Restaurant in Shanghai, China · Inside Upper House Shanghai
Sui Tang Li
480Pearl PointsMichelin-credentialed contemporary Chinese, book ahead.

About Sui Tang Li
Sui Tang Li holds both a Michelin Plate (2024 and 2025) and a Black Pearl 1 Diamond (2025), making it one of the more credibly recognised contemporary Chinese options in Shanghai's ¥¥¥ bracket. Located on the second floor of 366 Shimen Road in Jing'An, it suits food-focused diners who want technical Chinese cooking without committing to the city's ¥¥¥¥ tier. Booking is rated easy, but mid-week visits are recommended for the most relaxed experience.
Is Sui Tang Li worth booking in Shanghai's contemporary Chinese scene?
Yes — with the right expectations. Sui Tang Li holds both a Michelin Plate (2024 and 2025) and a Black Pearl 1 Diamond (2025), which puts it in a credible but not top-tier position among Shanghai's contemporary Chinese restaurants. At ¥¥¥ pricing, it sits in a competitive bracket where you should be asking whether the technical execution justifies the spend. Based on its dual-recognition track record and a 4.7 Google rating, the answer is yes for diners who want contemporary Chinese cooking at a price point below the city's ¥¥¥¥ flagships.
What Sui Tang Li does in the kitchen
Contemporary Chinese cuisine in Shanghai operates on a spectrum from loosely modernised regional cooking to rigorous technique-led reinterpretation. Sui Tang Li sits toward the more considered end of that range. The consistent double-year Michelin Plate recognition signals a kitchen that meets a repeatable standard rather than a one-season flash — Michelin's Plate designation is awarded for good cooking, not just atmosphere or service, so two consecutive years of recognition tells you the kitchen is maintaining discipline.
The Black Pearl 1 Diamond adds a second layer of credibility. Black Pearl operates as China's own fine dining guide and its criteria weight Chinese culinary tradition heavily, so a restaurant earning both Michelin and Black Pearl recognition in the same year is demonstrating technical range: it satisfies Western-trained inspectors and China-focused evaluators simultaneously. For explorers who want to understand where Chinese Contemporary is being done well at mid-premium pricing in Shanghai, this dual validation matters.
Peer restaurants in the same cuisine category elsewhere in China give useful context. Gastro Esthetics DaDong in Beijing operates at a higher price point with a more theatrical presentation style. Wild Yeast in Hangzhou takes a fermentation-led approach to Chinese ingredients. Sui Tang Li's position in Jing'An places it in central Shanghai with easier access than some of the city's more destination-driven dining addresses.
The space
Sui Tang Li is located on the second floor of 366 Shimen Road No.1 in Jing'An district, one of Shanghai's denser mid-city neighbourhoods. Second-floor restaurant spaces in this part of the city tend toward more controlled, separated dining environments , insulated from street noise and foot traffic in a way that ground-floor venues are not. This matters if you are choosing between a meal that functions as a conversation across a table versus one where the room's energy is part of the experience. At ¥¥¥, a quieter, more composed environment is a reasonable expectation, and a second-floor address in Jing'An supports that.
The Google review count is still low , 6 reviews at 4.7 , which means the rating is directionally positive but statistically thin. Do not treat the score as a sample-size-validated verdict. Treat it as consistent with the Michelin and Black Pearl recognition: all three signals point in the same direction.
When to visit
For contemporary Chinese restaurants at this price point in Shanghai, weekday dinner is the optimal booking window. Weekend evenings attract the city's busiest dining traffic across the Jing'An and Xintiandi corridors, and while Sui Tang Li's booking difficulty is rated easy, that reflects the current reservation volume rather than a permanent condition. Recognition in both the 2024 and 2025 Michelin guide tends to build reservation pressure gradually over the course of a guide year, so booking earlier in the evening and on a Tuesday through Thursday gives you the leading combination of relaxed pacing and attentive service.
Seasonally, Shanghai's spring (March to May) and autumn (September to November) are the most comfortable periods for restaurant-focused trips to the city. Summer heat and humidity and the Winter holiday compression around Chinese New Year both create logistical friction that has nothing to do with the restaurant itself but affects the overall quality of a dining visit. If you are building a Shanghai dining itinerary and Sui Tang Li is on the list alongside options like Hakkasan, Da Dong (Xuhui), or 102 House, anchor the itinerary in spring or autumn and sequence Sui Tang Li mid-week.
Booking and practical details
No phone or website is listed in available data, which means walk-in or third-party platform booking (Dianping, OpenTable China) is likely the most direct route. Given the easy booking difficulty rating, you should not face significant lead time , but confirm availability at least a few days in advance for weekend visits. No dress code data is available; at ¥¥¥ contemporary Chinese in Jing'An, smart casual is a safe assumption. For comparable Shanghai contemporary Chinese options with different spatial formats, see Gastro Esthetics at DaDong and Fu He Hui.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking difficulty | Awards |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sui Tang Li | Chinese Contemporary | ¥¥¥ | Easy | Michelin Plate 2024 & 2025; Black Pearl 1 Diamond 2025 |
| Fu He Hui | Vegetarian | ¥¥¥¥ | Moderate | , |
| Ming Court | Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Moderate | , |
| Royal China Club | Chinese, Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Easy | , |
| Polux | French | ¥¥ | Easy | , |
How it fits a wider Shanghai dining trip
If you are building a serious food itinerary in Shanghai, Sui Tang Li works well as your mid-tier contemporary Chinese anchor , the venue that gives you a calibrated read on what this cuisine category does technically before you move up to higher price points. For further context on the Chinese Contemporary category across mainland China, Xin Rong Ji in Beijing, Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu, and Ru Yuan in Hangzhou offer regional comparison points. For Macau and Guangzhou versions of refined Chinese dining, see Chef Tam's Seasons and Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine. The Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing rounds out the Yangtze Delta picture if you are travelling regionally.
For your full Shanghai planning: our full Shanghai restaurants guide, hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences.
Frequently asked questions
- How far ahead should I book Sui Tang Li? Booking difficulty is rated easy, so you are unlikely to need more than a few days' lead time on weekdays. For Friday or Saturday evening, book at least a week out as a precaution , the venue's back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 and Black Pearl Diamond in 2025 will have built gradual awareness among Shanghai's dining-out crowd. At ¥¥¥, it competes in a popular price bracket, so do not leave weekend bookings to same-day.
- Can Sui Tang Li accommodate groups? No seat count or private dining room data is available in current records. For groups larger than four, contact the venue directly via Dianping or a hotel concierge before assuming group seating is available. At ¥¥¥ in Jing'An, many restaurants of this profile offer at least one semi-private room, but this cannot be confirmed without direct enquiry. If group dining is your primary concern and flexibility matters, Hakkasan Shanghai has a documented private dining infrastructure at a comparable price tier.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Sui Tang Li?
Book at least one to two weeks in advance for weekday dinners; weekend slots at a Michelin Plate and Black Pearl 1 Diamond venue in Jing'An will go faster. No direct website or phone is listed, so use Dianping or OpenTable China as your primary booking route. Walk-ins are a long shot at the ¥¥¥ price point — don't rely on them.
Can Sui Tang Li accommodate groups?
The second-floor location at 366 Shimen Road suggests a defined room size, which typically means group bookings compete with regular reservations rather than having dedicated space. For groups of four or more, book well ahead through Dianping and confirm capacity directly. Larger private-dining groups may find venues with explicit private room listings a safer bet for Shanghai contemporary Chinese at this award level.
What is Sui Tang Li known for?
Sui Tang Li is primarily known for Chinese Contemporary in Shanghai.
Where is Sui Tang Li located?
Sui Tang Li is located in Shanghai, at China, Shanghai, Jing'An, 366, Shimen Rd (No.1), 366号2层 邮政编码: 200041.
Location
China, Shanghai, Jing'An, 366, Shimen Rd (No.1), 366号2层 邮政编码: 200041
Shanghai, China
Compare Sui Tang Li
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sui Tang Li | Chinese Contemporary | ¥¥¥ | Michelin Plate (2025); Black Pearl 1 Diamond (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Fu He Hui | Vegetarian | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Ming Court | Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Polux | French | ¥¥ | Unknown | — | |
| Royal China Club | Chinese, Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Unknown | — | |
| Scarpetta | Italian | ¥¥¥ | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Sui Tang Li measures up.
Also Consider
- Fu He Hui — Vegetarian, ¥¥¥¥
- Ming Court — Cantonese, ¥¥¥
- Polux — French, ¥¥
- Royal China Club — Chinese, Cantonese, ¥¥¥
- Scarpetta — Italian, ¥¥¥
At ¥¥¥ with dual recognition from Michelin and Black Pearl, Sui Tang Li is the clearest choice among these peers if Chinese Contemporary cuisine is your specific interest. Fu He Hui operates at ¥¥¥¥ and focuses entirely on vegetarian Chinese cooking — it is the right pick for diners who want a more immersive plant-based interpretation of Chinese tradition, but it asks for more money and more advance planning. If budget is the deciding factor and cuisine flexibility exists, Polux at ¥¥ is the easiest on the wallet, though it operates in French cuisine and is not a substitute for what Sui Tang Li does.
Royal China Club and Ming Court both sit at ¥¥¥ and lean into Cantonese tradition rather than contemporary Chinese reinterpretation. If you want a more classical regional Chinese meal, either is worth considering alongside Sui Tang Li. For diners who prefer a broader meal that mixes European and Chinese influences in one sitting, Scarpetta at ¥¥¥ covers the Italian side of Shanghai's mid-premium dining offer — useful context for a multi-night itinerary but not a direct competitor to Sui Tang Li's cuisine focus.
The clearest use case for Sui Tang Li over its peers: you want award-validated contemporary Chinese cooking at ¥¥¥, with easy booking and a composed second-floor setting in central Jing'An. If you are willing to pay more for a deeper, more singular experience, Fu He Hui is the step up. If you want traditional Cantonese rather than contemporary Chinese, Royal China Club or Ming Court are more directly matched to that preference.
Recognized By
Explore Shanghai
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