Best Anniversary Restaurants in Chengdu 2026
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The anniversary pick in Chengdu for 2026 is Yu Zhi Lan in Qingyang, Lan Guijun's two-Michelin-star, 18-seat room, set menu ¥1,600 to ¥2,000. Editorial runners-up: The Hall, Silver Pot, Mi Xun Teahouse, Li Xuan.
“The chef decides what you eat,” the host at Yu Zhi Lan explained, “you only decide the date.” That is the right spirit for an anniversary in Chengdu, a city that hides its finest rooms behind gates and inside hotel towers. Nineteen Chengdu restaurants sit in our directory; six are built for a milestone, and here is what each one costs.
Six Chengdu Tables for an Anniversary
Chef Lan Guijun has refined his Sichuan cooking for over three decades, and his 18-seat room on Changfa Street in Qingyang holds two Michelin stars in the 2026 Chengdu guide. There is no printed menu: you book, you arrive, the kitchen decides, and the set experience runs ¥1,600 to ¥2,000 a head. The Golden Thread Noodles, hand-cut tableside with a giant cleaver, are the dish people fly in for. For an anniversary that wants intimacy and mastery in equal measure, this is the table in the city.
Italian chef Leonardo Zambrino runs the only Louis Vuitton restaurant in China, inside the LV Maison at Sino-Ocean Taikoo Li in Jinjiang, and it kept its one Michelin star in 2026. The tasting menu is ¥1,888, with an ¥888 wine pairing, and the cooking reads Sichuan through a French and Mediterranean lens: a crab angel hair that carries heat low and long, a Yunnan-mushroom course in three textures. Zambrino took the Michelin Young Chef Award in 2025. For an anniversary that wants design and occasion, book the eight-course.
Chef-owner Ziling Zhou cooks a one-Michelin-star tasting on the fifth floor of the M6 building at 300 Jiaozi Avenue in Wuhou, and added the Black Pearl Diamond in 2025. Her signature is a roast pigeon smoked over Sichuan pepper leaves, its scent unmistakably málà; large Russian scallops cooked slowly over a pepper-scented green sauce are the course people remember. The set runs about ¥600 a head, which makes it one of the better-value stars anywhere. A quietly ambitious, romantic room for an anniversary.
Mi Xun Teahouse sits in a courtyard within The Temple House on Bitieshi Street, beside the historic Daci Temple, and holds one Michelin star plus Chengdu's only Michelin Green Star in 2026. The vegetarian tasting, around ¥500, is built from produce grown near the province's panda habitats, with local wines and teas poured alongside. The setting, an old temple complex with an open kitchen, is among the most serene rooms in the city. For an anniversary that wants calm and a sense of place, this is the one.
Twenty-six floors up at The Ritz-Carlton on Shuncheng Avenue in Qingyang, Li Xuan cooks the Cantonese food that rewards stock and timing over fireworks, and holds a place in the Michelin Chengdu selection. The double-boiled yellow croaker soup with fish maw is the dish to measure the kitchen by; the char siu is glossed and properly rendered, and the wok-fried Australian Wagyu lands with real heat. A set dinner for two with wine runs under ¥1,600, and on a clear night the lights of Tianfu Square run to the ring roads. A view room for an anniversary.
Fang Xiang Jing keeps its entrance understated: a gate into a stone garden, then a heritage building of private dining rooms only, no communal tables and no walk-in buzz. The Michelin inspectors praised it for faithfully reviving nostalgic Sichuanese recipes, and the kitchen rebuilds dishes most of the city has abandoned: a cabbage in chicken consommé pulled to crystalline clarity over hours, a properly textured mapo tofu. You book a room, you arrive, the door closes. For an anniversary that wants total privacy and a garden of its own, nothing in Chengdu matches it.
What an Anniversary Costs in Chengdu
The fine-dining range is wide: ¥1,600 to ¥2,000 a head for the set menu at Yu Zhi Lan, ¥1,888 for the tasting at The Hall, and around ¥1,600 for two with wine at Li Xuan. The value stars sit lower, near ¥600 at Silver Pot and ¥500 at Mi Xun Teahouse. Most starred rooms add service and ask for a deposit at booking.
Yu Zhi Lan seats only eighteen and takes a deposit equal to half the meal; reserve it first and weeks ahead. The Hall, Silver Pot and Mi Xun book through their own channels and fill on weekends. Fang Xiang Jing is private-room only, so request your room when you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
The editorial pick is Yu Zhi Lan in Qingyang, Lan Guijun's two-Michelin-star, eighteen-seat room, where the no-menu set experience runs ¥1,600 to ¥2,000 a head. For a design-led milestone, The Hall inside the Louis Vuitton Maison holds one star with a ¥1,888 tasting, and Fang Xiang Jing offers total privacy in a heritage courtyard.
Plan on ¥1,600 to ¥2,000 a head at Yu Zhi Lan, ¥1,888 for the tasting at The Hall, and around ¥1,600 for two with wine at Li Xuan. The value stars are lower, near ¥600 at Silver Pot and ¥500 at Mi Xun Teahouse. Several rooms take a deposit at booking, so check before you reserve.
Fang Xiang Jing is the answer. It operates as private dining rooms only, set in a heritage building behind a stone garden, with no communal tables and no walk-in crowd. You book a room, the door closes, and the Michelin-selected kitchen revives nostalgic Sichuanese recipes. Yu Zhi Lan's eighteen-seat room is the intimate alternative for couples who want to watch the chef.
Yes. Yu Zhi Lan seats only eighteen, takes a deposit of half the meal, and books out weeks ahead. The Hall, Silver Pot and Mi Xun Teahouse all reserve through their own channels and fill on weekends and holidays. Fang Xiang Jing is private-room only, so request the room when you reserve and confirm the set-menu price.