Head-to-Head · Hong Kong

Bo Innovation vs Mono

Alvin Leung's two-star X-treme Chinese against Ricardo Chaneton's one-star Latin counter. Book Mono to impress, Bo Innovation for theatre.

Bo Innovation
Central · X-treme Chinese · 2 Michelin stars · Food 9.0 / Room 9.2 / Value 7.0
Bo Innovation full review →
vs
Mono
Central · Latin American · 1 Michelin star · Food 9.0 / Room 8.0 / Value 7.0
Mono full review →

The Verdict

Bo Innovation is Alvin Leung's two-Michelin-star laboratory, the room where the self-styled Demon Chef built a category he calls X-treme Chinese; since 2022 it has run from H Code on Pottinger Street in Central, with a ten-course Masterpieces menu around HK$2,000. Mono, a few streets away on On Lan Street, is Ricardo Chaneton's one-star counter, Asia's first Michelin-starred Latin American restaurant, a HK$1,888 tasting drawn from his Venezuelan roots and seven years at Mirazur. Book Mono to impress a guest; book Bo Innovation for the more provocative, theatrical night.

The split is provocation versus precision. Bo Innovation deconstructs Cantonese classics into something deliberately confrontational, a meal that argues with you. Mono is a tighter, more lyrical counter built on South American ingredients and French technique, calmer and easier to read across a business dinner. Both sit at the top of the Hong Kong dining guide.

Scores, Side by Side

ScoreBo InnovationMono
Food9.0 / 109.0 / 10
Atmosphere9.2 / 108.0 / 10
Value7.0 / 107.0 / 10

Which One for Which Occasion

OccasionEditorial Pick
Impress clients or close a dealMonoA calm, refined counter and a clear Latin American narrative read more smoothly to a guest than a confrontational tasting.
An adventurous, theatrical nightBo InnovationLeung's deconstructed Cantonese and two stars make it the more provocative, memorable evening of the two.
A once-in-a-trip tastingMonoAsia's first Latin American star and a single intimate counter make for the more singular booking.
Solo diningMonoA counter is built for one and points you at the open kitchen rather than a forward-facing table.
Bragging rightsBo InnovationTwo Michelin stars and the Demon Chef's reputation carry the bigger name to drop afterwards.

Price Comparison

The two land close. Bo Innovation's ten-course Masterpieces menu runs about HK$2,000, prepaid, while Mono's counter tasting is HK$1,888, both before pairings. Wine pushes either well past that. They are evenly matched on value, so the choice is register rather than money. Weigh both against the best Chinese restaurants worldwide and the wider tasting menus worldwide.

How to Book

Bo Innovation books through its own site and prepays the Masterpieces menu; confirm the current Pottinger Street address, since the older listings still show Wan Chai. See the Bo Innovation review first. Mono, a small counter, releases dates online and sells out fast for weekends, so reserve a week or two ahead; the Mono review has the booking detail.

For occasion fit, weigh them against the best Hong Kong tables to impress clients and close a deal, and browse more match-ups on the compare index.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which is better, Bo Innovation or Mono?
Both are excellent and the choice is style. Bo Innovation holds two Michelin stars for Alvin Leung's confrontational X-treme Chinese, a provocative, theatrical meal. Mono has one star as Asia's first Latin American counter, Ricardo Chaneton's calmer, more lyrical tasting. Book Bo Innovation for the adventurous night, Mono to impress a guest with something refined and easy to read.
How much do Bo Innovation and Mono cost?
They are close. Bo Innovation's ten-course Masterpieces menu runs about HK$2,000, prepaid, and Mono's counter tasting is HK$1,888, both before wine. Pairings push either well higher. On value they are evenly matched, so decide on register rather than price; the occasion table above is the better tiebreaker.
Which is harder to book, Bo Innovation or Mono?
Mono's small counter sells out fast, especially for weekends, so reserve one to two weeks ahead online. Bo Innovation books and prepays through its own site and holds slightly better availability, but confirm the current H Code address on Pottinger Street in Central, since older listings still show the former Wan Chai location.
Can I do both Bo Innovation and Mono on the same trip?
Yes, easily. Both are in Central, a few streets apart, Bo Innovation at H Code on Pottinger Street and Mono on On Lan Street. Each is a full tasting, so book them on separate evenings rather than back to back. If you can only do one, the occasion table above is the tiebreaker between the two.