Kaohsiung — Editorial Overview
Kaohsiung is Taiwan's second city, a working port that has quietly developed one of Asia's most interesting contemporary dining scenes. Michelin-starred omakase and French fine dining sit a short ride from the Liuhe and Ruifeng night markets; the new Asia's 50 Best entries cluster along the harbor; and the citywide investment in public infrastructure over the last decade has made moving between these worlds unusually easy.
Dining Neighbourhoods
The highest concentration of serious kitchens sits in Lingya District (the flagship hotel restaurants and the Michelin-starred houses), Sanmin District around Kaohsiung Main Station (chef-driven contemporary, wine bars, dessert omakase), and Yancheng (the harbor-front district with the best port-view fine dining). For casual night-market dining, Liuhe and Ruifeng are essential.
Dining Culture & Reservations
Kaohsiung dining runs a split schedule. Fine-dining rooms open for lunch (typically 12:00–14:00) and dinner (18:00–21:30); night markets and casual rooms stretch until midnight. Michelin and Asia's 50 Best restaurants book four to eight weeks ahead and often require a deposit. Service is Taiwanese — warm, unfussy, specifically attentive to pacing — and service charge is usually added at 10 percent. Cash is still preferred at smaller rooms; the top restaurants all take cards.
Tips From the Editors
Eat across price tiers in a single trip. The city's charm is the ability to pair a $300 omakase with a $6 beef-noodle soup in the same 24 hours. For Michelin rooms, book via the restaurant directly where possible; many Kaohsiung kitchens use WeChat/Line reservation systems that do not appear on English booking platforms. Dress is smart-casual in most fine-dining rooms; jackets optional but not unusual at dinner.
All Restaurants in Kaohsiung
$ under $50 · $$ $50–$150 · $$$ $150–$300 · $$$$ $300+ per person
Modern French
THOMAS CHIEN
"Kaohsiung's landmark French fine-dining address — the room that first put the city on the Michelin map and sti..."
Japanese / Michelin
Sho
"The Kaohsiung outpost of Tokyo's Den — ten seats, a single set menu, and Michelin rigor without the Michelin s..."
Teppanyaki / Japanese
Ukai-Tei Kaohsiung
"The Kaohsiung outpost of Tokyo's legendary teppanyaki house — the city's most theatrical birthday room by a di..."
Modern French
Liberté
"A neo-bistro hidden in a Yancheng lane — candle-lit, natural-wine-driven, and the most romantic two-top in Kao..."
Dessert Omakase
HUGH dessert dining
"Asia's pioneering dessert omakase — a seven-course, sit-at-the-counter tasting that reframes what pudding can ..."
Best for a First Date in Kaohsiung
First Date
Liberté
"A neo-bistro hidden in a Yancheng lane — candle-lit, natural-wine-driven, and the most romantic two-top in Kaohsiung."
Read more →Best for Business Dinner in Kaohsiung
Impress Clients
THOMAS CHIEN
"Kaohsiung's landmark French fine-dining address — the room that first put the city on the Michelin map and still sets the standard."
Read more →The Kaohsiung Editorial Top 5
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#1
THOMAS CHIEN
Kaohsiung's landmark French fine-dining address — the room that first put the city on the Michelin map and still sets the standard.
-
#2
Sho
The Kaohsiung outpost of Tokyo's Den — ten seats, a single set menu, and Michelin rigor without the Michelin stiffness.
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#3
Ukai-Tei Kaohsiung
The Kaohsiung outpost of Tokyo's legendary teppanyaki house — the city's most theatrical birthday room by a distance.
-
#4
Liberté
A neo-bistro hidden in a Yancheng lane — candle-lit, natural-wine-driven, and the most romantic two-top in Kaohsiung.
-
#5
HUGH dessert dining
Asia's pioneering dessert omakase — a seven-course, sit-at-the-counter tasting that reframes what pudding can be.
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