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    Restaurant in London, United Kingdom

    Hakkasan Mayfair

    865pts

    High-glamour Chinese: dress up, book early.

    Hakkasan Mayfair, Restaurant in London

    About Hakkasan Mayfair

    Hakkasan Mayfair is London's flagship address for high-end Cantonese cooking, with consecutive Michelin Plate recognition and a 4.3 Google rating across 4,000-plus reviews. The basement dining room is theatrical and noisy; the ground-floor dim sum at lunch is among the better in the city. Book two to three weeks out minimum and ask for the Taste of Hakkasan set menu.

    A 4.3-star rating across 4,147 Google reviews tells you something: Hakkasan Mayfair converts skeptics regularly enough to sustain a consensus. The question is whether it converts them at ££££ prices — and whether the service justifies that bill.

    For a first-timer, the setup matters. You enter through a discreet door on Bruton Street, and the ground floor greets you with a lounge-bar feel and natural light. If you are here for dinner, ask specifically for a table on the lower floor. The basement dining room runs on a different energy: spot-lit tables, carved oriental screens, and a soundtrack that sits somewhere between ambient and nightclub. The atmosphere is deliberate and theatrical — this is a room designed to make you feel like the evening is an event. Whether that works for you depends on how you read the room.

    The sensory experience downstairs is full-on. Noise levels after 9 PM are significant. Conversation at a four-leading is manageable; a group of six will be leaning in. The tables are tightly packed, which means you will hear your neighbours' dinner as clearly as your own. If a quieter room is the priority, this is not the right booking , consider Kai or Hunan instead. But if the energy is part of what you are paying for, the basement at Hakkasan Mayfair delivers it consistently.

    Does the service earn the price?

    This is the editorial question that matters most at Hakkasan Mayfair, and the answer is mixed. The staff are well-trained and the room runs professionally. But multiple accounts flag a notably cool reception when diners ask for the Taste of Hakkasan set menu , described in the same breath as "incredible value" , suggesting the front-of-house culture is calibrated toward higher per-head spends. At a ££££ restaurant, the expectation is that every diner at every price point receives the same quality of attention. When that does not happen, it corrodes the value proposition more than a slow starter course would.

    The food itself is harder to fault. Chef Tong Chee Hwee has run the Hakkasan kitchen with consistency that has earned consecutive Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) and placement in the Opinionated About Dining Casual Europe rankings , #303 in 2024 and #480 in 2025. The cooking is technically precise: batter work is genuinely light, timing on vegetables is accurate, and the luxury-ingredient upgrades (roast duck with caviar, ibérico pork char siu with black garlic glaze) are not just menu decoration. The Singapore noodles arrive with jumbo prawns rather than the budget substitutes you encounter elsewhere in London's Chinese restaurant circuit. The Duke of Berkshire sweet-and-sour pork is a serious reworking of a dish that most kitchens treat as an afterthought.

    For London benchmarks in Chinese dining, the comparison set is instructive. Imperial Treasure and Four Seasons operate at lower price points with strong Cantonese credentials. Barshu is the address for Sichuan cooking without the Mayfair markup. Hakkasan occupies a different position: it is the version of Chinese fine dining built around atmosphere, global brand credibility, and cooking that uses luxury produce as a structural feature rather than an occasional flourish. Whether that is worth it depends on what you are booking for.

    When to go

    Lunch on the ground floor, Tuesday through Thursday, is the optimal timing for a first visit. The dim sum is among the better in London , serious enough to justify the trip on its own , and the lighter, less pressurised environment lets you assess the kitchen without the full evening-performance framing. The ground floor gets natural light during daytime hours, which makes the space feel less constructed.

    If dinner is the plan, Thursday through Saturday delivers the full version of what Hakkasan Mayfair is selling: the energy, the crowd, the dressed-up room. Sunday through Wednesday evenings are quieter, which is a better environment for conversation but arguably undersells the atmosphere this room is built around. Booking difficulty is high regardless of day , plan on reserving at least two to three weeks out for dinner, more for Thursday through Saturday slots.

    For international context, Hakkasan operates ten locations from Miami to Mumbai. If you have eaten at another outpost, the Mayfair location is the original European flagship and the benchmark against which the others are measured. The Tottenham Court Road original, which was the founding address when Alan Yau launched the concept in 2001, closed in February 2025 after 24 years , making the Mayfair address the sole London representative of a restaurant that materially changed what aspirational Chinese dining looked like in this city.

    For other serious dining in London, our full London restaurants guide covers the full range across cuisines and price points. If you are building a wider trip, see also our London hotels guide, bars guide, wineries, and experiences. For Chinese fine dining outside London, Restaurant Tim Raue in Berlin and Mister Jiu's in San Francisco are the reference points worth knowing. For UK fine dining at the leading end more broadly, The Fat Duck in Bray, L'Enclume in Cartmel, Moor Hall in Aughton, Gidleigh Park in Chagford, Hand and Flowers in Marlow, and hide and fox in Saltwood represent the spread.

    Practical details

    Reservations: Book two to three weeks ahead minimum for dinner; further out for Thursday–Saturday. Booking difficulty is high. Hours: Monday–Wednesday and Sunday 5:30–10 PM; Thursday–Saturday 5:30–11 PM. Lunch service available (ground floor). Price: ££££ , budget for wine to at least double the food bill. The Taste of Hakkasan set menu is flagged as strong value; ask for it confidently even if the response is lukewarm. Dress: Smart dress is expected and appropriate , this is a room where appearances are part of the contract. Address: 17 Bruton St, London W1J 6QB.

    FAQs

    Is Hakkasan Mayfair good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with one caveat. The basement dining room, dressed-up crowd, high-spec cooking, and Michelin Plate recognition make it a credible special-occasion booking. The caveat is noise: the atmosphere is energetic rather than intimate, so if a quiet dinner for two is the goal, the setting works against you. For a celebratory group dinner or a date where the event itself is part of the point, it delivers. The roast duck with caviar option is the kind of dish that photographs well and tastes better than it needs to.

    How far ahead should I book Hakkasan Mayfair?

    Two to three weeks minimum for a weekday dinner, four or more weeks for Thursday through Saturday. Lunch on the ground floor is somewhat easier to secure, but do not assume walk-in availability. Booking difficulty is rated high: this is a globally recognised address in Mayfair with consistent demand. If your dates are fixed, book as early as possible.

    Is Hakkasan Mayfair good for solo dining?

    It is not optimised for solo diners. The menu is built around sharing, the room is oriented toward groups and couples, and the price point feels harder to justify solo. That said, the bar and ground-floor lounge area are more amenable to a single diner, particularly at lunch for dim sum. If solo Chinese dining in London is the goal, Hunan offers a more natural solo format with its set tasting structure.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Hakkasan Mayfair?

    They are different enough to be treated as separate visits. Lunch on the ground floor is the better entry point for a first-timer: the dim sum is among the better in London, the room is less pressurised, and the price-to-quality ratio is more favourable. Dinner in the basement is the full version of what the brand is selling , the atmosphere, the occasion, the luxury-ingredient menu. If you can only go once, dinner gives you the complete picture; if you are assessing the kitchen on its own terms, lunch is the cleaner test.

    Does Hakkasan Mayfair handle dietary restrictions?

    The kitchen works with luxury ingredients across a broad menu, and high-end Chinese cooking has natural options for many dietary requirements , vegetable dishes, seafood, and non-meat preparations are menu staples. That said, specific allergen and dietary information is not available in our data. Contact the restaurant directly before booking if dietary restrictions are a factor; at this price point, advance communication should be met with a clear response.

    What should I order at Hakkasan Mayfair?

    The dim sum at lunch is the place to start if this is your first visit. At dinner, the roast duck (with or without the caviar addition), the Duke of Berkshire sweet-and-sour pork, the crispy soft-shell crab, and the ibérico pork char siu with black garlic glaze are the dishes that appear most consistently in accounts of the kitchen at its leading. The Taste of Hakkasan set menu is flagged as strong value , ask for it. Avoid over-ordering: the portions are generous and the bill builds quickly once wine is added.

    What should I wear to Hakkasan Mayfair?

    Smart dress is the working assumption. The room is designed around appearance , the staff are formally presented, the design is high-contrast and theatrical, and the Mayfair location sets a clear expectation. Business casual is the floor; most diners at dinner are in smart-casual to dressed-up. If you are arriving straight from the office in a suit, you will fit. Trainers and casual streetwear are out of place in the basement dining room, particularly Thursday through Saturday.

    Compare Hakkasan Mayfair

    Recognized Venues: Hakkasan Mayfair and Peers
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    Hakkasan Mayfair“Glamorous” and “refined Chinese food in an elegant” – if “very dark” – setting still pleases many admirers at this now-global brand, whose seminal basement original near Tottenham Court Road tube closed down after 24 years in February 2025. The “excellent” roast duck with caviar and other signature dishes can still be enjoyed at its svelte Mayfair offshoot, as well as 10 international locations from Miami to Mumbai. Nay-sayers view it as an experience for “the Instagram crowd, who eat little and take photos all the time” – but most diners still find it “amazing overall” . Top Tip – “they did not seem to like us asking for the Taste of Hakkasan set menu, which is incredible value!”; This seductive subterranean spot beckons you in through its discreet entrance on Bruton Street, immediately transporting you to somewhere altogether more thrilling. The ground floor is great for lunchtime dim sum, but if you’re here for dinner ask for a table on the lower floor, which has a more energising atmosphere. The extensive menus feature a roll-call of luxury ingredients, from whole native lobster to black truffle roasted duck.; There had been high-end Chinese eateries in London before visionary restaurateur Alan Yau launched Hakkasan in 2001 but none that had made the concept approachably aspirational rather than simply offering dining rooms for the rich. This 2010 sequel keeps all that was ground-breaking about the Tottenham Court Road original but in a Mayfair location that seems a better fit for the high-octane glamour of it all. A mirror hanging above the staircase to the basement dining room emphasises that this is a restaurant where appearances are at a premium and, from the carved oriental screens and spot-lit tables to the scarily good-looking staff, Hakkasan Mayfair is not somewhere to slum it. Then again, this is food to dress up for. The Anglo-Chinese favourites can be pimped up with luxury produce – the Peking duck comes with the optional addition of beluga caviar – but all the ingredients here are top-notch (as indeed they should be at these prices) and the quality of cooking is unfailingly high. The pork ribs are smoked with jasmine tea, the Singapore noodles adorned with jumbo-sized prawns (rather than the usual sad specimens), soft-shell crab, squid and Dover sole are gently encased in the lightest of batters, while perfectly timed pak choi zings with fresh ginger. Balance is a hallmark of the Hakkasan kitchen, whether the genuinely sweet-and-sour Duke of Berkshire pork (a best-in-class rendition of the clichéd dish), the hot-and-sour crispy freshwater prawns with chillies and cashews (an update of the classic kung po), or the sharp and rich slow-roasted ibérico pork char siu coated with black garlic glaze, mustard dressing and pickled daikon. Wines from the style-led list will at least double the bill, while other drawbacks to dining here include tightly packed tables that allow easy eavesdropping and a throbbing soundtrack that would not be out of place in a nightclub. Natural light makes the ground-floor dining room-cum-lounge bar feel less claustrophobic, not least for daytime dim sum that is some of the best in London. But for special occasions – or any time you just want to feel special – Hakkasan Mayfair fits the sizeable bill.; Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #480 (2025); Michelin Plate (2025); Opinionated About Dining Casual in Europe Ranked #303 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); World's 50 Best Restaurants #36 (2009); World's 50 Best Restaurants #19 (2008); World's 50 Best Restaurants #19 (2007); World's 50 Best Restaurants #36 (2006); World's 50 Best Restaurants #30 (2005); World's 50 Best Restaurants #14 (2004)££££
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    Sketch, The Lecture Room and LibraryMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best££££
    The LedburyMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best££££
    Dinner by Heston BlumenthalMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best££££

    What to weigh when choosing between Hakkasan Mayfair and alternatives.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Hakkasan Mayfair good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with caveats. The subterranean dining room, carved screens, and spot-lit tables create a setting that signals occasion spending — and dishes like roast duck with beluga caviar back it up. At ££££, it earns the Michelin Plate it holds. The drawback: tables are tightly packed and the soundtrack runs loud, which makes intimate conversation harder than at somewhere like The Ledbury. For celebrations where atmosphere and food both need to deliver, it works; for quiet, long dinners, it may not.

    How far ahead should I book Hakkasan Mayfair?

    Book two to three weeks out minimum for weeknight dinner; further ahead for Thursday through Saturday, when the room is at its most energised and fills fast. The Taste of Hakkasan set menu is reportedly strong value — reviewers flag that staff sometimes resist promoting it, so ask specifically when booking or on arrival. Dinner hours run Monday to Wednesday until 10 pm, Thursday to Saturday until 11 pm.

    Is Hakkasan Mayfair good for solo dining?

    Possible, but not the format's strength. The room is built around table dining with a nightclub energy — it's more social spectacle than solo retreat. If you're dining alone, the ground-floor lounge bar area offers a less intense entry point, especially at lunch when the dim sum menu applies and the atmosphere is lighter. Solo diners looking for a counter or bar-focused experience would be better served elsewhere.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Hakkasan Mayfair?

    Lunch on the ground floor is the sharper value play and the lower-pressure introduction to the kitchen — the dim sum is among the more serious in London and natural light keeps the space from feeling claustropheric. Dinner in the basement delivers the full Hakkasan effect: darker, louder, higher-energy. If it's your first visit and you want to assess the food before committing to the full ££££ dinner experience, lunch is the smarter test.

    Does Hakkasan Mayfair handle dietary restrictions?

    The venue database does not specify dietary accommodation policies. Given the ££££ price point and professional service standard, it is reasonable to call ahead and ask — the kitchen works with high-end ingredients across a broad menu, which usually allows flexibility. check the venue's official channels via the Bruton Street location (17 Bruton St, London W1J 6QB) to confirm before booking.

    What should I order at Hakkasan Mayfair?

    The roast duck with caviar is the signature worth ordering if budget allows. Reviewers with access to the kitchen's output also single out the pork ribs smoked with jasmine tea, the crispy soft-shell crab, and the ibérico pork char siu with black garlic glaze. The Taste of Hakkasan set menu draws repeated praise for value — ask for it explicitly, as staff have reportedly been reluctant to push it unprompted.

    What should I wear to Hakkasan Mayfair?

    Dress well. The room is designed around appearance — mirrored staircase, carved oriental screens, high-spec staff — and the clientele reflects that. A mirror above the entrance staircase is not accidental signalling. Smart dress is the floor; the upper end of the room skews toward occasion-night dressing. Turning up in casual clothes will not get you turned away, but you will feel conspicuous.

    Hours

    Monday
    5:30–10 pm
    Tuesday
    5:30–10 pm
    Wednesday
    5:30–10 pm
    Thursday
    5:30–11 pm
    Friday
    5:30–11 pm
    Saturday
    5:30–11 pm
    Sunday
    5:30–10 pm

    Recognized By

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