Jake Missing
Editorial Lead, London
Jake has always been in London but still makes a wrong turn in Soho. When he isn’t in a restaurant, you’ll find him eating Taytos in a pub.
LDNGuide
photo credit: Karolina Wiercigroch
Char siu bun, tick. A plate of turnip cakes, nod. Siu mai, sure. Har gow, absolutely. Dim sum is an irresistible lunchtime special. Irresistible in options. Steamed and savoury, deep-fried and desserts. This Cantonese go-to is truly in the upper echelons of all meals and these spots—from the low-key, to the high-end, to the airport-adjacent—are where you should be enjoying dim sum in London.
No rating: This is a restaurant we want to re-visit before rating, or it’s a coffee shop, bar, or dessert shop. We only rate spots where you can eat a full meal.
All day
Unlike some traditional dim sum restaurants in London, this little King’s Cross spot serves their peerless xiaolongbao, heaving char siu cheung fun, and bobbing wonton soup all day and night. This is obviously good news. Not least because in careful crafting and fantastic flavour, Dim Sum & Duck serves London’s best dim sum—all at a very affordable price. Get the artful prawn and chive dumplings, the mountainous plates of wok hei-flavoured beef ho fun, and the crispy chilli beef.
12pm - 5pm
With its glistening meats that hang suspended in the window and its crisp white tablecloths that beg to be painted with chilli oil, Gold Mine is a classic Cantonese restaurant of the most familiar and comforting variety. The Queensway spot has a constant flow of families, friends, and solo slurpers having long, lazy meals, day and night. The dim sum selection is top-tier: chicken claws glazed in a slick and umami-ish black bean sauce, nourishing congee with shredded pork, and house-made egg custard tarts. And if you miss the last order for lunch, you can get a little taster from one of their dim sum platters in the evening.
All day
The mega popular vegan Chinese spot has a few locations (including Spitalfields and Golders Green) but it’s their original location in Angel where we find ourselves enjoying tofu and mushroom xialongbao most often. While their soup dumplings are good, if a little thick, it's Tofu Vegan’s wontons in house special sauce that are the must-order dim sum item. Thin wrappers packed with a mix of tofu, mushrooms, and water chestnuts form the wonton while the sauce—a neon red chilli concoction—is fizzing, moreish, and completely gluggable.
All day
Not enough restaurants understand the profound power of combining excellent food with a healing soundtrack of pan flutes. Hong Kong Restaurant is one of them. Don’t be deceived by the laid-back atmosphere of this Cantonese spot on Upper Street. They’re serious about their dim sum, serving glistening siu mai, pillowy chicken and shiitake mushroom buns, and some of the best cheung fun in London. It’s also a win for night owls everywhere, as almost all of the expert dim sum is served until 9pm.
12pm - 4:30pm
The original Royal China Club on Baker Street is a restaurant that plenty of people get a little misty-eyed about. It’s an institution where the chilli oil or hoisin-stained white tablecloths can bring back all kinds of memories, and the lengthy dim sum menu is legendary for good reason. It ranges from the familiar (prawn cheung fun) to the fancy (crispy rolls with scallop and foie gras), and it can easily add up to west London club prices. That said, this is a club where everyone’s welcome and has a good time. You won’t find the extensive dim sum list past 4:30pm, but there’s a page-long evening dim sum list including a steamed seafood platter and some deep-fried options.
12pm - 3pm (until 4pm on weekends)
Imperial by name and imperial in price. Four pieces of siu mai will set you back £10.50 at this sedate Mayfair restaurant. Pins dropping and reverential peking duck servings aside, what you’ll notice at Imperial Treasure is how unbelievably good everything tastes. The sesame prawn toast comes in form of a chunky minced prawn head down in a sesame-covered roll, while the golden net prawn cheung fun—filled with youtiao (crisp deep-fried dough) and hunks of meaty prawn—is easily one of the best dim sum plates you can eat in London.
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12pm - 4:45pm
Understanding that you can’t order everything from Orient’s 70-something item dim sum menu can be hard to come to terms with. But regardless of whether you order one dish here (the XO fried turnip cake, FYI) or several (the Orient mixed cheung fun and roast pork puffs are particularly excellent), you’re going to be satisfied. The Chinatown restaurant is quite slick and shiny, so come for lunch with friends or date night in your nice top. While the full dim sum menu isn’t available past 4:45pm, you can still pop in for an eight-piece steamed platter after hours.
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All day
If Din Tai Fung could have trademarked the xiaolongbao, they more than likely would have. Stop by solo for five pieces of the earthy truffle ones to congratulate yourself for surviving another hump day, or schedule a quick catch-up to swap and slurp land and sea style, with a medley of crab and pork options. They’re the ultimate feat of steamer engineering. When you’re 99% sure the slick, chewy dough is going to split, crisis is averted. Other dishes worth ordering at the casual, sprawling Covent Garden spot, are the crispy pork wontons, golden prawn pancake, and bouncy crab and pork buns. It’s all available until closing too.
12pm - 4:30pm
Yi-Ban is a vast, white tablecloth dining room that serves moreish and excellent-value dim sum in a completely unique setting. At this big Docklands restaurant, you’ll also see a Boeing 787 taking off from City Airport mid-gnaw of crispy chilli beef. While things vary between decent and delicious—safe bets like steamed crystal dumplings and pork buns are the way to go—the view is never in doubt. The combination of whirring jet engines, XO sauce-slathered cheung fun, and lazy susans is a good one.
All day
Despite its glassy exterior and its vicinity to Paddington station, Pearl Liang is a fine choice for dim sum. The business-feeling but not business-priced restaurant keeps everything around the £4-£5 mark, which reflects the satisfactory standard of siu mai, cheung fun with XO sauce, and a favourite spicy prawn ravioli in broth, a.k.a prawn wontons. They also offer a dim sum set menu of eight items for £12.50, which is very reasonable.
Dim Sum & Duck, a Cantonese spot in King's Cross, makes second-to-none handmade dumplings, glistening roasted meats, and will become your new go-to from your very first bite.
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Editorial Lead, London
Jake has always been in London but still makes a wrong turn in Soho. When he isn’t in a restaurant, you’ll find him eating Taytos in a pub.
Senior Staff Writer, London
Heidi has been excessively eating cacio e pepe and writing about it since 2018 and accidentally over-sharing since birth.
Staff Writer, London
Rianne has been searching for London's best sweet treats and eating every thin-crust pizza in sight since 2019.