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    Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong

    Tin Lung Heen

    1,840pts

    102nd-floor Cantonese worth the planning.

    Tin Lung Heen, Restaurant in Hong Kong

    About Tin Lung Heen

    Tin Lung Heen earns its two Michelin stars with precise Cantonese cooking from Chef Paul Lau on the 102nd floor of Hong Kong's ICC tower. At $$$ it undercuts three-star rivals like Lung King Heen on price while matching them on formal execution. Book at least four to six weeks out for weekend dim sum; weeknight dinners are calmer and more accessible.

    Verdict

    Tin Lung Heen is the right booking if you want serious Cantonese cooking paired with one of the most dramatic dining rooms in Asia. Sitting on the 102nd floor of the International Commerce Centre (Hong Kong's tallest building), it holds two Michelin stars, a Black Pearl Diamond, and a La Liste score of 89 points for 2026 — credentials that put it firmly among the top tier of Cantonese restaurants anywhere in the world. The catch: it books out fast, views are better from the west-facing windows than toward Hong Kong Island, and the $$$ price point means you need to be intentional about when and how you go. Come for Saturday dim sum or a weeknight dinner at sunset, and you will leave satisfied. Come expecting the Wan Chai skyline and you will be mildly confused.

    The Room and the Experience

    The name translates as 'sky dragon pavilion,' and the room earns it. Lacquered in deep red wood veneer, the space is grand without being cold. Floor-to-ceiling windows run the perimeter, flooding the room with natural light during the day. The key spatial fact most visitors miss: the view faces west over Stonecutters Bridge, the working port, and the hills of Lantau — not toward the famous Hong Kong Island skyline. At lunch, the room is bright and relaxed. At dinner, the port lights and distant hills create a quieter, more contemplative atmosphere than the neon-dense views you get from restaurants on the Island side.

    The energy shifts meaningfully across the week. Weekends draw families for dim sum, and the room fills to a different rhythm , louder, more celebratory, children at the tables. Weeknight dinners are notably calmer: the sound level drops, tables spread out more easily, and the service team has more bandwidth for the kind of attentive pacing that suits a long Cantonese meal. If you are coming for a serious wine dinner or a quieter occasion, a Tuesday or Wednesday evening is the better call. For the full window-seat-at-noon experience with dim sum carts, Saturday lunch is worth the extra booking effort.

    The Food

    Chef Paul Lau Ping Lui has built a menu around Cantonese seafood with a formal precision that justifies the Michelin recognition. Live seafood selections anchor the menu, and signatures flagged in inspector notes include steamed crab claw with egg white and Hua Diao wine, and honey-glazed char siu that reviewers describe as among the most tender renditions of the dish available in Hong Kong. The dim sum menu at lunch , rice rolls with Wagyu beef, shrimp dumplings with black truffle, deep-fried crab cake , operates at a level well above what you find at most hotel Cantonese restaurants. The chicken soup with fish maw double-boiled in coconut is a fixture on the evening menu and worth ordering if available.

    The wine list is an outlier for a Cantonese restaurant and worth noting for food and wine travellers. Hundreds of references, deep Bordeaux and Burgundy inventory, and a serious Italian section including bottles from Gaja, Bruno Giacosa, and Conterno. For an explorer who wants to pair a 2015 Barolo with Cantonese roast meats, this is one of very few rooms in Hong Kong where that conversation goes somewhere meaningful with the sommelier.

    Counter and Bar Seating

    There is no chef's counter in the conventional open-kitchen sense at Tin Lung Heen , this is a formal Cantonese dining room, not a counter-format restaurant. The window seats function as the equivalent premium position: two rows closest to the floor-to-ceiling glass are the most requested spots in the room. Inspector notes confirm that every table has a view, but the window rows give you the full vertical drop of the ICC exterior and the harbour spread below. When booking, request window seating explicitly. It is not guaranteed, but it is worth asking for and the team are accustomed to the request. The bar at the Ritz-Carlton is accessible separately if you want to arrive early for a drink before your table , a reasonable strategy given the room fills quickly on weekends.

    Booking and Timing

    Getting a table requires real planning. Tin Lung Heen is rated Near Impossible to book, driven by a combination of the Ritz-Carlton hotel guest priority, the limited window seats, and strong repeat local clientele. Aim for at least four to six weeks out for weekend dim sum. Weeknight dinners are more accessible but still warrant two to three weeks minimum notice. Saturday lunch runs two distinct sittings , 11:30 am and 1:30 pm , so clarity on which sitting you want matters when you call. Reservations are accepted by phone through the Ritz-Carlton; the hotel concierge can assist hotel guests with priority access.

    Practical Details

    DetailTin Lung HeenLung King HeenT'ang Court
    Price range$$$$$$$$$$
    Michelin stars2 (2024)33
    CuisineCantoneseCantoneseCantonese
    Booking difficultyNear ImpossibleNear ImpossibleVery Hard
    Dim sum lunchYesYesYes
    Setting102F, ICC, Kowloon4F, Four Seasons, CentralLangham, Tsim Sha Tsui
    ViewWest harbour, LantauVictoria HarbourCity, limited

    For broader context on Hong Kong dining, see our full Hong Kong restaurants guide. If you are planning around hotels, our full Hong Kong hotels guide covers where to stay near ICC. For drinks before or after dinner, our full Hong Kong bars guide has the relevant options by neighbourhood.

    Pearl Picks , Other Cantonese Worth Booking

    • Lung King Heen , Three Michelin stars, Victoria Harbour views from the Four Seasons. The benchmark for formal Cantonese in Hong Kong, priced above Tin Lung Heen.
    • Lai Ching Heen , The Regent's Cantonese room, long-established, strong seafood focus.
    • T'ang Court , Three Michelin stars at the Langham, Tsim Sha Tsui. Easier to book than Lung King Heen.
    • Forum , Famous for abalone; a different register of Cantonese from the hotel set.
    • Rùn , Modern Cantonese at the InterContinental Grand Stanford; solid weeknight option.

    If you are exploring Cantonese fine dining across the region, relevant comparisons include Jade Dragon in Macau, Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau, Le Palais in Taipei, Summer Pavilion in Singapore, and in Shanghai: 102 House, Bao Li Xuan, and Canton 8 (Huangpu). For a contrasting Central experience, Le Salon de Thé de Joël Robuchon at ifc mall offers a completely different register for afternoon visits.

    FAQs

    Is Tin Lung Heen good for a special occasion?

    • Yes , the combination of two Michelin stars, a 102nd-floor setting, and formal Cantonese service makes it one of Hong Kong's most credentialled occasion restaurants at the $$$ price point.
    • It works for both intimate dinners and family celebrations; weeknight dinners are quieter and better suited to a private milestone, while weekend lunch has a livelier, more festive energy.
    • If budget is the deciding factor, it sits below Lung King Heen ($$$$) on price while delivering comparable formal Cantonese standards.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Tin Lung Heen?

    • At the $$$ price range, Tin Lung Heen delivers value relative to three-Michelin-star Cantonese rooms in Hong Kong. The kitchen's strength is in seafood and roasting , ordering signature dishes à la carte often gives you more control than a set menu over covering those high points.
    • Chef Paul Lau's signatures (crab claw, char siu, fish maw soup) are the reason to come; build your meal around them rather than defaulting to a fixed format if the menu structure allows.
    • For a comparison: Forum offers a more focused, single-dish-famous experience; Tin Lung Heen rewards diners who want breadth across a full Cantonese repertoire.

    What should a first-timer know about Tin Lung Heen?

    • The view faces west toward Stonecutters Bridge and Lantau, not toward Hong Kong Island's skyline. Request a window seat when booking , the two rows closest to the glass are the priority positions in the room.
    • The ICC is in Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon. Access via the MTR (Kowloon station or Austin station) is direct; the building connects directly to the station.
    • Dim sum at lunch is a distinct offering from the evening menu , if Cantonese dim sum is your goal, come specifically for the lunch sitting. See our full Hong Kong experiences guide for broader context on planning a Hong Kong food trip.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Tin Lung Heen?

    • Lunch is the better first visit. The room fills with natural light through the floor-to-ceiling windows, dim sum is served, and the $$$ pricing is more accessible at midday than an elaborate dinner build.
    • Saturday lunch runs two sittings (11:30 am and 1:30 pm); the earlier sitting gives you the fullest natural light and the most time before the room turns.
    • Dinner is the right call if atmosphere and wine matter more to you than dim sum , the room quiets on weeknights, and the wine list (deep Bordeaux, Burgundy, and Italian inventory) is leading explored when the pace is unhurried.

    What should I wear to Tin Lung Heen?

    • Smart casual is the floor , clean, polished clothing without being formal. This is a Ritz-Carlton property at the $$$ price point with two Michelin stars, so trainers, shorts, and casual beachwear are out of place.
    • Business casual or smart evening wear is appropriate and fits the room's energy. For dinner especially, the clientele tends toward well-dressed local professionals and hotel guests.
    • No dress code is confirmed in venue data, but aligning with Ritz-Carlton standards is a safe baseline. If in doubt, overdress slightly rather than under.

    Compare Tin Lung Heen

    Tin Lung Heen vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking DifficultyValue
    Tin Lung HeenCantonese$$$The view from the 102nd floor alone is almost enough of a reason to dine at Tin Lung Heen, but this excellent Cantonese restaurant would be worth a visit in any location.Housed in The Ritz-Carlton, Hong Kong, in the ICC building (HK’s tallest), the setting is simply spectacular.; The highest Cantonese restaurant in town, Tin Lung Heen is located on the 102nd floor of International Commerce Centre and is managed by The Ritz-Carlton Hotel. Besides the spectacular Victoria Harbor...; La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 89pts; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #103 (2025); Black Pearl 1 Diamond (2025); La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 90pts; **Our Inspector's Highlights During the day, the restaurant is flooded with natural light, thanks to floor-to-ceiling windows looking not toward the famous skyline of Hong Kong Island, but west over Stonecutters Bridge, the busy port and the hills of Lantau.Seafood, including some live selections, figures prominently on the menu, the work of noted chef Paul Lau.The ambitious wine list aims to impress with hundreds of references. Bordeaux and Burgundy are amply represented, but there is also deep inventory of Italian wines, including marquee reds from Gaja, Bruno Giacosa and Conterno.** **Things to Know The two rows of window seating are most coveted, but every table has a view at this Hong Kong restaurant.The Hong Kong restaurant is undoubtedly a power dining address, a great choice on all counts, but it’s popular with families, too, especially on the weekends. That means reservations are essential, whether you want to treat others, or just yourself.** **Treatments:** The Food Be sure to indulge in the abundant seafood offerings. Chef Paul Lau’s signature steamed crab claw with egg white and Hua Diao wine is a must-try.Don’t miss the barbecued Iberian pork with honey, likely one of the most tender renditions of the classic you’ll encounter.A dim sum menu is offered at lunchtime; try the rice rolls with Wagyu beef, shrimp dumplings with black truffle or deep-fried crab cake. **Amenities:** 1 Austin Road West, Kowloon, Hong Kong; Aptly named the ‘sky dragon pavilion’ in Chinese, this grand restaurant on the 102nd floor of a skyscraper is lavishly appointed in red wood veneer. Its huge windows flood the room in natural light, making it a perfect sunset or city nightscape viewing point. Signatures include chicken soup with fish maw double-boiled in coconut and honey-glazed char siu. Dim sum lunch presents a plethora of bite-sized goodies, whose portions can be tailored to your party size.; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #88 (2024); Michelin 2 Stars (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #103 (2023)Near Impossible
    Ta VieJapanese - French, Innovative$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong)Italian$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    FeuilleFrench Contemporary$$$Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    The ChairmanChinese, Cantonese$$Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    NeighborhoodInternational, European Contemporary$$Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Tin Lung Heen good for a special occasion?

    Yes, and it's one of the stronger cases for it in Hong Kong. The 102nd-floor setting in the Ritz-Carlton ICC, the 2 Michelin star kitchen under Chef Paul Lau, and the formal red wood dining room all signal occasion without requiring you to explain the choice. It draws a mix of power-lunch regulars and families on weekends, so it reads formal without being stiff. Book well ahead — the restaurant is rated Near Impossible to get into, and window tables go first.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Tin Lung Heen?

    At the $$$ price range, Tin Lung Heen sits at the serious end of Hong Kong fine dining, and the kitchen's Michelin 2-star track record (2024) gives the tasting format credibility. Chef Paul Lau's signatures — including the steamed crab claw with egg white and Hua Diao wine, and honey-glazed char siu — are the core draw. If you're coming for a single meal, ordering around those signatures a la carte is a reasonable alternative to a set menu. The wine list runs deep into Bordeaux, Burgundy, and Italian reds, so factor that into the final bill.

    What should a first-timer know about Tin Lung Heen?

    Book early and request a window seat — there are two rows of them, and they overlook Victoria Harbour and Stonecutters Bridge rather than the Hong Kong Island skyline, which catches some visitors off guard but is still a strong view. The restaurant is inside the Ritz-Carlton on the 102nd floor of the ICC, Hong Kong's tallest building, so allow extra time for the journey up. Dim sum is served at lunch and is a lower-commitment entry point to the kitchen than a full dinner; the rice rolls with Wagyu beef and shrimp dumplings with black truffle are noted signatures.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Tin Lung Heen?

    Lunch is the better first visit if dim sum is your format — the kitchen runs a dedicated dim sum menu, the room fills with natural light through floor-to-ceiling windows, and the price of entry is lower than dinner. Saturday and Sunday lunch runs split seatings (11:30am and 1:30pm), so pick your slot and book it; weekend lunches draw families and are noticeably busier. Dinner gives you the city-at-night view and a more formal pace, which suits the Cantonese seafood menu and the extensive wine list.

    What should I wear to Tin Lung Heen?

    This is a 2 Michelin star restaurant inside the Ritz-Carlton on the 102nd floor of the ICC — dress accordingly. The venue is described as a power dining address, and the clientele skews toward business and formal occasion groups. Collared shirts and dress trousers for men, evening or business attire for women is the practical floor. Arriving underdressed will feel conspicuous in a room of this register.

    Hours

    Monday
    12–2:30 pm, 6–10 pm
    Tuesday
    12–2:30 pm, 6–10 pm
    Wednesday
    12–2:30 pm, 6–10 pm
    Thursday
    12–2:30 pm, 6–10 pm
    Friday
    12–2:30 pm, 6–10 pm
    Saturday
    11:30 am–1 pm, 1:30–3 pm, 6–10 pm
    Sunday
    11:30 am–1 pm, 1:30–3 pm, 6–10 pm

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