Restaurant in Beijing, China
Family Li Imperial Cuisine
230ptsCourt-rooted cooking, easy to book.

About Family Li Imperial Cuisine
Family Li Imperial Cuisine is one of Beijing's most consistently ranked imperial Chinese restaurants, holding an OAD Asia Top 300 position for three consecutive years. Located on Jinbao Street in Dongcheng, it offers a structured banquet-style experience rooted in Qing Dynasty court cooking. Book here if you want serious imperial cuisine; the format rewards curious, committed diners.
The Case for Booking Family Li Imperial Cuisine
If you are weighing Beijing's imperial Chinese options, Family Li Imperial Cuisine belongs in a different conversation from the Peking duck circuit. Where Da Dong and Duck de Chine draw crowds to a single showpiece dish, Family Li operates as a private-style imperial banquet house — the kind of place where the full scope of the meal is the point, not a single protein. That distinction matters when you are deciding where to spend a serious dinner in Beijing.
What Family Li Imperial Cuisine Is
Located on Jinbao Street in Dongcheng, Family Li Imperial Cuisine presents a style of cooking rooted in the Qing Dynasty court tradition — dishes drawn from recipes that were historically prepared for the imperial household. Under chef Ivan Lee, the kitchen holds a consistent position on the Opinionated About Dining rankings for Asia: ranked 262nd in 2025, 238th in 2024, and Highly Recommended in 2023. That three-year trajectory on one of the more rigorous peer-reviewed lists in the region is a credible signal that this is not a heritage-concept restaurant coasting on its story. The food is being evaluated seriously by people who eat across Asia for a living, and it keeps placing.
The setting, from what the address and format suggest, is intimate rather than sprawling. This is not a banquet hall you stumble into off a tourist strip. Jinbao Street is a Dongcheng address with proximity to Wangfujing, which puts it in the eastern core of the city , accessible, but not a casual walk-in destination. Plan ahead.
Drinks and the Table Experience
Imperial Chinese cuisine at this level is typically paired with Baijiu, Chinese rice wines, or carefully selected teas rather than a Western cocktail program. The editorial angle here is worth stating directly: if you are arriving with a strong interest in a cocktail-forward bar program, Family Li is not the right pick. Beijing has a growing bar scene , see our full Beijing bars guide for dedicated options. What Family Li offers instead is a drinks pairing that should be read as an extension of the cuisine itself. At a restaurant operating at this tier of the OAD Asia rankings, tea service and traditional spirit pairings are part of the cultural context of the meal, not an afterthought. If that format interests you, it adds genuine depth to the experience. If you need a strong cocktail list, book elsewhere for drinks and come here for the food.
Optimal Timing
For a meal of this format, a weekday dinner is likely your cleanest experience , less tourist pressure, more attentive pacing. If you are visiting Beijing in autumn (October through early November), the combination of cooler weather and the city's cultural energy before the winter slowdown makes it one of the better windows to eat seriously here. Spring (April to May) is a comparable second choice. Avoid national holidays, particularly Golden Week in early October, when reservations across the city become harder and the experience at any destination restaurant is compressed by volume.
How It Rates
Family Li holds a 4.5 Google rating (note: based on a small review sample, so treat this as directional rather than statistically strong). The more meaningful signal is the multi-year OAD Asia ranking, which draws from a larger and more food-literate reviewer base. For context on Beijing's broader restaurant scene, see our full Beijing restaurants guide.
Booking and Practical Details
Reservations: Booking is rated Easy, which is relatively rare for a restaurant at this award tier in Asia , take advantage of that. Location: Jinbao Street, Dongcheng, Beijing , central enough to pair with a stay in the area. Dress: No confirmed dress code in the database, but the imperial cuisine format and the OAD ranking suggest smart-casual at minimum; err on the side of tidiness. Budget: Price range is not confirmed in our data , contact the venue directly or check current listings before you go. Phone/Website: Not available in our current data; search directly for the Jinbao Street location to confirm hours and booking.
How It Compares to Other Beijing Chinese Dining
For a comparison of Family Li against its closest peers in Beijing, see the section below. If you are considering other high-end Chinese dining experiences across China, Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu, Ru Yuan in Hangzhou, and 102 House in Shanghai are worth knowing. For imperial-adjacent fine Chinese dining further afield, Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine in Guangzhou and Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau sit at a comparable prestige level. Curious what this cuisine tradition looks like when it travels? Restaurant Tim Raue in Berlin and Mister Jiu's in San Francisco both show how Chinese culinary frameworks land in Western contexts , useful reference points if you want to appreciate what Family Li is doing on home turf.
For Beijing-specific alternatives in a more casual register, Liqun Roast Duck and Made in China serve reliable classic Beijing cooking at a lower price point. Xitan Beijing is worth noting for a different regional angle. For a fuller picture of what Beijing has to offer beyond the table, see our full Beijing hotels guide, our full Beijing wineries guide, our full Beijing experiences guide, and our full Beijing bars guide. Also worth checking: Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing for imperial-influenced Cantonese cooking if your itinerary takes you further east.
The Verdict
Book Family Li Imperial Cuisine if you want a structured, historically grounded meal that sits well above the tourist-facing Beijing restaurant tier. The OAD Asia ranking , consistent and improving over three years , gives you a reliable basis for confidence. Booking is direct. The format rewards diners who come with curiosity about the tradition rather than those looking for a quick standalone dish. If that is the trip you are on, this is where you should eat.
Compare Family Li Imperial Cuisine
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Family Li Imperial Cuisine | Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #262 (2025); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Ranked #238 (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in Asia Highly Recommended (2023) | — | |
| Jing | Michelin 1 Star | ¥¥¥ | — |
| Xin Rong Ji (Xinyuan South Road) | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
| Chao Shang Chao (Chaoyang) | Michelin 3 Star | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
| Lamdre | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
| Jingji | Michelin 2 Star | ¥¥¥¥ | — |
How Family Li Imperial Cuisine stacks up against the competition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Family Li Imperial Cuisine handle dietary restrictions?
check the venue's official channels before booking — imperial court cuisine is built around a fixed, historically structured menu, so the kitchen's ability to accommodate restrictions may be limited by the format itself. Given that reservations are rated Easy, you have time to communicate needs in advance rather than raising them on arrival. Chef Ivan Lee's team runs a deliberate, curated operation, so last-minute requests are less likely to land well here than at a more flexible à la carte venue.
What should I order at Family Li Imperial Cuisine?
Family Li presents a set menu format rooted in Qing Dynasty court cooking, so ordering is not the decision — committing to the format is. Specific dishes are not published in advance, which is standard for this style of dining. If you need menu transparency before booking, this format is not your best fit; if you trust the kitchen to pace and sequence the meal, that is exactly what the experience is built around.
What should a first-timer know about Family Li Imperial Cuisine?
This is not a Peking duck or dim sum outing — Family Li operates in a different register entirely, serving structured imperial court cuisine on Jinbao Street in Dongcheng. Ranked #262 in OAD's Top Restaurants in Asia for 2025 (and #238 in 2024), it is a credentialed venue in a category most Beijing visitors never encounter. Booking is rated Easy, which is atypical at this award tier in Asia, so there is no reason to delay reserving.
What are alternatives to Family Li Imperial Cuisine in Beijing?
Lamdre and Jingji are the closest comparisons within Beijing's high-end Chinese dining tier worth considering alongside Family Li. For a broader luxury Chinese experience with a hotel-backed format, Jing offers a different but overlapping audience. Xin Rong Ji (Xinyuan South Road) and Chao Shang Chao (Chaoyang) skew toward regional Chinese rather than imperial court cooking, so they serve a different purpose in your trip planning.
Is Family Li Imperial Cuisine good for a special occasion?
Yes — the structured, historically grounded format makes it one of the more purposeful special-occasion choices in Beijing's Chinese dining tier. Its OAD Asia ranking (Top Restaurants, 2024 and 2025) gives it external credibility you can point to, which matters for business dinners or milestone meals where the venue needs to carry some weight. The easy booking rating means you are not competing for a table the way you would at comparable venues in Tokyo or Hong Kong.
Can Family Li Imperial Cuisine accommodate groups?
Group suitability depends on the private dining arrangements available, which are not confirmed in the venue record — check the venue's official channels to ask. For larger parties, the set-menu format works in your favour since there is no per-person ordering complexity. Groups wanting a flexible, order-what-you-like experience would be better served by Xin Rong Ji or Chao Shang Chao.
What should I wear to Family Li Imperial Cuisine?
The dress code is not documented for this venue, but the combination of Qing Dynasty court cuisine, OAD Asia recognition, and a Dongcheng address on Jinbao Street signals that smart dress is the safer default. Arriving in casual tourist clothing at a meal of this format would be out of step with the occasion. When in doubt, dress as you would for a formal dinner in a major city.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Beijing
- King's JoyKing's Joy holds 2 Michelin Stars and a Green Star for its plant-based tasting menu in a bamboo-shaded Dongcheng hutong courtyard. Chef Gary Yin's kitchen, anchored by seasonal mushrooms and full culinary technique, is the strongest vegetarian fine dining argument in Beijing at the ¥¥¥¥ tier. Book months ahead — availability is extremely limited.
- LamdreBeijing's most credentialed plant-based fine dining address, Lamdre holds a Michelin 1 Star, Black Pearl 2 Diamond, and a place at #50 on Asia's Best Restaurants 2025. At ¥¥¥¥ with near-impossible booking difficulty, it outpaces King's Joy on current critical recognition. Book four to six weeks ahead and prioritise lunch for the skylight-lit main room at its best.
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