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    Restaurant in Shanghai, China

    Hang Yuen Hin

    210pts

    Authentic Cantonese at ¥¥, no hassle booking.

    Hang Yuen Hin, Restaurant in Shanghai

    About Hang Yuen Hin

    A Michelin Plate Cantonese restaurant in Xujiahui offering authentic, low-salt cooking informed by both Guangzhou and Hong Kong technique. At the ¥¥ price tier, it delivers credible value — particularly for dim sum and signature dishes like almond-crusted shrimp rolls and crispy pigeon. The right choice if you want a relaxed, family-style Cantonese meal without stepping up to the ¥¥¥ bracket.

    Should You Book Hang Yuen Hin?

    If you are comparing Hang Yuen Hin against the more polished, higher-priced Cantonese rooms in Shanghai — Ming Court or Royal China Club, both at ¥¥¥ — the answer here is yes, book it, but go in with the right expectations. Hang Yuen Hin is a ¥¥ neighbourhood Cantonese restaurant in Xujiahui that earned a Michelin Plate in 2025, which means Michelin's inspectors found the cooking consistently good enough to recommend without awarding a star. At this price tier, that credential matters: it separates Hang Yuen Hin from the crowded mid-range Cantonese field in Shanghai and gives you a meaningful reason to choose it over a random local alternative.

    The Space

    The restaurant sits at 290 Wanping Road in Xuhui District, and the room works in its favour before the food arrives. Lush greenery visible through the windows softens the space and gives it a calm, almost residential quality that is rare in a district better known for retail density. This is not a dramatic dining room designed to impress on arrival , it is designed to make you comfortable for a long meal, which suits the Cantonese format well. The atmosphere skews family and group, with the kind of unhurried pace that dim sum with multiple courses demands. Solo diners and couples will find it functional rather than intimate, but the relaxed spatial quality is a genuine asset if you are planning a longer, exploratory meal.

    The Cooking and How the Meal Progresses

    The kitchen draws on a chef with experience across both Guangzhou and Hong Kong, which is a meaningful distinction in the Cantonese context. Guangzhou cooking tends toward restrained seasoning and clarity of ingredient; Hong Kong technique brings precision in preparation and a stronger focus on texture. Both traditions inform what Michelin noted about the menu here: the dishes are described as deliberately low in salt and oil, which is a philosophical position as much as a dietary one. It signals a kitchen that is not compensating for ingredient quality with seasoning, and it places Hang Yuen Hin closer to the mainland Cantonese tradition than to the richer, more sauce-forward style you find at some Hong Kong-influenced restaurants in Shanghai. For a broader look at how this style sits in the regional landscape, Forum in Hong Kong and Le Palais in Taipei both represent the higher-end expression of classical Cantonese if you want a benchmark for comparison.

    Michelin record identifies almond-crusted fried shrimp rolls and crispy pigeon as signature dishes. Both are technically demanding preparations: the shrimp roll requires a precisely seasoned filling and a crust that holds without becoming heavy, while crispy pigeon is a dish where the gap between a good version and a mediocre one is immediately obvious in the skin texture and the seasoning of the brine. These are the dishes to order if you want to assess the kitchen's range. Dim sum rounds out the offering and is explicitly flagged as a strength, making this a strong option for a mid-morning or lunch booking with a group. For other Cantonese dim sum options in Shanghai, Canton 8 (Huangpu), Bao Li Xuan, and Ji Pin Court are worth comparing before you decide.

    Progression of a meal here follows the classic Cantonese logic: lighter, more delicate preparations first, richer and more textured dishes as the meal deepens. If you are ordering a la carte rather than a set menu, this architecture is worth keeping in mind. Start with the dim sum or lighter cold preparations, move through the shrimp rolls, and let the crispy pigeon anchor the later stage of the meal. This is a format that rewards pacing and conversation rather than speed, and the room is built for exactly that. For context on how Cantonese tasting architecture plays out at a higher price point elsewhere in the region, Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau and Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing offer useful reference points.

    Booking and Logistics

    Hang Yuen Hin is rated Easy for booking difficulty. No advance reservation weeks out is required , this is not a hard-to-get table. That said, for weekend dim sum or larger group lunches, booking ahead by a few days is sensible given the Michelin recognition it received in 2025. The address at Wanping Road places it in Xujiahui, which is well connected by metro. Phone and website details are not currently listed in Pearl's database, so the most reliable approach is to book via a platform such as Dianping or ask your hotel concierge to assist. For a fuller picture of where to eat, stay, and drink in the city, see our full Shanghai restaurants guide, our full Shanghai hotels guide, and our full Shanghai bars guide.

    How It Compares

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    Is Hang Yuen Hin Worth It?
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Hang Yuen Hin¥¥Easy
    Fu He Hui¥¥¥¥Unknown
    Ming Court¥¥¥Unknown
    Royal China Club¥¥¥Unknown
    Scarpetta¥¥¥Unknown
    Yè Shanghai¥¥Unknown

    How Hang Yuen Hin stacks up against the competition.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Hang Yuen Hin good for solo dining?

    It works well enough for solo diners, but the format favours sharing. Cantonese cooking at this level — Michelin Plate, ¥¥ — is designed for table-wide ordering, especially dim sum. A solo visit limits how much of the menu you can reasonably cover. If you are dining alone, focus on the signature dishes rather than attempting a spread.

    How far ahead should I book Hang Yuen Hin?

    Booking difficulty is rated Easy — you do not need to plan weeks out. That said, weekend dim sum with families fills tables quickly, so a same-day call ahead is sensible for groups. Weekday lunches and dinners are generally accessible without much lead time.

    What should I wear to Hang Yuen Hin?

    At ¥¥ pricing in Xuhui, there is no indication of a strict dress code. Neat, relaxed clothing is appropriate. This is not a formal dining room in the way that higher-priced Cantonese venues like Ming Court position themselves.

    Is Hang Yuen Hin worth the price?

    At ¥¥, it is good value for Michelin Plate-recognised Cantonese cooking with a chef background spanning Guangzhou and Hong Kong. If you are comparing against ¥¥¥ rooms like Ming Court or Royal China Club, Hang Yuen Hin trades some polish for significantly lower spend. For an everyday Cantonese meal that takes the cooking seriously, the price-to-quality ratio holds up.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Hang Yuen Hin?

    No tasting menu format is documented for Hang Yuen Hin. The venue appears to operate as a standard Cantonese restaurant with signature dishes — almond-crusted fried shrimp rolls and crispy pigeon are specifically noted — alongside dim sum. Order to the table rather than expecting a set progression.

    Does Hang Yuen Hin handle dietary restrictions?

    No specific dietary accommodation policy is documented in available data. The kitchen is noted for cooking Cantonese dishes that are low in salt and oil, which may suit some preferences, but specific allergy or dietary restriction handling is not confirmed. check the venue's official channels before booking if this is a priority.

    Can Hang Yuen Hin accommodate groups?

    The venue is positioned as a strong choice for family and group dim sum, which suggests it is set up for larger parties. At ¥¥ pricing and with an easy booking profile, it is a practical option for groups who want a proper Cantonese meal without the cost or advance planning required at ¥¥¥ competitors. Booking ahead for larger groups is still advisable.

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