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    Restaurant in Taipei, Taiwan · Inside Palais de Chine

    Le Palais

    1,255Pearl Points

    Taipei's hardest table. Worth the effort.

    Le Palais, Restaurant in Taipei

    About Le Palais

    Le Palais holds three Michelin stars and is Taipei's leading address for formal Cantonese dining, with a La Liste score of 91 points and an upward OAD ranking. Booking is near impossible — plan six to eight weeks ahead and request counter seating to watch Chef Ken Chen's kitchen in full operation. At $$$$ pricing, it delivers one of the most credentialed dining experiences in Taiwan.

    If You Can Get a Seat, Take the Counter

    The single most useful thing to know before booking Le Palais is this: request counter seating when you make your reservation. The 17th-floor dining room at 3 Chengde Road Section 1 gives you a clear sightline into the kitchen, and at a venue holding three Michelin stars since 2025, watching Chef Ken Chen's team execute Cantonese technique at this level is part of what you are paying for. The room itself is formal, lacquered, and visually precise — the kind of setting where the light on a dish arrives as deliberately as the dish itself.

    Securing that seat, however, is the harder problem. Le Palais operates on near-impossible booking difficulty. It is closed Mondays, and lunch (12–2:30 pm) and dinner (6–9:30 pm) service Tuesday through Sunday fill fast at this tier. Plan to book a minimum of four to six weeks ahead; for weekend dinner, eight weeks is more realistic. If you are visiting Taipei from abroad, lock in the reservation before you book flights. Treat the table as the fixed point of your itinerary.

    What the Awards Tell You

    Le Palais carries a credential stack that justifies the difficulty. Three Michelin stars as of the 2025 guide puts it in the top tier of formal Cantonese dining anywhere in the world, not just in Taiwan. La Liste scored it 91 points for 2025, dropping to 85 points for 2026 — a shift worth monitoring but not alarming at this level. Opinionated About Dining ranked it #121 in Asia for 2025, up from #178 in 2024, meaning its trajectory across independent critical sources is upward. Google reviewers give it 4.5 across 2,927 ratings, which at a restaurant charging top-tier prices suggests consistent execution rather than occasional brilliance.

    For Cantonese cuisine specifically, three Michelin stars is a meaningful signal. The format rewards technical precision in roasting, steaming, and sauce work , disciplines where marginal differences in timing and temperature produce visibly different results. At Le Palais, the awards consensus is that those disciplines are being executed at a level that places it alongside the small number of Cantonese rooms operating at this standard in Asia. If you have eaten at comparable venues such as Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau or 102 House in Shanghai, Le Palais belongs in that conversation.

    Who This Is For , and When to Go

    Le Palais is the right choice if Cantonese fine dining is the specific format you are after and you want Taipei's most credentialed version of it. It is a strong pick for a special occasion: the room reads formal without being cold, and the service standard at three-star level should carry a celebratory meal without effort. Solo diners can eat here comfortably, particularly at counter seating, where the kitchen activity provides engagement that carries the meal. For groups, the private dining options in a room of this scale are worth asking about when booking, though the logistics and availability are leading confirmed directly with the venue.

    In terms of timing, the current season matters. Cantonese menus at this level rotate around ingredient availability, and what the kitchen is working with now shapes what you will actually eat. Go at dinner if you want the full kitchen experience and the city views from the 17th floor have any meaning to you after dark. Lunch offers the same food at what is typically a more relaxed pace across formal Chinese dining rooms.

    If you are building a broader Taipei restaurant itinerary around Le Palais, the city has depth at every price point. For high-end Cantonese in a slightly different register, Ya Ge and Lin Ju are worth considering. Longyue operates in the same formal Chinese dining tier if you want a second benchmark during your visit. For something lighter in commitment, 85TD and JUNTO offer contrast without pulling focus from the main event.

    Beyond Taipei, Taiwan's fine dining circuit extends to JL Studio in Taichung and GEN in Kaohsiung if you are touring the island. For a more complete picture of where to eat, stay, drink, and explore the capital, see our full Taipei restaurants guide, our full Taipei hotels guide, our full Taipei bars guide, our full Taipei wineries guide, and our full Taipei experiences guide. If you want to extend the trip further, A Cun Beef Soup in Tainan, Volando Urai Spring Spa & Resort in Wulai District, A Gan Yi Taro Balls in New Taipei, and Ang Gu in Hsinchu County each offer a different angle on what Taiwan does well.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Near impossible , book 6–8 weeks ahead for weekend dinner, 4 weeks minimum for weekday lunch. Request counter seating when booking. Hours: Tuesday–Sunday, 12–2:30 pm and 6–9:30 pm; closed Monday. Budget: $$$$ , expect top-tier pricing consistent with three-Michelin-star Cantonese dining. Dress: Smart formal; the room is lacquered and serious, and the service standard will notice. Address: 17F, 3 Chengde Road Section 1, Datong District, Taipei.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Le Palais?

    Le Palais operates at the $$$$ tier with three Michelin stars, which puts it firmly in formal dining territory. Smart formal is the safe call — think dress shirt and trousers or equivalent for women. Arriving underdressed at a room of this calibre will stand out, and not in a useful way.

    Is Le Palais good for solo dining?

    Yes, and counter seating is the specific reason. Request counter when booking — it's the better solo experience, puts you closer to the kitchen, and avoids the awkwardness of a table for one in a formal banquet-style dining room. Solo seats tend to have slightly more flexibility in the booking window too.

    Is Le Palais good for a special occasion?

    It's one of the stronger cases in Taipei for a milestone dinner. Three Michelin stars, a 17th-floor address, and formal Cantonese service create a setting that reads as occasion-appropriate without explanation. Book 6–8 weeks ahead for weekend dinner and mention the occasion when reserving — rooms or seating arrangements may be adjustable.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Le Palais?

    At $$$$ pricing with three Michelin stars and an OAD Asia Top 125 ranking in 2025, the credentialing supports the price point for serious Cantonese fine dining. If the format suits you — structured, multi-course, formal — this is Taipei's most awarded version of it. If you want a more casual Cantonese meal, the price-to-format ratio won't land the same way.

    Can Le Palais accommodate groups?

    The 17th-floor space at 3 Chengde Road Section 1 includes private dining options typical of Cantonese restaurants at this tier. For groups of six or more, check the venue's official channels when reserving and specify the occasion — private room requests need lead time, and weekend slots are already competitive. Solo or pairs have more flexibility.

    Is Le Palais worth the price?

    For Cantonese fine dining specifically, yes. Three Michelin stars in the 2025 guide and a La Liste score of 91 points in 2025 (85 in 2026) back up the $$$$ price tier. The question is format fit: Le Palais is formal, structured, and requires planning. If that matches what you're after, the credential stack is among the strongest in Taipei.

    What are alternatives to Le Palais in Taipei?

    Taïrroir is the closest comparison for occasion dining at a high credential level, but it runs contemporary Taiwanese rather than Cantonese. Logy offers a tighter, more intimate tasting menu format at a lower booking difficulty. Golden Formosa covers Taiwanese banquet-style cooking if the Cantonese format isn't the draw. None of these match Le Palais's specific Michelin three-star Cantonese positioning.

    Location

    103, Taiwan, Taipei City, Datong District, Section 1, Chengde Rd, 3號17樓

    Taipei, Taiwan

    Compare Le Palais

    The Complete Picture: Le Palais and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Le PalaisCantoneseLa Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 85pts; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #121 (2025); La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 91pts; Michelin 3 Stars (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #178 (2024); Michelin 3 Stars (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #140 (2023)Near Impossible
    logyModern European, Asian ContemporaryMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    TaïrroirTaiwanese/French, Taiwanese contemporaryMichelin 3 StarUnknown
    Mudan TempuraTempuraMichelin 2 StarUnknown
    de nuitFrench ContemporaryMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    Golden FormosaTaiwaneseMichelin 1 StarUnknown

    What to weigh when choosing between Le Palais and alternatives.

    Also Consider

    At $$$$ across Taipei's top tier, the choice between Le Palais and its peers comes down to cuisine format more than quality — all of these rooms are operating at Michelin-recognised levels. Le Palais is the pick if formal Cantonese is specifically what you want: roasting, steaming, and sauce-based technique executed at three-star precision. Taïrroir and logy are the natural comparisons for diners who want Taiwan's fine dining identity expressed differently — Taïrroir through a Taiwanese/French lens, logy through Modern European with Asian contemporary influence. Both are easier to book than Le Palais and represent strong alternatives if your date flexibility is limited.

    Mudan Tempura and de nuit operate at the same $$$$ price point but in narrower formats — Mudan for tempura precision, de nuit for French Contemporary. Neither competes directly with Le Palais on cuisine scope, but both offer a more accessible booking window and a focused experience that suits diners who know exactly what format they want. If your group is split between cuisines, logy's Modern European approach tends to have broader appeal than Le Palais's formal Cantonese structure.

    For the price-conscious traveller who still wants Taiwanese food done well, Golden Formosa at $$ is a clear step down in formality and price but a useful option if budget is a factor. It does not replace Le Palais in any meaningful sense, but it rounds out an itinerary that already includes one $$$$ booking. The practical recommendation: if Le Palais is your target and the booking opens, take it. If it does not, Taïrroir is the most comparable experience in terms of occasion suitability and kitchen ambition.

    Hours

    Monday
    Closed
    Tuesday
    12–2:30 pm, 6–9:30 pm
    Wednesday
    12–2:30 pm, 6–9:30 pm
    Thursday
    12–2:30 pm, 6–9:30 pm
    Friday
    12–2:30 pm, 6–9:30 pm
    Saturday
    12–2:30 pm, 6–9:30 pm
    Sunday
    12–2:30 pm, 6–9:30 pm

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