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    Restaurant in Shanghai, China

    Polux

    410Pearl Points

    Pairet's bistro: serious French cooking, fair price.

    Polux, Restaurant in Shanghai

    About Polux

    Paul Pairet's accessible Shanghai bistro earns its Michelin Bib Gourmand two years running with credible French cooking at ¥¥ pricing. Open daily 10 am to 10 pm in Huangpu, it is the strongest value case for serious French food in the neighbourhood. Book easily for weekday lunch if you want the room at its best.

    Verdict

    Polux is Paul Pairet's more accessible Shanghai address, and it earns its Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025) by delivering credible French cooking at a price point that makes the decision easy. At ¥¥, this is one of the few places in Huangpu where you can sit down to serious European food without the ¥¥¥¥ commitment that Pairet's flagship Ultraviolet demands. If you are looking for a French bistro-style meal in Shanghai that is backed by real culinary pedigree, Polux is the answer. If you want a full tasting-menu event, look elsewhere.

    About Polux

    Polux occupies a lanehouse address on Taicang Road in Huangpu, a neighbourhood where restored shikumen blocks and contemporary dining coexist in close quarters. The space reads as a considered bistro rather than a grand dining room: the scale is intimate, the layout favours smaller tables, and the absence of ceremony is deliberate. This is not a room designed to impress on a first glance; it is designed to make you comfortable enough to stay for a second glass. For a special occasion that does not require a formal atmosphere, that framing works well. For a celebratory dinner where the room itself needs to signal occasion, you may want to weigh that against alternatives.

    The chef behind Polux is Paul Pairet, who also runs Ultraviolet, one of the most discussed tasting-menu restaurants in Asia. That association matters for credibility but should not set your expectations wrong: Polux is intentionally a different proposition, aimed at frequency and accessibility rather than spectacle. The Opinionated About Dining panel ranked Polux at #78 in their Casual Asia list for 2025 (up from #65 in 2024), and also placed it at #263 in their broader Leading Restaurants in Asia ranking for 2024. A 4.5 Google rating from 87 reviews supports a consistent quality picture. These signals together suggest a kitchen that performs reliably rather than occasionally.

    The restaurant is open seven days a week, 10 am to 10 pm. That is an unusually long service window for a French restaurant of this calibre in Shanghai, and it shapes how you should think about timing. Lunch slots are typically easier to secure than weekend dinner, and the room has a different character earlier in the day — lighter, less populated, more conducive to conversation. For a business lunch or a date where you want to talk without competing with the noise of a full dinner service, a weekday lunch is the better call. Weekend dinner will be fuller and louder. Both work, but they are different experiences.

    Booking is rated easy. Walk-ins are plausible given the extended hours and consistent availability, but for weekend evenings or a specific group configuration, reserving in advance is the sensible move. No booking method is confirmed in our data, so check current availability through standard Shanghai restaurant booking channels or contact the venue directly. Dress code is not specified, which is consistent with the bistro positioning: smart casual is safe, formal is unnecessary.

    On Takeout and Delivery

    Polux's French bistro format — the kind of cooking that centres on carefully sauced proteins, fresh bread, and composed plates , is not a natural fit for delivery. French food at this price tier and quality level almost always loses something in transit: textures that depend on timing, sauces that separate, and heat that dissipates. If your priority is eating Polux's cooking at its leading, eat in the room. The extended 10 am to 10 pm window gives you more flexibility than most comparable addresses in Huangpu, so an in-person visit is rarely difficult to schedule. If takeout is your only option on a given day, it is worth confirming with the venue directly what travels and what does not , not all dishes will be equally suited. We have no confirmed delivery or takeout data for Polux, so treat this as general guidance for the category rather than venue-specific policy.

    For comparison, if off-premise French food in Shanghai is genuinely the priority, Coquille and Phénix are worth checking, as their format and menu structure may transfer differently. But for the full Polux experience, the room is where it makes sense.

    How It Compares

    See the comparison section below for Polux against its Shanghai peers.

    Nearby and Related

    If you are planning a broader French dining itinerary in Shanghai, Le Comptoir de Pierre Gagnaire and Jean Georges operate at higher price tiers but offer a more formal occasion. L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon (Shanghai) is the closest peer in terms of chef-pedigree French cooking at a counter-style setting. For broader dining across China, Xin Rong Ji in Beijing, Ru Yuan in Hangzhou, and Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau represent the range of serious regional cooking worth tracking on a wider trip. For comparable French benchmarks outside China, L'Effervescence in Tokyo and Hotel de Ville Crissier in Crissier set the European standard. See our full Shanghai restaurants guide, Shanghai hotels guide, Shanghai bars guide, Shanghai wineries guide, and Shanghai experiences guide for further planning. Elsewhere in the region, Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine in Guangzhou, Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu, and Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing round out the wider China picture.

    Quick reference: Polux, Taicang Rd, Huangpu, Shanghai. French, ¥¥. Open daily 10 am–10 pm. Booking: easy. Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024–2025. OAD Casual Asia #78 (2025).

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Polux?

    Polux is a French bistro with a Michelin Bib Gourmand rating, which signals a relaxed but deliberate dining environment rather than a dressy one. Think clean, put-together casual: neat jeans and a shirt work fine. You do not need to dress up the way you would for Pairet's higher-end address.

    Can Polux accommodate groups?

    Polux operates out of a lanehouse address on Taicang Road, which typically limits large group configurations. For parties of 6 or more, contact the venue in advance to confirm table availability and any minimum spend requirements. Smaller groups of 2–4 should have no issues.

    Can I eat at the bar at Polux?

    Bar seating availability is not confirmed in available venue data, so check directly when booking. The bistro format generally supports counter or casual seating options, but do not assume it without confirming.

    Is Polux worth the price?

    Yes, at ¥¥ pricing, Polux delivers credible French cooking from a chef with serious credentials — Paul Pairet also operates at the Michelin three-star level in Shanghai. The Michelin Bib Gourmand (2025) and back-to-back Opinionated About Dining Asia rankings (#65 in 2024, #78 in 2025 casual tier) confirm the value is real, not just perceived. For accessible French bistro cooking in Shanghai, the price-to-quality ratio is hard to argue with.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Polux?

    Polux's format is French bistro, which typically favours à la carte ordering over a structured tasting menu. Specific menu format details are not confirmed in available data, so verify when booking. If you want a multi-course tasting format from Pairet, his higher-tier Shanghai restaurant is the more appropriate venue.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Polux?

    Polux is open 10am–10pm daily, so both are available. Lunch tends to be the better value call at French bistros in this price bracket, often with shorter waits and a lighter room. Dinner will be busier given the Taicang Road neighbourhood foot traffic. If your priority is a relaxed experience, book lunch on a weekday.

    Is Polux good for solo dining?

    A French bistro format at ¥¥ pricing is one of the more comfortable solo dining setups in Shanghai — lower financial commitment, no awkward group dynamics, and a format that moves at your pace. Polux's lanehouse setting on Taicang Road also makes it a practical standalone stop rather than an event that requires company to justify the trip.

    Location

    China, Shanghai, Huangpu, Taicang Rd, 181弄5号

    Shanghai, China

    Compare Polux

    Booking Options Near Polux
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    PoluxFrench¥¥Easy
    Fu He HuiVegetarian¥¥¥¥Unknown
    Ming CourtCantonese¥¥¥Unknown
    Royal China ClubChinese, Cantonese¥¥¥Unknown
    ScarpettaItalian¥¥¥Unknown
    Yè ShanghaiShanghainese¥¥Unknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Also Consider

    Against the other credible addresses on Pearl's Shanghai list, Polux occupies a specific and useful slot: serious cooking, moderate spend, no ceremony required. At ¥¥, the closest Shanghai peer in price tier is Yè Shanghai, which delivers Shanghainese cooking at a comparable spend. The two are not in direct competition by cuisine, but if the question is where to get a quality dinner without a ¥¥¥ commitment, both are worth considering. Polux has the stronger external award signal (Michelin Bib Gourmand, OAD Casual Asia recognition); Yè Shanghai has the local cultural specificity that some diners will prefer on a Shanghai trip.

    Step up to ¥¥¥ and the comparison set changes. Scarpetta offers Italian at that tier; Ming Court and Royal China Club cover Cantonese at the same price level. If a more formal room or a longer, more composed meal is what the occasion requires, those addresses deliver that in a way that Polux's bistro format does not aim to. For pure value against the award credentials on offer, Polux is the sharper choice in Shanghai's French category at its price tier.

    At the top of the Shanghai range, Fu He Hui operates at ¥¥¥¥ with a vegetarian tasting-menu format that is a genuinely different proposition. If a high-spend, high-ceremony special occasion is the brief, Fu He Hui handles that; Polux does not compete there and does not try to. The practical summary: book Polux for a well-priced, award-backed French meal with minimal booking friction. Book Fu He Hui for a formal vegetarian tasting occasion. For Cantonese or Italian at a mid-tier spend, Ming Court, Royal China Club, or Scarpetta each serve their own category more directly.

    Hours

    Monday
    10 am–10 pm
    Tuesday
    10 am–10 pm
    Wednesday
    10 am–10 pm
    Thursday
    10 am–10 pm
    Friday
    10 am–10 pm
    Saturday
    10 am–10 pm
    Sunday
    10 am–10 pm

    Recognized By

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