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    Restaurant in New York City, United States

    Joe’s Shanghai

    350pts

    Chinatown's soup dumpling standard, still delivering.

    Joe’s Shanghai, Restaurant in New York City

    About Joe’s Shanghai

    Joe's Shanghai at 46 Bowery is New York City's most credentialled soup dumpling address in Chinatown, holding a Pearl Recommended (2025) designation and an OAD Casual North America ranking. Open daily 11am to 11pm with a 4.2 Google rating across nearly 6,000 reviews, it's an easy booking and a reliable choice — especially in autumn when crab xiao long bao are in season.

    The Verdict

    If you're weighing Joe's Shanghai against Din Tai Fung for soup dumplings in New York City, Joe's Shanghai is the local institution worth knowing. It has been serving xiao long bao on the Lower East Side and in Chinatown for decades, holds a Pearl Recommended Restaurant (2025) designation, and ranks #605 on the Opinionated About Dining Casual North America list (2024). The 4.2 Google rating across nearly 6,000 reviews signals consistent crowd-pleasing performance. For a no-frills, high-volume soup dumpling experience with legitimate credentials, book here — but go in knowing the format: communal tables, fast turnover, no-fuss service. This is not a date-night destination in the conventional sense; it's a working Chinatown restaurant that earns its reputation through the dumplings, not the room.

    About Joe's Shanghai

    Joe's Shanghai at 46 Bowery has been a Chinatown fixture long enough that it predates most of the soup dumpling conversation in the United States. That longevity is a meaningful credential: surviving in New York's Chinatown requires consistent product, fair pricing, and repeat local business. The Bowery location draws tourists and regulars in roughly equal measure, and the kitchen handles that volume without obvious drop in quality — which is exactly what the OAD Casual ranking reflects.

    The kitchen's focus is soup dumplings , xiao long bao , and the menu is structured around that specialty. Seasonality here plays a subtle but real role: crab xiao long bao, when available, represent the premium order, and their quality tracks the East Coast crab season from late summer through autumn. If you're visiting between September and November, ask whether the crab version is on offer; it's the reason regulars time their visits deliberately. Outside that window, the pork xiao long bao remain the reliable anchor of any meal.

    The Bowery dining room is not designed for lingering. Tables seat quickly, portions are generous, and the pace is set by the kitchen, not the guest. That dynamic works in your favour at lunch, when the room is slightly easier to get into and the kitchen is fully operational. Dinner service, especially on weekends, sees the wait times stretch. The venue is open 11am to 11pm every day of the week, which gives you more scheduling flexibility than most comparable spots in the neighbourhood.

    For a special occasion framing, Joe's Shanghai works leading as part of a broader Chinatown evening rather than as the headline act. It is genuinely good at what it does, and sharing a steamer of xiao long bao with a group has an inherent communal energy , but the room offers little in the way of atmosphere or pacing for a celebration. If the occasion calls for more, consider building an evening around it: arrive early, eat well, and move on for drinks elsewhere in the neighbourhood.

    Compared to Nan Xiang Xiao Long Bao in Flushing, Joe's Shanghai offers the advantage of a Manhattan location without a meaningful quality compromise. Bao, The leans more upmarket in presentation. For a global reference point, Jia Jia Tang Bao in Shanghai and Din Tai Fung in Hong Kong are the benchmarks the category is measured against. Joe's Shanghai holds its own credibly in that conversation at a price point that makes the comparison generous to the diner.

    Know Before You Go

    • Address: 46 Bowery, New York, NY 10013
    • Hours: Monday to Sunday, 11am to 11pm
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , walk-ins are generally viable; weekday lunch is the most accessible window
    • Leading timing: Weekday lunch or early dinner to avoid peak weekend waits; late September to November if you want crab xiao long bao
    • Format: High-volume, communal-style Chinatown dining room; fast turnover
    • Awards: Pearl Recommended Restaurant (2025); OAD Casual North America #605 (2024); OAD Recommended (2023)
    • Google rating: 4.2 from 5,911 reviews
    • Nearby guides: Full NYC restaurants guide | NYC hotels | NYC bars | NYC experiences

    How It Compares

    Compare Joe’s Shanghai

    Worth the Price? Joe’s Shanghai vs. Peers
    VenuePriceValue
    Joe’s Shanghai
    Le Bernardin$$$$
    Atomix$$$$
    Per Se$$$$
    Masa$$$$
    Eleven Madison Park$$$$

    A quick look at how Joe’s Shanghai measures up.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Joe’s Shanghai handle dietary restrictions?

    Dietary accommodations can vary. Flag restrictions in advance via the venue's official channels.

    What should a first-timer know about Joe's Shanghai?

    Go for the soup dumplings — that's the reason Joe's Shanghai at 46 Bowery earned Pearl Recommended status and an OAD ranking in 2024. Expect a no-frills Chinatown dining room, shared tables during busy periods, and a menu centered on xiao long bao. Come hungry, be direct about your order, and skip overthinking the full menu on your first visit.

    How far ahead should I book Joe's Shanghai?

    Joe's Shanghai operates 11am–11pm daily, and walk-ins are common at this style of Chinatown restaurant. That said, peak lunch and weekend dinner hours can produce waits. If you have a group, arriving before 12pm or after 2pm on weekdays keeps things manageable without needing a reservation.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Joe's Shanghai?

    Lunch is the sharper call. The room is less crowded in the early afternoon, the kitchen is at full pace, and the soup dumplings are the same regardless of hour. If you want to avoid waits and shared tables, a weekday lunch before 12:30pm is the low-friction option. Dinner works fine, but the 46 Bowery location draws crowds on weekend evenings.

    Hours

    Monday
    11 am–11 pm
    Tuesday
    11 am–11 pm
    Wednesday
    11 am–11 pm
    Thursday
    11 am–11 pm
    Friday
    11 am–11 pm
    Saturday
    11 am–11 pm
    Sunday
    11 am–11 pm

    Recognized By

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