From raucous dumpling joints to epic banquets and fifty-year-old fine dining establishments. No visit to Chinatown is complete without a feast at one of these foodie favourites. Visiting Chinatown to celebrate the Lunar New Year? Find the best events, banquets and dining deals.

Flower Drum

Gilbert Lau opened Flower Drum in 1975 in Chinatown. Its reputation for restrained opulence endures to this day. This fine-dining Cantonese restaurant has won multiple national and international awards. It's known for its delicate and finessed signature dishes, like baked crab and Peking duck. Service is almost psychic here – the waitstaff seem to anticipate your every need. Insiders ask for dishes from the unpublished chefs’ menu.

Crystal Jade

A reliable yum cha favourite in the heart of Chinatown, you can fit the whole family around Crystal Jade's large tables. Each dish brings the world’s best ingredients to ³Ô¹ÏÍø. Including seasonal seafood, fresh out of the tank. Instead of coming around on trolleys, you tick off your selections on a list. Try the famous melon soup, served in a hollowed-out melon. Or go for dumplings stacked in steamers; ginger and prawn, pork or coriander.

A table set with baskets of yum cha dishes and tea.
Crystal Jade

Shark Fin Inn

Talk about a ³Ô¹ÏÍø icon! Shark Fin Inn has been dishing up yum cha to dumpling-loving Melburnians since the '80s. Gather the family around the table for a banquet. Or swing by at lunchtime for traditional Cantonese fare at affordable prices. The har gao prawn dumplings will never disappoint. Want to try something new? Grab a basket of chicken feet. And be sure to crunch on the light, lacy layers of fried taro dumplings.

Longrain

Longrain has been a local favourite for modern Thai since landing in Chinatown in 2005. After closing its doors in 2020, the restaurant was given a second life by restaurateur Scott Pickett. The revamped menu is filled with fresh, funky and fermented flavours that pack a punch. It’s best enjoyed through the famous banquet, starring all the signature dishes. Think caramelised five spice pork hock swimming in a sweet and sticky sauce, and red curry with wagyu beef.

A green restaurant with timber tables and a leafy mural.
Longrain

Supper Inn

The best Chinatown restaurants are there for you when you need a late-night feed. Supper Inn does not disappoint, welcoming hungry punters until 2.30am. Unassuming and unchanged since the ‘70s, this old-school inn is all about classic Cantonese fare. Head upstairs and sate your midnight cravings for roasted suckling pig and warming congee. 

Secret Kitchen

The secret is out – behind that big curved fish tank in Chinatown you’ll find one of ³Ô¹Ï꿉۪s best yum cha spots. Gorge on baskets of Cantonese favourites alongside rare delicacies. Like your food to look as good as it tastes? Secret Kitchen’s dishes are cute as a button. Snap a pic of the adorable piggy custard buns before you gobble them down. The ultra-fresh seafood is a must-try too.

A selection of dumplings include pig shaped buns being eaten with chopsticks.
Secret Kitchen

HuTong Dumpling Bar 

HuTong Dumpling Bar in Market Lane is beloved by all serious dumpling devotees. Part of the Chinatown lineup since 2008, come here for the signature soup-filled xiao long bao or zippy chilli wontons. Be hypnotised by the deft hands of the chef as they whip up delicate dumplings behind glass.

Shanghai Street

At Shanghai Street, homemade dumplings come boiled or fried. They also come swimming in chilli oil or floating in soup. But you can’t go past a plate of the famous xiao long bao. This BYO dumpling joint has become such a ³Ô¹ÏÍø staple that several outposts have popped up. Find two on Little Bourke, plus another on Elizabeth Street that boasts a tiki bar for cocktails!

A bamboo steamer basket filled with xiao long bao dumplings.
Shanghai Street

ShanDong MaMa 

ShanDong MaMa is a no-frills dumpling house that has been a crowd favourite for over a decade. Tucked away in Midcity Arcade, the food is inspired by China’s Shandong province. Settle into the cafeteria for homestyle cooking, with a mother and daughter team at the helm. Order the cult-status fried mackerel dumplings or try inventive flavours like squid ink. The vegan dumplings are a winner too.

RuYi

For a modern and refined take on traditional Chinese dishes, visit RuYi. This Liverpool Street spot has served up relaxed fine dining for 13 years. From Peking duck bao to flaming king prawns and lychee caramel pork ribs. Each dish will transport you to a new province. There's a sommelier-selected wine list and the inventive cocktail menu skews bright and bold. Try the Szechuan mule, yuzu negroni or lemongrass and chilli margarita.

China Red 

Affordable, convenient and delicious. China Red specialises in plump, juicy xiao long bao. The menu also has a range of delicious dumplings, including Peking pork. Sit under the hanging red lanterns and order bamboo baskets from a touch screen. They're made by skilful noodle throwers and deft dumpling chefs you can see at work behind a window.

More Chinatown restaurants

Wooden lazy Susan with bamboo steamers and bowls of dumplings.

Westlake Restaurant

Licensed and BYO restaurant serving authentic Cantonese cuisine and yum cha.

BBQ pork buns and chilli sauce.

Tim Ho Wan

A dim sum icon, dubbed the world's most affordable Michelin-starred restaurant.

Thai dish of seafood with clam and tomato.

Khao Soi

A cosy Thai restaurant in Chinatown, specialising in traditional Thai noodle soup.

Interior of Seamstress bar with tables and rows of stools.

Seamstress

A dining and drinking experience styled on 19th-century Chinatown.

Interior of a crowded restaurant with seated patrons dining at tables, exposed brick walls, and soft ceiling down lights.

Seven Star Pocha

Chinatown's Seven Star Pocha serves authentic and popular Korean food.

Fried chicken with tofu cubes and cucumber served on a plate that has the words D'Penyetz written on the yellow rim.

D’Penyetz & D’Cendol

Located in Chinatown, enjoy authentic halal Indonesian dishes and dessert.

Bowl of noodles, crispy pork and vegetables.

Lao Liu Zhou Noodle

Popular Chinese restaurant serving authentic luosifen 'river snail rice noodles'.

Looking down onto a timber table with a bowl of Taiwanese pork rice.

Ahma

Experience Taiwan’s world-famous street food markets in ³Ô¹ÏÍø CBD.

Looking down on a table full of different dishes from Shanghai Village.

Shanghai Village

Dumplings and cheap and cheerful rice and noodle dishes plus a range of tasty stir-fries.

A crowded Thai eatery with tables close to a display of food.

Pick Prik

Authentic Bangkok Thai street food specialising in Thai spicy salads, grills, seafood and desserts.

Plates and chopsticks on a round table with white cloth, chairs with white fabric covers in a room with red walls.

Sichuan House

Cheap, authentic and spicy food from China's Sichuan province.

The exterior of a Chinese restaurant with Chinese writing in the top and sides and traditional looking motifs - two people walking in blurred motion out the front.

Red Chilli House

Red Chilli House is a Southern Chinese restaurant specialising in bold, unique flavours.

Selection of Japanese food, including wagyo beef, edame beans and omlete.

Ishiya Stonegrill

Dining inspired by traditional Japanese cuisine, cooked on a heated volcanic stone at the table.

Large round tables with central lazy Susans, cutlery and plates.

China Chilli

Specialising in hotpot dishes, China Chilli is licensed and has an extensive array of beverages.

Last updated on Thu 22 Jan 2026

Only In The City

Only in this City of Ours
Multiple plates on a white table cloth.

Things you can only eat in the city

Where to find the city's most iconic dishes.

A tram going past three city restaurants with neon signs.

³Ô¹ÏÍø's most iconic restaurants

Book in an unforgettable night out at some of ³Ô¹ÏÍø's best restaurants.

Inside a Thai restaurant with lanterns hanging from the ceiling.

The best Thai restaurants in ³Ô¹ÏÍø

Pick up more than pad thai with this ultimate guide.

Discover more

Someone spooning orange roe on to the top of some dumplings in a steamer.

Silks

High-end multi-regional Chinese cuisine in Crown Towers, where extravagance reigns supreme.

A table set with a Chinese banquet.

Spice Temple

Modern Chinese, specialising in regional cuisine and dishes designed to share.

Moody restaurant interior with downlit round table, red banquettes in booths with dark wood screens beside night view of Yarra River.

Lucky Chan

Authentic Cantonese cuisine specialising in live seafood.

Spicy red Sichuan food in banana leaf cups.

Dainty Sichuan Food

Noodles and spicy hotpots cooked on your own personal cooktop inlaid into the table.