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    Restaurant in Macau, China

    Zi Yat Heen

    1,645pts

    Strong dim sum case. Book Sunday lunch first.

    Zi Yat Heen, Restaurant in Macau

    About Zi Yat Heen

    Zi Yat Heen is the most compelling case for Cantonese fine dining on the Cotai Strip, particularly on Sunday when cart dim sum runs until 3 PM. The Black Pearl Diamond kitchen keeps seasoning restrained to let the ingredients lead, and a 580-label wine list makes dinner worth lingering over. At $$$ pricing, it delivers more than its Four Seasons address suggests it needs to.

    The Verdict

    If you've been to Zi Yat Heen once for dinner, come back on a Sunday morning. The dim sum lunch service, which starts at 11:30 AM on Sundays versus noon on weekdays, is where this Four Seasons Macao restaurant earns its Black Pearl Diamond and its spot at #260 on the 2025 Opinionated About Dining Asia rankings. The cooking is restrained by Macau standards — reduced seasoning, first-rate ingredients, Cantonese technique that doesn't compete with the wine list for your attention. At $$$ pricing, it sits in the same tier as Lai Heen, but the Four Seasons address and the 580-label wine program give it a slight edge on occasion framing. Book it for a group that wants serious Cantonese food without committing to a $$$$-tier tasting menu.

    The Room and the Experience

    The dining room reads gold and ivory from the moment you walk in — white linen tablecloths, silver-tipped chopsticks, deeply polished wood trim against pale panelling printed with Chinese landscape scenes. A glass-enclosed wine cellar sits at the centre of the space and functions as both storage and visual anchor. Lanterns overhead cast warm light across the room. The effect is formal without being stiff: opulent in palette, composed in execution. On a second visit you notice the details more clearly , the precision of the table settings, the way the room is proportioned so that even with full covers it doesn't feel crowded.

    The kitchen under Chef Anthony Ho works within a tight Cantonese framework: barbecued items, seafood, delicate soups, and prestige ingredients such as abalone and bird's nest. The menu is deliberately long, which can be either an asset or a distraction depending on how you approach it. The practical move is to anchor on the signature dishes flagged on the menu , crispy crab claw with shrimp mousse and a trademark crispy chicken are among them , and supplement with one or two seasonal items. Peking duck also appears, a slight departure from the Cantonese core, but it's there for a reason: it sells.

    The Dim Sum Case

    Sunday lunch is the most efficient use of a Zi Yat Heen visit if you're coming specifically for dim sum. Service runs until 3 PM on Sundays (versus 2:30 PM Monday through Saturday), giving you more time and a slightly more relaxed pace than the weekday window. Dim sum is presented on carts , steamed shrimp dumplings, barbecued pork buns , executed with the precision you'd expect from a kitchen operating at this level. For comparison, the dim sum format at Jade Dragon and Chef Tam's Seasons tilts toward tasting menus and à la carte rather than cart service, so if the Sunday trolley experience is your priority, Zi Yat Heen delivers it more directly. The dessert options carry the same prestige-ingredient logic as the savoury menu: chilled mango pudding alongside bird's nest with rock sugar.

    For travelers connecting Macau to a broader China itinerary, Cantonese fine dining of comparable seriousness is available at Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine in Guangzhou and Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing. For the Hong Kong comparison, Forum in Hong Kong and Le Palais in Taipei operate in the same prestige-Cantonese register. Within Macau, Wing Lei and Pearl Dragon round out the upper end of the Cantonese category.

    The Wine Program

    580 selections, 3,000 bottles in inventory, with strengths in Bordeaux, Burgundy, Portugal, Australia, and Italy. Corkage is $63 if you bring your own. At $$$ wine pricing, expect many bottles above $100. Sommeliers Kaleb Paw and Sergiu Ng manage the list, and the tea program runs in parallel for those who prefer it , a practical alternative given the Cantonese food pairing logic. The wine list is one of the more compelling reasons to book dinner here over lunch: you have three hours of service (6 PM to 10:30 PM) to work through it properly.

    Practical Information

    Zi Yat Heen is inside the Four Seasons Hotel Macao on the Cotai Strip. Smart casual dress is required; men should avoid shorts, sleeveless shirts, and open shoes. Reservations are recommended for both lunch and dinner , the restaurant draws locals and hotel guests alike, and walk-in availability is not reliable. Booking difficulty is moderate: not as hard to secure as some Michelin-level rooms in the region, but don't show up without a reservation and expect to be seated quickly on a weekend. For context on what else the Cotai Strip area offers, see our full Macau restaurants guide, our Macau hotels guide, and our Macau bars guide. For regional food travelers, Xin Rong Ji in Beijing, 102 House in Shanghai, Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu, and Ru Yuan in Hangzhou all sit in the same serious Chinese fine dining tier across the mainland.

    VenueCuisinePriceDim SumWine ProgramBooking Difficulty
    Zi Yat HeenCantonese$$$Yes (cart service)580 labels, $$$Moderate
    Lai HeenCantonese$$$YesNot specifiedModerate
    Jade DragonCantonese$$$$LimitedExtensiveHigh
    Chef Tam's SeasonsCantonese$$$$LimitedCuratedHigh

    Frequently Asked Questions

    • Is the tasting menu worth it at Zi Yat Heen? For a group that wants to cover the full range of the kitchen , abalone, bird's nest, the signature barbecue items, dessert , the tasting menu is the more efficient path and makes the wine list relevant. If you're coming for dim sum specifically, the à la carte lunch format gives you more control and comparable value at $$$ pricing. The tasting menu earns its place on grand occasion dinners; it's harder to justify on a casual weekday lunch.
    • How far ahead should I book Zi Yat Heen? For weekday lunch, a week out is usually sufficient. For Sunday dim sum or weekend dinner, book two to three weeks ahead. The Black Pearl Diamond recognition and the Four Seasons address mean weekend covers fill faster than the moderate booking difficulty rating implies. If your travel dates are fixed, book the moment your itinerary is confirmed.
    • Does Zi Yat Heen handle dietary restrictions? No specific dietary accommodation policy is published in available data. Given the Cantonese format and the heavy use of seafood, shellfish, and prestige animal products (abalone, bird's nest), strict vegetarian or vegan diners will find the menu limiting. Contact the Four Seasons Hotel Macao directly before booking if dietary needs are a factor.
    • What should I wear to Zi Yat Heen? Smart casual is the official dress code. Women have flexibility in interpretation; men should avoid shorts, sleeveless shirts, slippers, and open shoes. Given the gold-and-ivory dining room and the Four Seasons context, dressing toward the formal end of smart casual is the safer call , you won't be overdressed.
    • Is lunch or dinner better at Zi Yat Heen? It depends on what you want from the meal. Sunday lunch (11:30 AM to 3 PM) is the call for dim sum cart service and a relaxed pace. Dinner (6 PM to 10:30 PM, seven days) is the better fit for the wine program, tasting menus, and the full à la carte spread including prestige ingredients. For first-time visitors, Sunday lunch gives you the broadest read on what the kitchen does well.
    • Can I eat at the bar at Zi Yat Heen? No bar seating is confirmed in available data for Zi Yat Heen. The restaurant operates as a full-service dining room. If bar dining is a priority, the Four Seasons Macao has separate lounge and bar spaces; check with the hotel directly. For Macau bar options more broadly, see our Macau bars guide.

    Compare Zi Yat Heen

    Value Check: Zi Yat Heen and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Zi Yat Heen$$$Moderate
    Aji$$$$Unknown
    Five Foot Road$$Unknown
    Lai Heen$$$Unknown
    Robuchon au Dôme$$$$Unknown
    Feng Wei Ju$$Unknown

    Key differences to consider before you reserve.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Zi Yat Heen?

    The tasting menu makes sense for a grand occasion or a first visit where you want to cover the range — Cantonese classics, barbecue items, seafood, and prestige products like abalone and bird's nest. At $$$ pricing, it positions alongside Macau's top Cantonese rooms. If you're visiting primarily for dim sum, the à la carte lunch is a more focused and cost-efficient route.

    How far ahead should I book Zi Yat Heen?

    Book at least a week out for weekday lunch, longer for Sunday service and dinner. Zi Yat Heen draws both hotel guests and locals, which keeps the room consistently occupied. Sunday dim sum in particular runs until 3 PM and fills quickly — don't expect to walk in.

    Does Zi Yat Heen handle dietary restrictions?

    The venue data does not confirm specific dietary accommodation policies. Given the format — Cantonese fine dining with an extensive à la carte menu including seafood, barbecue, and prestige ingredients — check the venue's official channels before booking if restrictions are a factor.

    What should I wear to Zi Yat Heen?

    Smart casual is the official dress code, and it's enforced with some specificity for men: no shorts, sleeveless shirts, slippers, or open shoes. Women have more flexibility within that standard. The room runs gold and ivory with white linens and silver-tipped chopsticks, so dressing slightly above casual is the safer call.

    Is lunch or dinner better at Zi Yat Heen?

    Sunday lunch is the stronger case if dim sum is your priority — service starts at 11:30 AM and runs until 3 PM, giving more time than the weekday 12–2:30 PM window. Dinner suits a longer Cantonese meal with the full à la carte range or a tasting menu, and the 580-selection wine list becomes more relevant. Choose based on format, not prestige.

    Can I eat at the bar at Zi Yat Heen?

    Zi Yat Heen is a table-service Cantonese fine-dining room inside the Four Seasons Hotel Macao, not a bar-format venue. The database does not indicate counter or bar seating. A reservation for a proper table is the standard approach here.

    Hours

    Monday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10:30 PM
    Tuesday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10:30 PM
    Wednesday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10:30 PM
    Thursday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10:30 PM
    Friday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10:30 PM
    Saturday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6 PM-10:30 PM
    Sunday
    11:30 AM-3 PM 6 PM-10:30 PM

    Recognized By

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