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    Restaurant in Zurich, Switzerland

    Shin

    250pts

    Eight seats. Book early or miss out.

    Shin, Restaurant in Zurich

    About Shin

    Shin seats eight diners at a single counter for a fixed eight-course Asian contemporary menu in central Zurich, steps from Münsterhof square. Michelin inspectors have highlighted its seafood-led cooking and seasonal range. Book well in advance — walk-ins are not an option — and go expecting an intimate, engagement-driven special occasion rather than a flexible dinner out.

    Verdict: Book Shin if You Want Serious Asian Counter Dining in Central Zurich

    The common assumption about Shin is that it functions like any other upscale Asian restaurant in Zurich's old town — walk in, pick a table, order what you like. That is wrong on every count. Shin seats eight diners at a single counter, serves one eight-course set menu per sitting, and closes on Tuesdays. If you arrive without a reservation, you will not get in. Get that expectation right before you plan anything else.

    What you do get, when you have booked correctly, is one of the most focused dining experiences available in Zurich's centre. The counter at Zinnengasse 7, a side street off Münsterhof square, is the entire restaurant. There are no alternative tables, no à la carte fallback, and no casual drop-in option. The format is deliberate: eight seats, one menu, two sittings per service, Wednesday through Monday.

    What Shin Actually Is

    The cuisine is Asian contemporary with a strong lean toward seafood, and the menu changes with the seasons. Michelin's inspectors have highlighted dishes including a golden garlic oyster royale with a hint of chilli, a langoustine broth with corn, and Peking duck — a range that signals both technical ambition and a willingness to move across Asian culinary traditions rather than anchor to one. The beverage pairing spans sake, wine, and alcohol-free options, which gives the format genuine flexibility for different drinkers at the same counter.

    Hostess Lin Wang runs the front of house and actively explains dishes and ingredients as the meal progresses. At a counter with eight seats, that personal engagement is not incidental , it is structurally built into the experience in a way that a larger dining room cannot replicate. For a special occasion or a date where the conversation should be driven partly by what is in front of you, that matters.

    Why the Location Is Part of the Proposition

    Münsterhof is one of Zurich's most historically grounded squares, sitting between the Fraumünster church and the River Limmat. Shin occupies a side street immediately adjacent to it, which means you are in the geographic and cultural centre of the old city. The walk along the Limmat before or after dinner is a legitimate part of the evening , the river and the illuminated facades of the old town are directly accessible on foot. For a celebration dinner or a first visit to Zurich, the location amplifies the occasion rather than competing with it.

    If you are exploring more of Zurich's dining scene, the city has strong options across formats: IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada runs a sharing format at a comparable price tier, The Counter offers creative counter dining, and The Restaurant sits at the creative end of the Zurich fine dining spectrum. Widder is a reliable Swiss option for a less format-restricted evening, and Eden Kitchen & Bar handles Italian in the same price neighbourhood. See our full Zurich restaurants guide for the broader picture.

    How Shin Sits in Switzerland's Fine Dining Context

    Switzerland carries serious weight in European fine dining. Schloss Schauenstein in Fürstenau and Hotel de Ville Crissier represent the country's highest-decorated kitchens, while Cheval Blanc by Peter Knogl in Basel, Memories in Bad Ragaz, Maison Wenger in Le Noirmont, and Einstein Gourmet in Sankt Gallen each hold significant recognition in their own right. Shin operates at a different scale to all of these , the eight-seat counter is a format choice, not a limitation , but it competes in the same conversation about where to eat seriously in Switzerland. For international reference points on seafood-focused counter dining, Le Bernardin in New York and the communal-table format of Lazy Bear in San Francisco offer useful comparisons on what committed, single-menu counter or set-menu formats can deliver.

    Know Before You Go

    • Cuisine: Asian Contemporary, eight-course set menu
    • Price tier: €€€€
    • Address: Zinnengasse 7, 8001 Zürich (off Münsterhof square)
    • Hours: Wednesday to Monday, 6 PM–11 PM; Tuesday closed
    • Sittings: Two sittings per service night
    • Capacity: Eight seats , counter only, no tables
    • Booking: Essential; walk-ins are not a realistic option given the eight-seat limit
    • Beverages: Sake, wine, or alcohol-free pairings available
    • Leading for: Special occasions, date nights, solo diners who want engagement over isolation
    • Nearby: River Limmat and Münsterhof square , worth building time for a walk into the evening

    How It Compares

    Explore More in Zurich

    Compare Shin

    How Easy to Book: Shin vs. Peers
    VenueCuisinePriceBooking Difficulty
    Shin€€€€ · Asian ContemporaryEasy
    IGNIV Zürich by Andreas CaminadaSharing€€€€Unknown
    KLEVegan€€€Unknown
    KronenhalleSwiss, Traditional Cuisine€€€Unknown
    The RestaurantCreative€€€€Unknown
    EquiTableModern Cuisine€€€€Unknown

    How Shin stacks up against the competition.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can Shin accommodate groups?

    Only if your group is small: Shin seats exactly eight diners at its counter and cannot split or expand. A party of four or five fills half the restaurant, which works fine, but larger groups will need to book the entire venue or look elsewhere. For groups of six or more wanting a private-feeling dinner, IGNIV Zürich by Andreas Caminada offers more flexible seating arrangements.

    What should I wear to Shin?

    The counter-dining format and Michelin-noted status point toward neat, considered dress — think dinner-out rather than business formal. The space is compact and intimate, so very casual attire would feel out of place. There is no documented dress code in the venue record, but the eight-course set menu and seafood-forward cuisine set a clear expectation for the evening.

    Is Shin good for solo dining?

    Yes, and it is one of the stronger solo dining options in Zurich's fine dining tier. Counter seating is inherently suited to solo guests, and hostess Lin Wang is on hand to walk through each course and its ingredients, so you are not left to eat in silence. At eight seats total, a solo diner never risks being seated awkwardly at an oversized table.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Shin?

    Shin operates dinner only, from 6 PM across six days (closed Tuesdays), so the question does not apply. There are two sittings available Wednesday through Monday, which gives some flexibility on timing, but you are choosing between an early and a late dinner rather than between meal periods.

    What should I order at Shin?

    There is no à la carte menu: Shin serves a single eight-course set menu, and the dishes change with the seasons. Michelin has cited the golden garlic oyster royale, langoustine broth with corn, and Peking duck as representative dishes. The menu leans heavily on seafood, and the drinks pairing spans sake, wine, or alcohol-free options — worth considering in advance since the format is set and choices are limited.

    Hours

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

    Recognized By

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