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    Restaurant in Guangzhou, China

    Song

    450Pearl Points

    Two Michelin stars. Mid-range prices. Book it.

    Song, Restaurant in Guangzhou

    About Song

    Song has held a Michelin star for two consecutive years (2024 and 2025), making it Guangzhou's clearest case for Sichuan fine dining at an accessible ¥¥ price point. Chef Robin Song's kitchen in Tianhe's Grandview Plaza delivers sustained recognition at a fraction of what comparable Michelin-starred addresses charge. Book well in advance — demand runs consistently ahead of availability.

    The Verdict

    Song has held a Michelin star for two consecutive years (2024 and 2025), which tells you something clear: this is not a flash-in-the-pan addition to Guangzhou's dining scene. For Sichuan cuisine at this level of recognition, Song sits at the ¥¥ price point — meaningfully more accessible than the ¥¥¥¥ competitors in the same awards tier. If you are weighing where to spend on a special occasion in Tianhe, this is worth booking. The difficulty is actually getting a table.

    Song in Guangzhou

    Second visits to Song tend to confirm the first impression rather than complicate it. That consistency is part of the case for returning: what you are booking is a Sichuan kitchen operating at a level that has earned Michelin recognition twice in a row, in a room on the fourth floor of the Grandview Plaza Winter Square in Tianhe, one of Guangzhou's most commercially active districts. The building context is dense and corporate, which makes the restaurant's positioning as a considered, destination-worthy dining address all the more deliberate. You are not stumbling across Song. You are going to it.

    Spatially, the fourth-floor setting in a mall complex shapes the experience in specific ways. Arrival requires navigation through a retail environment, but the restaurant itself functions as a room apart from that context. For a special occasion — a celebration dinner, a business meal where the choice of venue signals effort, or a date where you want the food to do the talking , the separation between the commercial surroundings and the dining room is a practical asset. The room is not street-level casual. The Michelin star and two-year retention signal that the kitchen takes the cooking seriously, and the physical setting follows that lead.

    Chef Robin Song leads the kitchen, and the culinary framing is Sichuan. In Guangzhou, Sichuan cuisine occupies an interesting position: the city's dominant culinary identity is Cantonese, so a Sichuan kitchen earning sustained Michelin recognition here is operating against the grain of local expectation. That is relevant context for the decision to book. Song is not the default fine-dining choice in this city , it is a specific argument for a cuisine tradition that sits outside Guangzhou's home register, and it has made that argument convincingly enough to earn back-to-back star recognition. For diners whose appetite runs toward Sichuan's characteristic heat, complexity, and layered spice rather than Cantonese precision, Song is the address in Guangzhou to know.

    Tianhe as a district matters here. The neighbourhood is Guangzhou's commercial and financial centre, dense with office towers, luxury retail, and international hotel brands. Song's placement in Grandview Plaza puts it in the heart of that zone. For business diners flying in, or for visitors based in Tianhe's hotels, the location is a practical advantage. For diners travelling from other districts , Yuexiu, Haizhu, or Baiyun , the trip is direct on Guangzhou's metro, with Tianhe well-served by multiple lines. As a neighbourhood anchor, Song is doing something specific: it is giving Tianhe's corporate-facing dining scene a Sichuan option at Michelin level that the district would otherwise lack. That is a functional gap it fills well. You can explore more of what the city offers through our full Guangzhou restaurants guide, but for Sichuan at this standard in this part of the city, Song has no direct equivalent nearby.

    The ¥¥ price range is one of the more consequential facts about Song. Among Guangzhou's Michelin-recognised restaurants, sitting at ¥¥ while retaining a star for two years is an unusual combination. Comparable Sichuan fine dining elsewhere in China , including Yong in Guangzhou, which operates at ¥¥¥¥, or the celebrated Yu Zhi Lan in Chengdu , commands significantly higher per-head spend. Song's pricing makes it a realistic option for occasions where the food quality matters but the budget ceiling is real. It also means it is accessible for solo diners or pairs who want a Michelin-standard meal without committing to an extended tasting menu format at the upper end of the market. For comparison on Sichuan cooking at higher price points, Fang Xiang Jing in Chengdu offers a useful benchmark for what the cuisine can command at its ceiling.

    Booking Song is hard. A two-star Michelin run at an accessible price point in a major commercial district creates persistent demand. Plan ahead , walk-ins are not a realistic strategy. If you are organising a special occasion, the lead time needs to be built into your planning, not treated as an afterthought. Booking method details are not confirmed in the current data, so approach through the venue directly or via third-party reservation platforms that cover Guangzhou. For other options in the city while you plan, Ease in Yuexiu and Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine are worth knowing as fallbacks or alternatives depending on your occasion. The broader context for a Guangzhou trip is covered in our hotel guide and bars guide if you are building a longer itinerary.

    For Sichuan dining at Michelin level elsewhere in China, the reference points are strong: Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu, 102 House in Shanghai, and Ru Yuan in Hangzhou each represent the cuisine at different price and format registers. Song's position in Guangzhou is distinct: it is the only address in the city currently making this argument at this price point with this level of sustained recognition. That is a specific reason to book it when you are here.

    How It Compares

    Practical Details

    DetailSongPeers (range)
    Price range¥¥¥¥¥ to ¥¥¥¥ (comparable award tier)
    CuisineSichuanCantonese, Modern European, Innovative
    AwardsMichelin 1 Star 2024 & 2025Varies by venue
    LocationTianhe, Grandview Plaza, 4FSpread across central Guangzhou
    Booking difficultyHardModerate to hard
    Leading forSpecial occasions, business mealsVaries by venue

    Also Worth Knowing

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Song?

    Song sits in a mall setting at Gaode Plaza, Tianhe, but a Michelin star for two consecutive years signals a room that takes itself seriously. Dress neatly — think business casual at minimum. Showing up in sportswear would be out of step with the crowd.

    What should I order at Song?

    The menu is Sichuan, so heat and complexity are the kitchen's territory. At ¥¥ pricing, the value case is strongest if you commit to the full spread rather than ordering light. Let the kitchen guide you where a set menu or chef's selection is available — that's where a two-time Michelin-starred kitchen shows its range.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Song?

    At ¥¥ pricing, Song is one of the more accessible Michelin-starred formats in Guangzhou, so if a tasting format is offered, the price-to-credential ratio is strong. Two consecutive Michelin stars suggest consistency, which matters when committing to a multi-course format.

    Does Song handle dietary restrictions?

    No specific dietary policy is documented for Song. For a Sichuan kitchen, meat and shellfish are central to the format, so vegetarian or allergy-driven requests may limit what the kitchen can do at its best. check the venue's official channels before booking if restrictions are a factor.

    Is Song good for a special occasion?

    Yes, with caveats. Two Michelin stars and a focused Sichuan format give Song the credentials for a meaningful dinner, and ¥¥ pricing means it won't require the same commitment as a luxury omakase. If you want ceremony and formality above all else, a higher price-tier venue may feel more occasion-appropriate — but for food-first celebration, Song delivers.

    What are alternatives to Song in Guangzhou?

    Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine is the clearest comparison for refined Chinese cooking in the city, though it leans Cantonese rather than Sichuan. For a different register altogether, Taian Table in Shanghai is worth the trip if you're open to travelling. Within Guangzhou, the Michelin-starred tier is competitive, so cross-reference the current guide for up-to-date options.

    Is Song worth the price?

    At ¥¥, Song is one of the better-value Michelin-starred meals you can book in Guangzhou. Two consecutive stars from the 2024 and 2025 guides under chef Robin Song confirm this isn't a one-year anomaly. For Sichuan cooking at this credential level, the price point is hard to argue with.

    Location

    China, CN 广东省 广州市 天河区 珠江东路 16 16号高德置地广场冬广场4层417号 邮政编码: 510623

    Guangzhou, China

    Compare Song

    The Complete Picture: Song and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    SongSichuanMichelin 1 Star (2025); Michelin 1 Star (2024)Hard
    Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese CuisineCantoneseMichelin 2 StarUnknown
    Taian TableModern European, European ContemporaryMichelin 2 StarUnknown
    YongSichuanMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    ChōwaInnovativeMichelin 1 StarUnknown
    RêverFrench ContemporaryMichelin 1 StarUnknown

    How Song stacks up against the competition.

    Also Consider

    Song's closest direct competitor on cuisine is Yong, which is also Sichuan but operates at ¥¥¥¥ — double or more the price tier. Both carry Michelin recognition. If budget is a real constraint and Sichuan is the cuisine you want, Song is the stronger choice. If you want a more expansive spend and are open to what a higher price buys in terms of format or scale, Yong is the comparison to make. The two are not interchangeable on occasion type: Song's ¥¥ positioning makes it accessible for a regular special dinner; Yong is more squarely in full-occasion splurge territory.

    For Cantonese at the ¥¥¥ tier, Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine is the relevant peer. If the occasion calls for Guangzhou's home cuisine rather than Sichuan, Imperial Treasure is the default recommendation at that price level. Chōwa (Innovative, ¥¥¥) sits in a different culinary lane but at a comparable price to Imperial Treasure — better suited to diners who want creative or cross-cultural cooking rather than a cuisine-rooted kitchen. Song outperforms both on value-to-recognition ratio for diners whose appetite is specifically Sichuan.

    At the ¥¥¥¥ ceiling, Taian Table (Modern European) and Rêver (French Contemporary) are operating in a different culinary register entirely. These are not alternatives if Sichuan is the point — they are alternatives if the occasion is the point and the cuisine is secondary. Song wins on price efficiency and Michelin credential combination. Rêver and Taian Table win if you want the full high-spend modern tasting menu format and are indifferent to Chinese cuisine specifically. For most diners in Guangzhou who have identified Sichuan as the direction, Song is the practical answer at its price tier, and the booking difficulty is the only meaningful friction.

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