamon, served hot from a bamboo basket lined with banana leaf. The soft-shell crab dressed in red Sichuan chilli oil at £42 is the other order; the chilli oil is house-made with Erjingtiao chillies and the heat sits at the Hunan-Sichuan border rather than the pure-numbing end. Skip the Peking duck — it is the only weak link on the menu and the kitchen knows it.

Reservations are easier than the Mayfair list — 30 days out via the website, and the early sitting at 5.30pm gets the sunset window in summer for £75 set lunch prices. The dress code is smart, not jacket-required, and the lift queue at 6pm is the worst part of the evening.

VerdictThe best view in London Cantonese, the char siu carries the room, the duck does not — try it once for a Friday-night sunset.

Read the full Hutong at The Shard review ›

Chef: Tong Chee Hwee (group), Stephanie Wong (head dim sum chef)
Signature: Venison puff; scallop shumai with golden caviar; jasmine tea creme brûlée
Neighbourhood: Soho, Broadwick Street
Price: £60–£90 dim sum brunch; £80–£110 dinner
Rating: 8.2/10
Proof point: One Michelin star from 2005 through 2025 — the longest-running Cantonese star in Britain

Yauatcha opened on Broadwick Street in 2004 — Alan Yau's second restaurant after Hakkasan — and won its Michelin star in 2005. It has held that star without interruption for twenty years, which makes it the longest-running starred Chinese kitchen in Britain. The ground floor is the patisserie and the macarons; the basement is the dim sum dining room with the blue glass fish tank along the back wall.

Stephanie Wong leads the dim sum kitchen now under Tong Chee Hwee's group oversight. The venison puff at £8 a piece is the dish to order — a hot-water pastry shell filled with five-spice venison shoulder, served two to a portion. The scallop shumai dressed with golden caviar at £14 is the other order. For pudding, the jasmine tea creme brûlée is the only Chinese-tea dessert in London that works at brûlée temperature without breaking.

Reservations open 28 days out on the website. The weekend dim sum brunch from 12pm to 4pm books two weeks ahead in spring; the weekday 6pm pre-theatre slot is the easiest entry point at around £60 per person before wine.

VerdictTwenty straight years of Michelin stars on Broadwick Street, the venison puff is the city's most consistent £8 — book it for a pre-theatre dinner that won't run late.

Read the full Yauatcha Soho review ›

Chef: Ko Chee Seng
Signature: Singapore-style roast goose; suckling pig with crackling skin; double-boiled bird's nest
Neighbourhood: St James's, 9 Waterloo Place
Price: £140–£220 a la carte; £200 Signature roast menu
Rating: 8.9/10
Proof point: One Michelin star 2022, retained through 2025; sister to the Hong Kong original which holds three stars

Imperial Treasure opened on Waterloo Place in 2021 as the Singapore group's first European outpost, and won its London Michelin star in the 2022 guide. The dining room is a 95-cover ground-floor space behind a pale stone facade two blocks from St James's Park — quieter than Mayfair, dressier than Soho, and built around the Hong Kong group's specialty: Cantonese-style roast meats cooked in the visible kitchen along the back wall.

Ko Chee Seng's Singapore-style roast goose at £88 is the dish to fly to London for. The bird is hung for two days, brushed with maltose and five-spice, then roasted in a 1.2-metre charcoal oven at the back of the kitchen — the skin shatters at the first cut, the fat is fully rendered, and the meat underneath stays at medium-rare temperature. The suckling pig at £148 for half is the other big order, ordered 48 hours ahead. The bird's nest soup at £58 is the only one in London that justifies the price.

The wine list runs to 1,400 bins under head sommelier Marcus Tan, and leans heavily on aged Burgundy. Reservations open 90 days out on the website — the roast-goose covers go first.

VerdictThe only Singapore-style roast goose in Britain at Michelin standard, hung two days, carved at the table — fly to London for it once.

Read the full Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine review ›

Chef: Erchen Chang
Signature: Classic gua bao — slow-braised pork belly, peanut, fermented mustard greens, coriander
Neighbourhood: Soho, Lexington Street
Price: £15 for two gua bao; full meal £35–£55 per head before drinks
Rating: 8.3/10
Proof point: Opened 2015 by Erchen Chang, Shing Tat Chung and Wai Ting Chung — Bib Gourmand 2016–2019, four London sites by 2026

Erchen Chang started Bao in 2013 as a Hackney market stall, opened the 30-seat Soho site on Lexington Street in 2015, and won the Bib Gourmand the same year. The original gua bao — slow-braised Cantonese pork belly, crushed peanut, fermented mustard greens, a single coriander leaf, all folded into a steamed Taiwanese milk bun — is still £8 a piece in 2026, which is a remarkable hold given the rest of Soho's food inflation.

The cooking is Taiwanese rather than Cantonese or Northern Chinese, which is the point — Bao is the city's most ambitious Taiwanese restaurant, not its most ambitious Chinese one. The classic gua bao is the order; pair it with the trotter nuggets at £6.50 and the daikon-and-pickle 'house plate' for £4. The Soho site does not take reservations after 6pm; arrive at 5.30pm Tuesday through Thursday and you will be seated within fifteen minutes.

The group now runs four London sites — Soho, Fitzrovia, Borough and Marylebone — and the cooking is consistent across all of them. Borough is the largest and the easiest to walk in to. Cash is not accepted at any branch.

VerdictErchen Chang's Taiwanese pork belly bun is the most consistent £8 in Soho since 2015 — try it once for a Tuesday solo dinner.

Read the full Bao Soho review ›

Chef: Wai Sang Lo
Signature: Cantonese suckling pig (24-hour pre-order); steamed scallops with garlic and vermicelli
Neighbourhood: Elephant & Castle, Walworth Road
Price: £35–£55 a la carte; suckling pig £85 for half
Rating: 7.9/10
Proof point: Opened 2005; the only restaurant south of the river to hold a Bib Gourmand continuously since 2010

Dragon Castle sits on Walworth Road five minutes from Elephant & Castle station, in a 180-cover dining room that has not been redecorated since 2009 and does not need to be. Wai Sang Lo cooks Cantonese — properly Cantonese, the kind where the suckling pig is ordered 24 hours ahead and the kitchen cares whether you take soy or chilli first. The clientele is two thirds Cantonese-speaking on a Sunday lunchtime.

The suckling pig at £85 for half a bird is the order to plan a meal around. The skin is the standard for Hong Kong roast-meat counters but rarely reached in London — fully blistered, paper-thin, separates cleanly from the fat layer. The steamed scallops on the half-shell with minced garlic and glass vermicelli are the other order at £4.50 a piece. Dim sum runs Tuesday to Sunday from 11.30am to 5pm.

Reservations open 14 days out by phone — the website booking system has not worked since 2022 and the staff are aware of this. Sunday lunch books a week in advance for groups of six or more; weekdays usually walk in.

VerdictThe only south-of-the-river Cantonese kitchen that cooks suckling pig at Hong Kong standard — pencil it in for a Sunday lunch with a big group.

Read the full Dragon Castle review ›

Who This Guide Isn't For

This is not a Chinatown guide. Lisle Street and Gerrard Street have their own logic — fast turnover, £15 plates, the kind of late-night roast pork and noodles that make sense at 11pm after a show. None of that is wrong, none of it is on this list. If you are looking for that, the right writeup is the Gerrard Street late-night roast meats roundup, not this one.

Skip Hakkasan Mayfair for a first date you want to actually hear. The room is built around the DJ and the conversation level after 9pm is the loudest in W1. Park Chinois Salon, Yauatcha Soho's basement, or A. Wong are the better calls for two people who came to talk.

Skip Mott 32 if you have not pre-ordered the duck. The rest of the menu is solid but no longer extraordinary; without the 42-day Peking duck the meal lands at £180 a head for a dinner you could have had at Hakkasan for £140. The duck is the brief.

How to Pick the Right Room for Your Evening

Splurge tier (£150–£280 per head). A. Wong is the answer for a once-a-year birthday or anniversary, ninety days out. Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine for a serious business dinner. Mott 32 for the Peking duck event.

Mid tier (£90–£140). Hakkasan Mayfair for a group dinner that runs late, Park Chinois Salon for a date, Hutong for the view, Yauatcha Soho for pre-theatre or dim sum brunch.

Casual (£30–£60). Bao Soho for a solo Tuesday-night gua bao, Dragon Castle for a Sunday-lunch suckling pig with eight people. Both walk-in-friendly outside peak weekends.

Booking windows. A. Wong opens 90 days out via Tock — the counter goes in the first 20 minutes. Imperial Treasure also 90 days out, on the website. Hakkasan, Park Chinois and Mott 32 open 30 to 60 days out on Resy / OpenTable / SevenRooms respectively. Yauatcha, Hutong and Dragon Castle are 14 to 28 days out. Bao does not take reservations after 6pm.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Chinese restaurant in London has the most Michelin stars?
A. Wong in Pimlico has two Michelin stars, won in 2021 and retained through the 2025 guide. It is the only Chinese restaurant outside Asia to hold two stars. Yauatcha Soho holds one star (since 2005, the longest-running Chinese star in Britain), and Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine on Waterloo Place holds one star (since 2022). Hakkasan Hanway Place held a star from 2003 to 2018.
How hard is it to book A. Wong?
Bookings open 90 days out via Tock at 10am Wilton Time. The chef's counter (six seats facing the open kitchen) typically sells out within the first 20 minutes; the 40-seat dining room takes another two hours to fill the prime 7pm and 8.30pm slots. The 6pm and 9.30pm slots are usually available three to four weeks out if the prime times are gone. The £180 tasting is the only menu served at dinner.
Where in London has the best Peking duck?
Mott 32's 42-day apple-wood roasted Peking duck at £128 is the most serious Peking duck in London — it requires a 48-hour pre-order, is carved at the table over wood charcoal, and is finished with caviar. Hakkasan Mayfair's jasmine tea-smoked Peking duck at £92 is the more available alternative without pre-order. Park Chinois and Hutong both serve a competent Peking duck but neither is the reason to book either restaurant.
What should I order at Bao Soho?
The classic gua bao — Cantonese-braised pork belly, crushed peanut, fermented mustard greens, coriander, in a steamed Taiwanese milk bun, £8 a piece. Pair with the trotter nuggets (£6.50), the peanut milk (£3.50), and the daikon-and-pickle house plate (£4). The horlicks ice cream is the dessert. The Soho site does not take reservations; the Borough site is the easiest of the four London branches to walk in to.
Is there serious Cantonese cooking in London outside the Michelin starred restaurants?
Yes — Dragon Castle in Elephant & Castle has cooked Cantonese suckling pig at Hong Kong standard since 2005 without ever being included in the Michelin guide. Royal China Club on Baker Street and Phoenix Palace on Glentworth Street both serve serious Cantonese seafood at £80 to £120 per head. The bar for serious Cantonese in London now sits two clear tiers above where it was in 2015, when Hakkasan was effectively the only credible option.
Which Chinese restaurant in London is best for a first date?
Park Chinois Salon on Berkeley Street — the live jazz quartet starts at 8pm, the room is dim and intimate, the dim sum cart provides natural conversation prompts between courses, and the £45 truffle xiao long bao is the order that will be remembered. Skip Hakkasan Mayfair for a first date — the room is too loud after 9pm for a conversation across the table to land.