Restaurant in Miami, United States
Double Luck Chinese
475ptsHigh-energy American Chinese with real personality.

About Double Luck Chinese
Double Luck Chinese earned a spot on Resy's Best of the Hit List for 2025, and it delivers: maximalist American Chinese cooking with a bar program to match in Miami's Upper Eastside. Booking is easy, the energy is high, and it works best for groups or a date night where the room is part of the point. Not a wine destination, but a strong call for cocktails and shared plates.
Is Double Luck Chinese Worth Booking in 2025?
Yes — and Resy agrees. Double Luck Chinese landed on Resy's Leading of the Hit List for 2025, which in Miami's crowded dining scene is a signal worth taking seriously. This is a high-energy spot on the Upper Eastside that takes American Chinese classics and pushes them into something louder, more playful, and more deliberate. If you went once and are wondering whether it holds up on a second visit, the short answer is: go back, and this time sit at the bar.
What Double Luck Chinese Actually Is
The premise is maximalist American Chinese, which means the visual experience is part of the point. The room leans into colour and texture in ways that signal intent from the moment you walk in — this is not a neutral backdrop. The bar program is taken seriously here, which matters if your last visit was food-focused. The cocktails are built to match the kitchen's register: bold, specific, a little irreverent. For a neighbourhood that runs between Wynwood's tourist-facing energy and Miami Shores' quiet residential pace, Double Luck reads as a genuine local anchor rather than a destination import.
The wine list at Double Luck is not the main event , and that is fine. American Chinese cooking, especially in its maximalist form, tends to work better with cocktails or cold beer than with a structured wine program. If you are a wine-first diner, L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon Miami or Ariete will serve you better on that dimension. At Double Luck, the drink pairing logic runs through the cocktail menu, not the cellar. Order accordingly.
Booking and Timing
Booking difficulty here is low. You are not fighting a six-week waitlist. Resy handles reservations, and the venue is accessible enough that planning a few days out is usually sufficient. That said, the bar scene picks up sharply on weekends , if the lively, louder side of the room is not what you want, a weeknight visit gives you more space and a calmer pace. Walk-ins at the bar are a reasonable option if you are flexible on timing. The Upper Eastside location at 1085 NE 79th St puts it a short drive from Wynwood and the Design District, so it layers well into a broader Miami evening.
Who Should Book Double Luck Chinese
This is the right call if you want something with genuine personality rather than another polished tasting-menu experience. It works well for groups who want to share plates in a room with some energy, for a date that benefits from a lively atmosphere, or as an opener to a night that continues into Miami's bar circuit. It is not the right call if you are looking for quiet conversation, a deep wine list, or a fine-dining occasion. For the latter, Boia De or Cote Miami fit better. For something more ambitious in the Peruvian-Asian register, ITAMAE is worth considering as a companion or alternative depending on your mood.
The 2025 Resy recognition matters here because it reflects current momentum, not legacy reputation. Double Luck is not coasting on a years-old buzz cycle. For a returning visitor, that means the kitchen has continued to develop rather than settled into a formula , reason enough to go back and eat wider across the menu than you did the first time.
How It Compares
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Compare Double Luck Chinese
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Double Luck Chinese | Resy Best of the Hit List (2025); Double Luck Chinese is a high-energy Chinese restaurant in Miami’s Upper Eastside known for playful, maximalist takes on American Chinese classics and a lively bar scene. | Easy | — | |
| Cote Miami | Korean Steakhouse, Korean | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Ariete | Modern American, Contemporary | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Boia De | Italian, Contemporary | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Stubborn Seed | Progressive American, Contemporary | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann | Argentinian | Unknown | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Double Luck Chinese accommodate groups?
Groups are a natural fit here. The high-energy room and bar-forward format suit larger parties better than a quiet tasting-menu spot would. Book ahead on Resy to secure space for groups of four or more, especially on weekends given its Resy 2025 Hit List profile.
Does Double Luck Chinese handle dietary restrictions?
The menu is built around American Chinese classics, so vegetable-forward dishes are typically part of the format. That said, specific dietary accommodations are not documented in the available venue record, so check the venue's official channels before booking if allergies are a concern.
Can I eat at the bar at Double Luck Chinese?
Yes, and the bar is part of the point. Double Luck Chinese is known specifically for its lively bar scene alongside the dining room, so bar seating is a genuine option rather than an afterthought. It works well for walk-ins or solo diners who want the full energy of the room.
What should I wear to Double Luck Chinese?
The maximalist, high-energy vibe at Double Luck Chinese reads as casual-to-fun rather than formal. Think going-out casual: no dress code pressure, but the colourful room rewards the effort. Leave the blazer at home unless you want to.
Recognized By
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