Restaurant in Shanghai, China
Gong De Lin (West Nanjing Road)
250ptsMichelin-recognised vegetarian at a fair price.

About Gong De Lin (West Nanjing Road)
Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) make Gong De Lin the most credentialled budget vegetarian option in central Shanghai. Rooted in Chinese Buddhist cooking traditions, it delivers serious plant-based depth at ¥¥ pricing on West Nanjing Road. Book for weekday lunch and skip it only if the high-design Fu He Hui experience is what you are after.
Verdict
Gong De Lin on West Nanjing Road is the answer if you want serious Chinese vegetarian cooking at a price that feels almost implausibly fair for central Shanghai. Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) confirm what regulars already know: this is not a default option for plant-based diners who ran out of ideas. It is a destination in its own right. Book it for lunch on a weekday if you can, arrive hungry, and do not expect minimalist aesthetics. If you want the high-design vegetarian experience, Fu He Hui exists for that. Gong De Lin is for people who want to eat well and spend sensibly.
About Gong De Lin
Walk past the ground-floor facade on West Nanjing Road and you are already inside one of Shanghai's longer-running vegetarian traditions. The address places it squarely in the People's Square corridor, one of the most navigated stretches of the city, and that accessibility is part of the value proposition. You are not hunting for it down a lane or making a pilgrimage. It is there, in the middle of everything, and it has been doing this long enough that the cooking has a settled confidence to it.
Chinese Buddhist vegetarian cuisine at this level is built around a specific sourcing logic that separates it from generic meat-free cooking. The kitchen works with ingredients that have been central to Chinese monastic food traditions for centuries: tofu preparations in multiple forms, gluten-based proteins, seasonal vegetables, fermented condiments, and stocks built without animal products. The craft is in making these ingredients perform at a level that does not feel like compromise. When the sourcing is right, the depth of flavour in a braised tofu dish or a well-constructed vegetable stock can hold its own against any meat-based equivalent. The Bib Gourmand recognition specifically rewards this kind of value-to-quality ratio, which means inspectors found the sourcing and execution strong enough to meet Michelin standards at the ¥¥ price point.
That price tier is significant context for anyone planning around a Shanghai dining budget. At ¥¥, Gong De Lin sits well below the ¥¥¥¥ bracket occupied by Fu He Hui, which offers a tasting-menu-driven take on creative vegetarian cuisine in a different league of interior design. The comparison matters for decision-making: if you are after one high-ceremony vegetarian meal in Shanghai, Fu He Hui earns that spend. If you want to eat well twice or three times without the ceremony, Gong De Lin makes that possible. The Lakeside Veggie is another option in the city for plant-based eating, but the Michelin recognition gives Gong De Lin a documented quality floor that is harder to argue with.
For the explorer who travels specifically to track down regional Chinese cooking traditions, this venue sits within a broader network of serious Chinese restaurants across the country worth mapping against. Xin Rong Ji (West Nanjing Road) is a few minutes away and anchors the Taizhou seafood tradition in Shanghai with similar neighbourhood-institution energy. The contrast between the two is instructive: same street, two very different sourcing philosophies, both executed with enough care to attract repeat diners. If you are building a multi-city China itinerary, note that comparable vegetarian depth exists at Lamdre in Beijing, and for Buddhist-tradition vegetarian cooking in Hangzhou, Ru Yuan is worth the trip.
The timing question matters here more than at most ¥¥ venues. Weekday lunch is the move. The West Nanjing Road area draws significant office and tourist traffic at peak times, and a Michelin-listed vegetarian restaurant at accessible prices will fill. Midday on a Tuesday or Wednesday gives you the leading combination of crowd level and kitchen focus. Weekend lunch is still workable but expect to wait if you have not planned ahead. Dinner is an option, though hours are not confirmed in our current data, so check directly before planning an evening visit.
For those building out a broader Shanghai trip, the area around People's Square puts you within reach of the city's central cultural infrastructure. Pair Gong De Lin with time in the surrounding neighbourhood and use our full Shanghai restaurants guide to anchor the rest of your eating across the city. If you are also covering ground in nearby cities, Xin Rong Ji in Beijing, Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu, and Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine in Guangzhou are the kind of regionally specific restaurants worth building itineraries around. For Macau, Chef Tam's Seasons and Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing round out the regional picture. Use our Shanghai hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide to fill the rest of the trip.
The Google rating of 3.8 from 46 reviews is a thin sample and should not carry much weight against the Michelin assessments. Bib Gourmand recognition requires consistency over multiple inspector visits; a small Google review pool skews easily from a handful of misaligned expectations. Factor it as a data point, not a verdict.
Know Before You Go
- Address
- 445 Nanjing Rd (W), People's Square, Huangpu, Shanghai 200003
- Cuisine
- Chinese Vegetarian (Buddhist tradition)
- Price
- ¥¥ — accessible; two people can eat well without financial planning
- Awards
- Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 and 2025
- Leading time to visit
- Weekday lunch — Tuesday to Thursday midday for lowest crowds and full kitchen attention
- Booking difficulty
- Easy , no multi-week advance planning required, but calling ahead for weekends is sensible
- Getting there
- People's Square metro station is the closest stop; West Nanjing Road is walkable from there
- Good for
- Solo diners, couples, small groups, budget-conscious explorers, vegetarians and non-vegetarians alike
- Google rating
- 3.8 (46 reviews) , low sample size; weight the Michelin recognition more heavily
How It Compares
See the comparison section below.
Further Reading
- Fu He Hui , high-design vegetarian, ¥¥¥¥
- The Lakeside Veggie , vegetarian alternative in Shanghai
- 102 House (Cantonese)
- Taian Table , Modern European, innovative
- Xin Rong Ji (West Nanjing Road) , Taizhou seafood, same street
- Lamdre , Vegetarian in Beijing
- Bonvivant , Vegetarian in Berlin
- Our full Shanghai wineries guide
Compare Gong De Lin (West Nanjing Road)
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gong De Lin (West Nanjing Road) | Vegetarian | ¥¥ | Easy |
| Fu He Hui | Vegetarian | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Ming Court | Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Polux | French | ¥¥ | Unknown |
| Royal China Club | Chinese, Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Scarpetta | Italian | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Gong De Lin (West Nanjing Road)?
Book at least a few days in advance, especially for weekends. The West Nanjing Road location sits in the heart of Huangpu, pulling heavy foot traffic from People's Square, and a two-time Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition (2024 and 2025) has sharpened demand. Walk-ins may work on quieter weekday lunches, but for groups or dinner, a reservation is the safer call.
Can Gong De Lin (West Nanjing Road) accommodate groups?
Yes, and the format suits groups well. Chinese vegetarian spreads are designed for sharing, so the ¥¥ price point makes it easy to order broadly without a painful bill split. For larger parties of six or more, call ahead rather than relying on walk-in availability, particularly given the venue's Michelin Bib Gourmand profile driving consistent covers.
What should a first-timer know about Gong De Lin (West Nanjing Road)?
The kitchen focuses on traditional Chinese vegetarian cooking, a category with genuine depth beyond simple ingredient substitution. At ¥¥ pricing with back-to-back Bib Gourmand awards in 2024 and 2025, you are getting Michelin-recognised quality without the spend that usually accompanies it in central Shanghai. Arrive with the expectation of a full meal rather than a quick stop.
What should I wear to Gong De Lin (West Nanjing Road)?
No formal dress code applies at a ¥¥-tier Bib Gourmand restaurant in this category. Neat, comfortable clothes are appropriate. This is not a white-tablecloth occasion, so you can arrive directly from a day around People's Square without overthinking it.
Can I eat at the bar at Gong De Lin (West Nanjing Road)?
Gong De Lin is a Chinese vegetarian restaurant, not a bar-format venue, so a dedicated bar counter is not part of the setup here. If you are after a solo or impromptu seat, ask about counter or casual table availability when you arrive, but plan around a table-service experience rather than a bar perch.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Shanghai
- Fu He HuiFu He Hui holds two Michelin stars and a World's 50 Best #64 global ranking for 2025, making it the most credentialed plant-based tasting menu restaurant in China. Chef Tony Lu's kitchen is a serious destination for special occasions, but the vegetarian-only format and near-impossible booking difficulty mean it rewards guests who are genuinely committed to the experience. Book weeks in advance and plan your evening around the 9 pm kitchen close.
- Taian TableTaian Table holds three Michelin stars and La Liste recognition for 2025, making it one of Shanghai's most credentialed fine-dining addresses. Chef Christiaan Stoop's Modern European tasting menu is format-committed and near-impossible to book — plan two to three months out. At ¥¥¥¥, it is the right choice for food-focused travellers who want precision cooking with no equivalent in the city.
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