Restaurant in Shanghai, China
102 House
1,285Pearl PointsTwo Michelin stars. Book early, dress sharp.

About 102 House
102 House is Shanghai's strongest current case for Cantonese fine dining: two Michelin stars, #29 on Asia's 50 Best, and a #16 OAD Asia ranking in 2025. At ¥¥¥¥ on the Bund, it is the right booking for a serious occasion, but reservations are near impossible on short notice. Plan weeks to months ahead.
Verdict
102 House is one of the strongest cases for Cantonese fine dining in mainland China right now. Two Michelin stars, a #29 ranking on Asia's 50 Best Restaurants (2025), and a #16 position on the Opinionated About Dining Asia list confirm what the reservation waitlist already suggests: this is a table that requires real planning to secure. If you are in Shanghai for one serious dinner and Cantonese cooking is your format, this is the booking to prioritise. If you cannot get in, Canton Table and Ji Pin Court are credible alternatives, but neither sits in the same awards tier.
About 102 House
102 House is a Cantonese restaurant on Zhongshan Road East, the Bund-adjacent stretch that positions it firmly in Shanghai's highest-stakes dining corridor. The cuisine is Cantonese, a tradition that rewards precision and restraint over spectacle — and at this level, both matter. Chef Xu Jingye has driven the kitchen to consecutive Michelin 2-star results in 2024 and 2025, with OAD Asia rankings climbing year over year: #49 in 2023, #34 in 2024, #16 in 2025. That upward trajectory is not incidental. It reflects a kitchen gaining confidence and recognition simultaneously.
Cantonese cooking at this tier is inherently seasonal. The cuisine's classical foundation is built on respecting what is available, which means the menu at 102 House shifts as ingredients peak across the calendar year. Winter brings richer preparations — think braised proteins, warming soups, and the kinds of dishes that reward slow technique. Spring and early summer shift toward lighter, cleaner flavour profiles, with a greater focus on seafood and delicate vegetable work. If the PEA-R-09 angle matters to your planning: visiting in the transition months of March to April or October to November tends to surface the most varied menus in high-end Cantonese kitchens, when chefs are working across two seasonal registers at once. The specific dishes at 102 House are not confirmed in our data, so treat this as category-level guidance rather than a menu preview.
The address on Zhongshan East Road places 102 House in Huangpu, the historic core of the city. For context, comparable top-tier Cantonese experiences in the broader region include Forum in Hong Kong, Le Palais in Taipei, and Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau. 102 House competes in that bracket. Within mainland China, the closest equivalent ambition can be found at venues like Xin Rong Ji in Beijing or Ru Yuan in Hangzhou, though those operate in different culinary registers.
Google reviews sit at 4.7 from 68 ratings, which at this price tier is a reasonable signal. The low review count is consistent with a small, tightly controlled dining room , the kind of operation where guest volume is deliberately kept low to maintain quality. That is worth factoring into your expectations: this is not a large-format restaurant built for throughput.
For explorers who want to map Shanghai's broader Cantonese scene before or after a 102 House booking, Bao Li Xuan, Canton 8 (Huangpu), and Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine all represent different price points and formats worth considering. Further afield, Imperial Treasure in Guangzhou and Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing give context for how Cantonese technique travels across the region.
The price range is ¥¥¥¥, placing it firmly in the top tier of Shanghai dining. At this level, the expectation is a multi-course tasting format with premium ingredients. Whether that represents value depends on your reference point: against Michelin 2-star peers in Tokyo or Hong Kong at equivalent price points, top-tier mainland Cantonese tends to offer solid competitive standing, particularly for ingredient quality. See the value assessment in the FAQ section for a more direct answer.
Our full Shanghai restaurants guide covers the broader dining scene if you are building an itinerary around this booking. For where to stay nearby, the Shanghai hotels guide is a practical starting point. If you want pre-dinner drinks or a nightcap, the Shanghai bars guide covers the options closest to the Bund corridor. The Shanghai experiences guide and Shanghai wineries guide round out the picture for multi-day visitors.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 27 Zhongshan Rd (E-1), Waitan, Huangpu, Shanghai 200002
- Cuisine: Cantonese
- Price range: ¥¥¥¥
- Chef: Xu Jingye
- Awards: Michelin 2 Stars (2024, 2025); Asia's 50 Best #29 (2025); OAD Asia #16 (2025); La Liste Leading Restaurants 75pts (2025)
- Booking difficulty: Near impossible , plan weeks to months in advance
- Google rating: 4.7 (68 reviews)
- Hours: Not confirmed , verify before visiting
- Phone/website: Not confirmed , check current listings for contact details
- Leading time to visit: Spring (March–April) or autumn (October–November) for seasonal menu transitions in Cantonese kitchens
How It Compares
Against other ¥¥¥¥ options in Shanghai, 102 House is the clearest choice for Cantonese fine dining at this tier. Fu He Hui operates at the same price level but in a vegetarian format, making it a strong option for plant-forward diners or groups with dietary restrictions rather than a direct alternative. If Cantonese is specifically what you are after, 102 House is ahead of any comparable local option on current awards evidence.
For diners who want Cantonese at a lower price point, Ming Court and Royal China Club both operate at ¥¥¥ and will be meaningfully easier to book. You trade some technical ambition and the prestige of the awards tier, but both are respectable choices for a solid Cantonese meal without the weeks-out reservation challenge.
If your group includes diners who are not committed to Chinese cuisine, Scarpetta (Italian, ¥¥¥) offers a credible alternative at a lower spend, and Polux (French, ¥¥) brings the price down further with genuine quality. Neither replaces what 102 House does, but both are practical fallbacks if the booking proves impossible or your group's preferences are mixed.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Can I eat at the bar at 102 House? Bar seating details are not confirmed in current data. At this price tier and with a dining room this tightly managed, counter or bar seating is not a standard feature of high-end Cantonese restaurants in mainland China. Contact the venue directly to confirm seating options before planning around this.
- Does 102 House handle dietary restrictions? No confirmed information is available from the venue. At Michelin 2-star level, most kitchens can accommodate restrictions with advance notice, but this should be communicated at the time of booking rather than assumed. Phone and website details are not confirmed in current data, so use the reservation platform you book through to flag requirements.
- Can 102 House accommodate groups? Seat count is not confirmed, but the low Google review volume suggests a small dining room. Groups larger than four should enquire about private room availability when booking. At ¥¥¥¥ pricing across a full table, the spend is substantial for larger parties, so confirm the format and any group booking requirements directly with the restaurant.
- Is 102 House worth the price? At ¥¥¥¥, yes, if Cantonese fine dining is your focus and you are comparing within Shanghai's top tier. The combination of Michelin 2 stars, a #29 Asia's 50 Best ranking, and a #16 OAD Asia position in the same year gives this restaurant credibility that most ¥¥¥¥ venues in the city do not match. If you are price-sensitive or unsure about the format, Ming Court or Royal China Club at ¥¥¥ offer Cantonese at a lower cost with fewer booking obstacles.
- Is 102 House good for a special occasion? Yes, with the caveat that you need to plan far in advance. The awards pedigree, Bund-area address, and Cantonese fine dining format make it well suited to a significant dinner. Book as early as possible , this is a near-impossible reservation on short notice. If timing is flexible, consider a spring or autumn visit to align with seasonal menu transitions, when Cantonese kitchens tend to be working at their most varied.
- What are alternatives to 102 House in Shanghai? For Cantonese at a lower price and easier booking, try Canton Table, Ji Pin Court, or Canton 8 (Huangpu). For a same-tier vegetarian experience at ¥¥¥¥, Fu He Hui is the most direct substitute. If you are open to Cantonese fine dining outside Shanghai, Forum in Hong Kong and Le Palais in Taipei operate in a comparable tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at 102 House?
Bar seating details are not confirmed in available venue data for 102 House. At a two-Michelin-star Cantonese restaurant at this tier, the experience is typically built around table service and a structured tasting format. check the venue's official channels to confirm seating options before assuming counter or bar access is available.
Does 102 House handle dietary restrictions?
Specific dietary accommodation policies are not documented in the venue record. Given the ¥¥¥¥ price point and two-Michelin-star standing, kitchens at this level typically engage with dietary requirements when notified at booking. Flag restrictions clearly when making your reservation rather than waiting until you arrive.
Can 102 House accommodate groups?
Group capacity details are not confirmed in available data. At Bund-adjacent fine dining restaurants of this calibre in Shanghai, private dining rooms for groups are common but must be requested in advance. If you are booking for six or more, check the venue's official channels to confirm arrangements and any minimum spend requirements.
Is 102 House worth the price?
At ¥¥¥¥ with two Michelin stars, a #29 ranking on Asia's 50 Best Restaurants (2025), and a #16 position on Opinionated About Dining's Asia list, 102 House has the credentials to justify the spend. It is one of the strongest arguments for high-end Cantonese in mainland China. If the format fits — tasting menu, formal service, destination dining — the price is defensible. If you want something more casual or flexible, the value calculation shifts.
Is 102 House good for a special occasion?
Yes, 102 House is a strong choice for a high-stakes occasion. The address on Zhongshan Road East puts it in Shanghai's most prestigious dining corridor, and two Michelin stars plus a top-30 Asia's 50 Best ranking signal a kitchen that performs consistently at that level. Book well in advance and communicate the occasion at the time of reservation.
What are alternatives to 102 House in Shanghai?
For Cantonese fine dining in Shanghai specifically, 102 House sits at the top of the category with its Michelin 2-star and Asia's 50 Best #29 credentials. If you want a comparable prestige level with a different cuisine, Shanghai's broader fine dining scene offers options across French and contemporary formats. For Cantonese elsewhere in the region, Hong Kong remains the reference point — Royal China Club and Ming Court serve that format in different registers and price brackets.
Location
27 Zhongshan Rd (E-1), Waitan, Huangpu, Shanghai, China, 200002
Compare 102 House
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| 102 House | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
| Fu He Hui | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
| Ming Court | ¥¥¥ | — |
| Polux | ¥¥ | — |
| Royal China Club | ¥¥¥ | — |
| Scarpetta | ¥¥¥ | — |
How 102 House stacks up against the competition.
Also Consider
- Fu He Hui — Vegetarian, ¥¥¥¥
- Ming Court — Cantonese, ¥¥¥
- Polux — French, ¥¥
- Royal China Club — Chinese, Cantonese, ¥¥¥
- Scarpetta — Italian, ¥¥¥
Against other ¥¥¥¥ options in Shanghai, 102 House is the clearest choice for Cantonese fine dining at this tier. Fu He Hui operates at the same price level but in a vegetarian format, making it a strong option for plant-forward diners or groups with dietary restrictions rather than a direct alternative. If Cantonese is specifically what you are after, 102 House is ahead of any comparable local option on current awards evidence.
For diners who want Cantonese at a lower price point, Ming Court and Royal China Club both operate at ¥¥¥ and will be meaningfully easier to book. You trade some technical ambition and the recognition that comes with a top-30 Asia ranking, but both are credible choices for a solid Cantonese meal without the weeks-out reservation challenge.
If your group includes diners less committed to Chinese cuisine, Scarpetta (Italian, ¥¥¥) offers a credible alternative at a lower spend, and Polux (French, ¥¥) brings the price down further. Neither replaces what 102 House does, but both are practical fallbacks if the booking proves impossible or the group's preferences are mixed.
Recognized By
Explore Shanghai
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