Chinese, Dim Sum Restaurants in Chinatown
1. Plum Valley
Chinese restaurant in Soho
20 Gerrard St - W1
“Fantastic dim sum with good-quality ingredients” make this family-run Cantonese “a good Gerrard Street standby”. Now entering its fifth decade, the decor is “slightly cooler than in your average Chinatown restaurant”.
2. Dumplings’ Legend
Chinese, Dim sum restaurant in Chinatown
16 Gerrard St - W1
“You can see the staff making the very fresh dumplings from scratch” as you enter this modern take on the traditional dim sum experience in Chinatown – they claim to make 8,000 a day! “Clean-tasting and fast food” is the result – “expect big queues at the weekend”. Top Menu Tip – “the BBQ meats are ace, too”.
3. Golden Dragon
Chinese restaurant in Soho
28-29 Gerrard St - W1
“Huge Cantonese restaurant” over two floors on Chinatown’s main drag, praised for its “sensibly priced and fine-quality dim sum”, along with “good crispy duck with pancakes”. “Service is brisk but friendly”, and its capacity makes it “good for walk-ins”.
4. Baozi Inn
Chinese, Dim sum restaurant in Chinatown
24 Romilly Street - W1D
“Brilliant, lip-numbing” northern Chinese cooking has put this Soho fixture from Wei Shao firmly on the map, and it serves a flexible menu of skewers, noodles and rice, wok dishes and other dim sum options. Some feel its Borough Market offshoot is “weak” by comparison (“it’s as if the Soho one benefits from the proximity of Chinatown but they don’t expect anyone with any discernment in SE1!”).
5. Yauatcha
Chinese restaurant in Soho
15-17 Broadwick St - W1
“Consistently excellent dim sum” served in a vibey setting that “even after so many years is still a fun, cool place to be” ensures continuing plaudits for these sleek venues (founded by Alan Yau in 2004 and nowadays an international brand owned by Tao Group Hospitality with three siblings in India and one in Saudi Arabia). Food aside, its two London branches are very different – the original, intimate ground floor and basement in Soho contrasting with the more “spectacular”, large, “light-filled” modern unit in the City’s Broadgate development. Both scored highly this year – “service appears to have become a bit less standoffish”; and “the only drawback is eating too much!”. Top Menu Tips – “Cheung fun, Venison Puff, Sichuan pork wonton and Wagyu beef puff are some of the tastiest things you can eat”.
6. Din Tai Fung
Chinese, Dim sum restaurant in Holborn
11 St Giles Square - WC2
“You can’t go past the xiao long bao” – “soup-filled dumplings hand-made onsite and steamed to order” – say fans of this Taiwanese-based global chain with three London outlets (in Covent Garden, CentrePoint and Selfridges). “All the other dishes are a bit hit and miss”, though, while a well-travelled minority reckon they’re “nothing like the original restaurants in Asia”, with prices – by comparison to e.g. Singapore – that are “off the scale”. But you must go: “cute robots help clear the plates!”
7. Din Tai Fung
Chinese, Dim sum restaurant in Covent Garden
5-6 Henrietta Street - WC2E
“You can’t go past the xiao long bao” – “soup-filled dumplings hand-made onsite and steamed to order” – say fans of this Taiwanese-based global chain with three London outlets (in Covent Garden, CentrePoint and Selfridges). “All the other dishes are a bit hit and miss”, though, while a well-travelled minority reckon they’re “nothing like the original restaurants in Asia”, with prices – by comparison to e.g. Singapore – that are “off the scale”. But you must go: “cute robots help clear the plates!”
8. Tao Tao Ju
Chinese restaurant in Chinatown
15 Lisle Street - WC2H
“Excellent dim sum and roast pork” are the mainstays of the extensive menu at this large, accomplished Cantonese fixture – one of the better bets for a traditional Chinatown experience.
9. Gouqi
Chinese, Dim sum restaurant in St James’s
25-34 Cockspur Street - SW1Y
This “really high-end Chinese” off Trafalgar Square is a “real treat”, delivering “exceptionally delicious and elegantly presented cuisine” from Tong Chee Hwee, the masterchef behind Hakkasan, who began cooking professionally in Singapore an astonishing 62 years ago. There’s no question that it’s “expensive and a bit lacking in atmos”, but the “cracking dishes” and “amazing dim sum” ensure that it’s often “very busy and lively”.
View full listings of 9 Chinese, Dim Sum Chinatown Restaurants
Popular Chinatown Restaurant Searches
Chinatown Restaurant News
Top Chinatown Restaurants
Hot Newcomers & Coming Soon
Hot Newcomers
Coming Soon