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    Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong

    Neighborhood

    1,265pts

    Starred, late-night, hard to book.

    Neighborhood, Restaurant in Hong Kong

    About Neighborhood

    A Michelin-starred, $$ restaurant on Hollywood Road with Asia's 50 Best recognition and a late kitchen (11:30 PM, six nights). Chef David Lai's rotating seafood-heavy tapas menu and pre-order sharing platters make it one of Hong Kong's clearest value cases at its award level. Book three to four weeks out minimum — walk-ins are not realistic.

    Verdict

    Book Neighborhood if you want one of Hong Kong's most awarded casual restaurants and you're prepared to plan well ahead. This Michelin-starred spot on Hollywood Road has ranked in Hong Kong's most competitive dining tier for years, reaching #21 on Asia's 50 Best in 2025 and #92 on the World's 50 Best in 2023, yet it prices and presents itself like a neighbourhood bistro at $$. For a special occasion dinner that doesn't require a four-figure bill, this is one of the clearest cases in the city. The catch: getting a table is genuinely difficult, and the kitchen closes at 11:30 PM six nights a week, making it a legitimate late-night option for diners who plan in advance.

    The Restaurant

    Neighborhood sits at 61 Hollywood Rd in Central, tucked down an alley lined with the kind of neighbours you wouldn't expect around a restaurant with this many accolades: rowdy bars, wet markets, and antique shops. The visual contrast is deliberate and works in the room's favour. Walk in expecting formal fine dining and you'll be surprised; the setting is casual, the energy is loud, and the space reads more like somewhere a local would eat after work than a destination restaurant with a waiting list measured in weeks.

    Chef David Lai, a Hong Kong native trained in the United States, runs a seafood-heavy menu built around roughly 20 tapas-style dishes on rotation, plus large sharing platters that need to be pre-ordered. The format is closer to a Spanish or modern Australian approach than to French fine dining: the meal is assembled from small plates rather than marched through courses. For a couple or a group of four, this format rewards ordering widely rather than carefully. The salt-baked chicken rice with giblets and morels and the Hokkaido kinki paella are the anchor dishes most frequently cited in coverage of the restaurant, and both require pre-ordering, so if you're planning around them, confirm when you book.

    The daily seafood special is where the kitchen tends to show its range most directly. The preparation varies, but smoked fish in spices has been noted as a highlight when available. Because the menu rotates, repeat visits tend to surface different strengths, which partly explains why the restaurant holds its ranking year after year rather than peaking on a single dish cycle.

    Late-Night Angle

    Most of Hong Kong's starred restaurants close their kitchens by 10 PM or earlier. Neighborhood runs service until 11:30 PM Tuesday through Saturday, and opens at 6 PM Monday through Saturday as well, which makes it one of the few Michelin-calibre options in Central where a 9 PM booking doesn't feel rushed. For a post-event dinner, a date that starts late, or a group coming from elsewhere in the city, that 11:30 PM last order is more useful than it sounds in a neighbourhood where the bars are still busy and most kitchens are already closed. Sunday is the only dark night.

    The neighbourhood itself contributes to the late-night logic. Hollywood Road at night is active without being difficult: bars are within walking distance, the area is accessible from Central MTR, and the alley setting means arrival and departure don't involve the lobby politics of a hotel restaurant. For a special occasion that's meant to feel relaxed rather than ceremonial, the combination of awards, price point, and late kitchen hours is genuinely hard to match in this city.

    Booking

    Getting a table here is near impossible by walk-in. The restaurant does not publish a phone number or website in its current listings, which means reservations likely run through a third-party platform or direct email contact. Plan a minimum of three to four weeks out, and considerably more for weekend evenings. If you're building a trip around this dinner, book before you book your flights. Large platters require pre-ordering at the time of reservation, so arrive knowing whether you want the signature sharing dishes. Note that the booking window and platform details should be verified directly with the venue, as no confirmed booking method is listed in current data.

    Practical Details

    Neighborhood is open Monday through Saturday, 6 PM to 11:30 PM, and closed Sunday. The price range is $$, which in Hong Kong's fine dining context represents strong value for a Michelin-starred restaurant with Asia's 50 Best recognition. The address is 61 Hollywood Rd, Central, reachable from Central or Sheung Wan MTR stations. The format is dinner-only, there is no lunch service. Groups wanting the large sharing platters need to pre-order; factor that into your reservation conversation. Google reviews sit at 4.0 from 276 ratings, which is modestly lower than you might expect for the award level, possibly reflecting the difficulty of securing a table rather than dissatisfaction with the meal itself.

    For context on how Neighborhood fits into Central's broader dining picture, see our full Hong Kong restaurants guide, and for planning the rest of a trip around it, our Hong Kong hotels guide and experiences guide are useful starting points. Comparable award-level restaurants globally that share a casual-format approach include Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Atomix in New York City, both of which operate outside the traditional fine dining mould at a similar prestige tier.

    How It Compares

    Compare Neighborhood

    Price vs. Value: Neighborhood
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Neighborhood$$Near Impossible
    Ta Vie$$$$Unknown
    8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong)$$$$Unknown
    Feuille$$$Unknown
    The Chairman$$Unknown
    Vea$$$$Unknown

    How Neighborhood stacks up against the competition.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What are alternatives to Neighborhood in Hong Kong?

    The Chairman is the closest peer for locally focused, ingredient-driven cooking at a similar casual register, though it skews more Chinese-traditional where Neighborhood is European-inflected. Feuille is a sharper choice if you want a tasting menu format with Hong Kong produce at the centre. Vea suits special-occasion diners who want a full chef's counter experience rather than sharing plates. For pure value-to-accolade ratio, Neighborhood at $$ with a Michelin star and a #21 Asia ranking (World's 50 Best, 2025) is hard to beat in this city.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Neighborhood?

    Neighborhood does not operate a fixed tasting menu in the conventional sense. The format is tapas-style, with around 20 rotating items plus large sharing platters that require pre-ordering, such as the salt-baked chicken rice with giblets and morels and the Hokkaido kinki paella. At $$ pricing, this sharing-plates model delivers strong value compared to Hong Kong's tasting-menu-only Michelin options, but if you specifically want a structured sequence of courses, look at Feuille or Ta Vie instead.

    Can I eat at the bar at Neighborhood?

    Bar seating availability is not confirmed in current listings. What is documented is that Neighborhood is a small, casual, alley-set restaurant that fills quickly, so any seat should be treated as a reservation-only situation. Walk-ins are near impossible given the accolades — Michelin-starred, ranked #21 in Asia's Best Restaurants 2025 — and the lack of a published booking website makes securing a table harder, not easier.

    What should I order at Neighborhood?

    The large sharing platters are where the kitchen shows its range: the salt-baked chicken rice with giblets and morels and the Hokkaido kinki paella are both noted highlights, but both require pre-ordering so flag them when you book. The daily seafood special is consistently cited as a standout — the smoked fish in spices is worth asking about when available. The menu rotates roughly 20 tapas-style items, so a table of two or three should order broadly rather than anchoring on one dish.

    What should a first-timer know about Neighborhood?

    Book as far in advance as you can — there is no published phone number or booking website in current listings, which means you will need to source the reservation channel through a third-party platform or direct inquiry. The restaurant is down a side alley off Hollywood Road in Central, surrounded by bars and wet markets, so do not expect formal dining surrounds. The format is sharing plates, the price range is $$, and the kitchen runs until 11:30 PM, making it one of very few Michelin-starred options in Hong Kong for late-night eating.

    Is Neighborhood good for a special occasion?

    Yes, but calibrate expectations around the format: this is a casual, alley-set, sharing-plates restaurant, not a white-tablecloth room. If the occasion calls for a formal or theatrical setting, Ta Vie or 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana will land better. If the occasion calls for a genuinely great meal without ceremony — a Michelin star, a #21 Asia ranking, late-night service, strong seafood focus — Neighborhood is a well-supported choice at $$ pricing that won't require the spend of a full tasting-menu room.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Neighborhood?

    Neighborhood is dinner-only, open 6 PM to 11:30 PM Monday through Saturday and closed Sunday. There is no lunch service to compare. The late close is one of the restaurant's practical advantages in a city where most comparable kitchens shut by 10 PM.

    Hours

    Monday
    6 PM-11:30 PM
    Tuesday
    6 PM-11:30 PM
    Wednesday
    6 PM-11:30 PM
    Thursday
    6 PM-11:30 PM
    Friday
    6 PM-11:30 PM
    Saturday
    6 PM-11:30 PM
    Sunday
    closed

    Recognized By

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