Beijing's Finest Tables
80 restaurants listedThe Beijing Dining Guide
Beijing does not apologise for its scale. This is a city of forty Michelin-rated restaurants, two three-star kitchens, and a street-food culture that has fed dynasties since the thirteenth century. To understand Beijing's dining scene is to understand that China's culinary identity was largely invented here — in the imperial kitchens of the Forbidden City, in the hutong noodle shops of Dongcheng, and in the Cantonese-influenced restaurants that followed the Qing court north from Guangdong.
The contemporary scene sits at an unusual crossroads. On one side, chefs like Yat Fung Cheung at Chao Shang Chao and the kitchen team at Xin Rong Ji are winning three Michelin stars by elevating obscure regional Chinese traditions — Teochew braised goose, Taizhou seafood preparations — to a level of technical refinement that rivals anything Paris produces. On the other, a generation of foreign-trained chefs has embedded into Beijing's hutong courtyards, producing Michelin-starred French cuisine inside ancient temples and Basque cooking beneath luxury hotels.
The result is a city that can simultaneously offer you the world's most refined Peking duck, an eight-hundred-year-old vegetarian courtyard restaurant, and a French tasting menu inside a Ming Dynasty shrine. No other capital quite manages that range.
Dongcheng District — The historic heart. The hutong lanes radiating from the Forbidden City and Drum Tower contain TRB Hutong, King's Joy, Da Dong, and dozens of century-old noodle shops. Wander here at night for lantern-lit dining rooms in ancient courtyard houses.
Chaoyang District — Beijing's international hub. Sanlitun's bar-restaurant district, the Parkview Green mall, and the CBD financial zone all sit here. Home to Xin Rong Ji, Chao Shang Chao, Duck de Chine, and Opera Bombana — the city's power-dining circuit.
Wangfujing / Peninsula Area — The luxury hotel corridor. The Peninsula's Jing and Huang Ting, the Grand Hyatt's Made in China. Come here for impeccable service and the kind of room where business deals get finalised over Cognac.
Haidian / Summer Palace — For the most atmospheric meal in China. The Aman at Summer Palace sits within the actual imperial estate grounds — dining here is a genuine historical event, not just a dinner.
Reservations — Essential at every three-star venue. Xin Rong Ji books out weeks in advance; the baby Peking duck requires 48-hour pre-order. Family Li Imperial Cuisine needs two weeks' notice minimum. For top tables in general, book through hotel concierges or platforms like Dianping.
Tipping — Not customary in Chinese restaurants. Service charges of 10–15% are added automatically at international hotel restaurants. Tipping would be considered unusual, even rude, in traditional Chinese establishments.
Price Range — Beijing's Michelin three-star tasting menus run 1,500–2,580 CNY per person (roughly $200–360 USD). Mid-tier restaurant dinners average 300–600 CNY per person. Peking duck at Da Dong runs 200–500 CNY per person inclusive of sides.
Dress Code — Smart casual at most restaurants; business attire expected at hotel fine-dining venues like Jing, Huang Ting, and The Capital at Aman. Avoid shorts and trainers at any Michelin-starred establishment.
Language — English menus are standard at hotels and internationally-focused restaurants. In hutong establishments and traditional Chinese restaurants, Google Translate's camera function is your essential companion.