Restaurant in Shanghai, China
Yu Du Lao Wei Mian (Huangpu)
250ptsMichelin-endorsed noodles at street-food spend.

About Yu Du Lao Wei Mian (Huangpu)
Yu Du Lao Wei Mian (Huangpu) has earned the Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025, making it one of the most credentialled budget noodle options in Pudong. At a single ¥ price point, it delivers Jiangxi-style noodles with consistent quality and easy walk-in access. The right call for late-night eating or a fast, low-cost lunch with no booking required.
The Verdict
If you are weighing up where to eat noodles in Shanghai and want a Michelin-endorsed answer at street-food prices, Yu Du Lao Wei Mian in Huangpu is the booking. It has held the Michelin Bib Gourmand in both 2024 and 2025, which in this price tier is about as strong a quality signal as you will find. The entry point is a single ¥ price range, meaning you are unlikely to spend more than a few dozen yuan per head. For late-night noodles in the city, it is one of the few options that pairs genuine recognition with genuine affordability.
What Yu Du Lao Wei Mian Is
Yu Du Lao Wei Mian sits inside Fuhui Plaza on Yinghua Road in Pudong, which puts it slightly east of the dense restaurant cluster around Xintiandi and the Bund. The name translates loosely as "the old foreign guy's noodles from Yudu," a reference to Yudu County in Jiangxi province, which has its own noodle tradition distinct from the Shanghainese-style soup noodles most visitors associate with the city. That regional specificity matters: this is not a generic noodle shop trying to cover every style. It has a defined identity, and the Bib Gourmand recognition two years running suggests it executes that identity with consistency.
The atmosphere here reads as a working neighbourhood spot rather than a designed dining room. Expect a practical interior, tables that turn over at pace, and the ambient noise of a room that is filling and emptying throughout service. This is not the venue for a long, quiet conversation over a bottle of wine. It works leading if you want to eat well, eat fast, and not pay restaurant prices for the privilege. The energy is brisk rather than festive, and if you are arriving after a longer evening elsewhere, the no-fuss format is an advantage rather than a drawback.
As a late-night option, the format plays to its strengths. Noodle shops in this category typically run longer hours than full-service restaurants, and the quick-service model means you can walk in, eat, and leave without booking days in advance. The Bib Gourmand, which Michelin awards specifically for good food at moderate prices, makes this a more defensible late choice than many of the surrounding options in the same price band. For context, the 2025 recognition places it in the same cohort as other Bib-recognised noodle shops in Shanghai, including A Niang Mian Guan, Jingmei Wuxi Noodles (Jingan), Lao Di Fang Mian Guan, Rongjia Noodles Soup with Yellow Croaker (Jingan), and Wei Xiang Zhai (Yandang Road).
Who Should Book This
Yu Du Lao Wei Mian suits a specific kind of visit well and a different kind poorly. If you are looking for a post-theatre meal, a late stop after drinks, or a low-cost lunch between appointments in Pudong, this is a clear yes. The price makes it risk-free and the Bib Gourmand removes the guesswork about quality. Booking difficulty is easy, which matters for spontaneous plans.
If you are planning a special occasion dinner or a business meal where the table setting and service pace need to carry some of the evening's weight, this is not the right venue. The format is built for efficiency. For celebration dining in Shanghai, you would do better looking at the full Shanghai restaurants guide for higher-tier options. For noodles elsewhere in China, A Xin Xian Lao in Fuzhou and Ajisai in Taichung give you regional comparisons worth knowing about.
Booking and Timing
Booking difficulty is rated easy, and given the format, advance reservations are unlikely to be necessary for most visits. Arriving at off-peak hours will give you the smoothest experience, but the shop's Bib Gourmand status means it draws a crowd at peak meal times. If you are planning a lunchtime visit during a weekend, give yourself a few minutes of buffer for a queue. Late-night visits on weeknights are likely to be the most relaxed in terms of wait time.
No website or phone number is listed in current records, so the most practical approach is to arrive directly. For broader trip planning in Shanghai, see also our Shanghai hotels guide, our Shanghai bars guide, our Shanghai experiences guide, and our Shanghai wineries guide.
Know Before You Go
- Price range: ¥ — budget-friendly, expect to spend a small amount per head
- Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2024 and 2025
- Cuisine: Noodles, Jiangxi style (Yudu County)
- Address: Fuhui Plaza, Unit 206, 80 Yinghua Road, Pudong, Shanghai
- Booking difficulty: Easy — walk-in viable for most visits
- Phone / Website: Not available in current records , arrive directly
- Dress code: No information available , a neighbourhood noodle shop at ¥ pricing, casual attire is appropriate
- Leading for: Late-night meals, quick lunches, budget noodles with Michelin credibility
- Not ideal for: Special occasion dinners, business meals requiring extended table time
Regional Context
Shanghai's noodle scene spans multiple regional traditions, and the city rewards knowing which style you are after before you choose. Yudu-style noodles are less widely represented than Shanghainese-style soup noodles or Suzhou-style toppings, which gives Yu Du Lao Wei Mian a degree of specificity that most generic noodle shops in the city cannot match. For fine Chinese dining in nearby cities, Ru Yuan in Hangzhou and Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu offer a sense of the broader regional range. For higher-end Chinese dining in Shanghai's peer cities, Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine in Guangzhou, Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing, and Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau represent the upper end of that spectrum. Xin Rong Ji in Beijing is worth knowing if you are comparing regional Chinese cooking across the country.
Compare Yu Du Lao Wei Mian (Huangpu)
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yu Du Lao Wei Mian (Huangpu) | Noodles | ¥ | Easy |
| Fu He Hui | Vegetarian | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Ming Court | Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Polux | French | ¥¥ | Unknown |
| Royal China Club | Chinese, Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Scarpetta | Italian | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to Yu Du Lao Wei Mian (Huangpu) in Shanghai?
For Michelin-recognised noodles at a similar price point, look at other Bib Gourmand holders on the current Shanghai Michelin list. If you want to step up in format and spend, Fu He Hui offers a completely different register — vegetarian tasting menus at a price tier several multiples higher. Yu Du Lao Wei Mian is the right call when your priority is a verified low-cost bowl rather than a full sit-down meal.
What should I wear to Yu Du Lao Wei Mian (Huangpu)?
This is a ¥-priced noodle shop inside a shopping mall in Pudong — there is no dress code. Come as you are. Save the smart dressing for somewhere like Royal China Club or Ming Court where the room expects it.
Is Yu Du Lao Wei Mian (Huangpu) worth the price?
Yes. Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) at a ¥ price range makes this one of the clearest value propositions on the Shanghai Michelin list. The Bib Gourmand designation exists specifically to flag good cooking at accessible prices, and Yu Du Lao Wei Mian has held it across two cycles.
What should I order at Yu Du Lao Wei Mian (Huangpu)?
Specific menu items are not confirmed in available data, so ordering off the menu as it stands on the day is the practical approach. The cuisine type is noodles, so the core offering is the bowl itself — ask staff for their recommendation if the menu is Chinese-only, as that is standard at this category of venue in Shanghai.
Can I eat at the bar at Yu Du Lao Wei Mian (Huangpu)?
No bar seating is documented for this venue. It operates as a noodle shop inside Fuhui Plaza, where counter or communal table seating is the typical format — not a bar in the Western sense. Arrive ready to sit where space is available.
Is Yu Du Lao Wei Mian (Huangpu) good for a special occasion?
Not really. A ¥ noodle shop in a Pudong shopping mall is the right call for a fast, satisfying meal with solid credentials — not a celebration dinner. For a special occasion in Shanghai, Polux or Fu He Hui are better fits in terms of setting and occasion weight.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Yu Du Lao Wei Mian (Huangpu)?
There is no tasting menu format at this venue. Yu Du Lao Wei Mian is a noodle shop priced at ¥ — you order individual bowls, not a structured progression. If a tasting menu format matters to you, this is the wrong venue.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Shanghai
- Fu He HuiFu He Hui holds two Michelin stars and a World's 50 Best #64 global ranking for 2025, making it the most credentialed plant-based tasting menu restaurant in China. Chef Tony Lu's kitchen is a serious destination for special occasions, but the vegetarian-only format and near-impossible booking difficulty mean it rewards guests who are genuinely committed to the experience. Book weeks in advance and plan your evening around the 9 pm kitchen close.
- Taian TableTaian Table holds three Michelin stars and La Liste recognition for 2025, making it one of Shanghai's most credentialed fine-dining addresses. Chef Christiaan Stoop's Modern European tasting menu is format-committed and near-impossible to book — plan two to three months out. At ¥¥¥¥, it is the right choice for food-focused travellers who want precision cooking with no equivalent in the city.
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