Restaurant in Guangzhou, China
BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road)
750ptsPrivate rooms, refined dim sum, book early.

About BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road)
A Michelin-starred Cantonese address in Guangzhou's Haizhu District with 32 private rooms, hand-crafted dim sum, and double-boiled tonics that require pre-ordering. Recognised by OAD Asia (#300, 2025) and La Liste (76 pts, 2025). One of the most defensible special occasion bookings in Guangzhou at the ¥¥¥ tier — but book well ahead and pre-order at the time of reservation.
The Verdict
Picture a private room at BingSheng Mansion, the kind of understated space where the tablecloth is pressed and the tea arrives before you've settled in. That setting is the entire point. This is a Michelin-starred Cantonese address in Haizhu District that has earned its place on both the La Liste Leading Restaurants list (76 points, 2025) and the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in Asia ranking (#300 in 2025, #292 in 2024). If you are planning a business dinner, a family celebration, or any meal that needs to land well, BingSheng Mansion at Xiancun Road is one of the most defensible bookings you can make in Guangzhou at the ¥¥¥ price tier. Book well ahead. The 32 private rooms fill on weekends, and pre-ordering certain dishes is explicitly advised by those who track this restaurant closely.
What BingSheng Mansion Is
BingSheng Mansion operates on a scale that most Cantonese restaurants in China's south do not attempt: a main dining room paired with 32 private rooms, all kept in a register of restrained formality rather than gilded excess. The atmosphere is composed rather than lively. Noise levels stay low enough for conversation across the table, which makes it a genuinely workable choice for business meals where being heard matters. Energy is calm, service-oriented, and occasion-appropriate without being stiff. For a special dinner in Guangzhou, that tonal balance is rarer than it sounds.
The culinary argument here is rooted in technique. BingSheng Mansion focuses on innovative and refined Cantonese cooking, and the programme includes hand-crafted dim sum — increasingly uncommon at this tier, where production-line dim sum has quietly become the norm at many venues. The tasting arc at BingSheng Mansion moves through registers that Cantonese cuisine handles better than almost any other tradition: restorative, slow-cooked broths in the double-boiled tonic section (fish maw and ginseng soup is among the offerings flagged for pre-order), the precise textural pleasure of stir-fried flat rice noodles with beef, and the richness of roasted goose. The meal ends on an intentional note of sweetness: black sesame sweet soup over milk custard, a pairing that closes the progression cleanly. That sequencing — tonic, roast, starch, sweet , is a considered arc, not a random selection. If you approach the menu as a progression rather than individual dishes, the logic of it becomes clear.
The pre-order requirement for several key dishes is worth treating seriously. La Liste's notes on BingSheng Mansion flag this directly. Arriving without pre-ordering risks missing the dishes that define why the restaurant holds a Michelin star. If you are booking for a special occasion, contact the restaurant when you make the reservation and confirm which items require advance notice. This is not a minor detail , it is the difference between a good meal and the meal the kitchen is actually capable of delivering.
Who Should Book
BingSheng Mansion is a strong match for special occasion dinners where the room and the food both need to perform. The private dining infrastructure , 32 rooms , means it scales from a table of two to larger group celebrations without losing the sense of occasion. For Guangzhou dining at the ¥¥¥ level, it offers more tonal seriousness than most alternatives. Those primarily interested in contemporary pan-Asian cooking or European formats will find better fits elsewhere. This is a restaurant for people who want refined Cantonese specifically, executed with the credential backing to justify the price point.
If you are visiting Guangzhou from elsewhere in China, it is useful to frame BingSheng Mansion against comparably credentialed Cantonese addresses in other cities: Forum in Hong Kong operates at a higher price point with decades of critical recognition behind it, while Le Palais in Taipei pursues a different, more ornate register of Cantonese presentation. BingSheng Mansion sits closer to restrained craft than spectacle , that is its distinction. Elsewhere in China, those building a picture of high-end Chinese dining more broadly might also consider Xin Rong Ji in Beijing, 102 House in Shanghai, or Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau for different points on the regional fine-dining spectrum.
Ratings & Recognition
- Michelin 1 Star (2024)
- Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in Asia: #300 (2025), #292 (2024), Recommended (2023)
- La Liste Leading Restaurants (2025): 76 points
- Google rating: 4.6 (68 reviews)
Booking & Practical Details
Booking difficulty for BingSheng Mansion is assessed as hard, particularly for private rooms on weekends and public holidays. Reservations: Book as far in advance as possible; weekend private rooms fill quickly and pre-ordering key dishes (including double-boiled tonics and roasted goose) is advised at the time of reservation. Address: 33 Dongxiao Rd, Haizhu District, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province. Price tier: ¥¥¥. Cuisine: Cantonese. Dress: Smart casual at minimum; the private room format and special occasion profile of the venue suggest dressing up. Group size: Works for couples and larger groups; 32 private rooms accommodate a wide range of party sizes.
For more on what to do around your meal, see our Guangzhou hotels guide, our Guangzhou bars guide, and our Guangzhou experiences guide.
How It Compares
Within Guangzhou's ¥¥¥ Cantonese tier, Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine is the closest direct peer. Both operate at a similar price point with a focus on refined Cantonese cooking. BingSheng Mansion has the edge in private dining infrastructure and tasting menu depth; Imperial Treasure is marginally easier to book and may suit those wanting a slightly less formal atmosphere. For Chao Zhou cuisine at the same price tier, Imperial Treasure Fine Teochew Cuisine is worth considering if the specific tradition matters to you, though the cooking styles are distinct enough that it is not a direct substitute.
If your group is open to spending more, Taian Table (¥¥¥¥) and Rêver (¥¥¥¥) operate in entirely different culinary registers , modern European and French contemporary respectively. Neither competes with BingSheng Mansion for authentic Cantonese, but both represent credible alternatives for special occasion spending if the cuisine type is flexible. Chōwa at ¥¥¥ offers an innovative format that suits diners who want a more experimental evening rather than a tradition-rooted one.
Among other Cantonese options nearby, Jiang by Chef Fei, Jade River, Lai Heen, and Lei Garden (Yuexiu) round out the credentialed field. BingSheng Mansion's combination of Michelin recognition, private room scale, and a menu built around hand-crafted dim sum and pre-ordered signature dishes puts it in a narrower, more deliberate category. It is the right call when the occasion demands a kitchen you can rely on and a room that holds the evening together.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road)?
- This is a Michelin-starred Cantonese restaurant in Haizhu District with 32 private rooms alongside a main dining room. The atmosphere is calm and formal , appropriate for a business meal or special occasion rather than a casual dinner.
- Pre-ordering key dishes is not optional if you want the full experience. Double-boiled tonics, roasted goose, and certain signatures need to be requested when you book.
- At ¥¥¥ pricing with consistent OAD and La Liste recognition, it is one of the more credentialed Cantonese bookings available in Guangzhou.
- Book as early as possible. Weekend availability , particularly for private rooms , goes fast.
What should I order at BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road)?
- The hand-crafted dim sum is a clear draw , genuinely rare at this level of the market, where machine-produced dim sum has become standard at many comparably priced restaurants.
- Double-boiled tonics are a signature category; fish maw and ginseng soup is the flagged example. Pre-order at booking.
- Stir-fried flat rice noodles with beef (a Cantonese classic, executed here at Michelin standard) and roasted goose are among the confirmed signatures.
- For dessert, black sesame sweet soup over milk custard closes the meal in the traditional Cantonese manner and is worth keeping space for.
Is the tasting menu worth it at BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road)?
- At ¥¥¥ with a Michelin star and consistent top-300 OAD placement, BingSheng Mansion delivers value that is hard to argue against for refined Cantonese in Guangzhou.
- The menu progression , tonic soups through roast dishes to a traditional sweet close , is architecturally coherent in a way that casual Cantonese restaurants rarely attempt.
- Worth it if Cantonese cuisine is what you want. If you are open to European formats at the same price or higher, Taian Table or Rêver offer a different experience entirely, but they do not substitute for what BingSheng Mansion does within its tradition.
Does BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road) handle dietary restrictions?
- No phone number or website is currently listed in Pearl's data for BingSheng Mansion, which makes pre-visit communication harder to arrange directly.
- Given the pre-order requirement for key dishes, it is worth making dietary needs explicit when booking , the kitchen is clearly operating in a made-to-order register for several signatures, which suggests some flexibility is built into the operation.
- Cantonese cuisine is generally adaptable around common dietary preferences, but the double-boiled tonics and roasted goose , both central to the experience here , are not easily substituted.
Is BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road) good for a special occasion?
- Yes. The private room setup (32 rooms), the calibre of the Cantonese cooking, and the composed, low-key atmosphere make this one of the stronger special occasion choices in Guangzhou at ¥¥¥.
- It works equally well for a business dinner requiring a reliable, impressive address and a family celebration where the group needs a private, well-serviced space.
- For those comparing across the city's fine dining options, BingSheng Mansion holds its own against all credentialed Cantonese alternatives. If the occasion is important enough to warrant a Michelin-starred room with 32 private dining options, this is the booking to make.
Compare BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road)
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road) | Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Hard |
| Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine | Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Taian Table | Modern European, European Contemporary | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Chōwa | Innovative | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Imperial Treasure Fine Teochew Cuisine | Chao Zhou | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Rêver | French Contemporary | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
A quick look at how BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road) measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road)?
Book a private room if you can — the 32 rooms are where the experience makes most sense, and weekend slots fill well in advance. BingSheng holds a Michelin star (2024) and an OAD Top 300 Asia ranking (2025), so expectations are set correctly: this is formal, occasion-ready Cantonese, not a casual dim sum house. Pre-ordering certain dishes, particularly the double-boiled tonics, is recommended to avoid disappointment on the day.
What should I order at BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road)?
The hand-crafted dim sum is the clearest differentiator here — it is increasingly rare to find this done properly at the ¥¥¥ level. Documented signatures include stir-fried flat rice noodles with beef, roasted goose, and fish maw and ginseng soup (pre-order). Finish with the black sesame sweet soup over milk custard. Pre-ordering the double-boiled tonics before your visit is strongly advised.
Is the tasting menu worth it at BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road)?
Specific tasting menu structure and pricing are not publicly documented, so the safest approach is to confirm format options when booking. What is established is that BingSheng operates at the ¥¥¥ price point with Michelin recognition and a menu built around refined Cantonese cooking, making it a credible spend for special occasions. If a set format is offered, the double-boiled tonics and dim sum sections are the clearest reasons to commit.
Does BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road) handle dietary restrictions?
No specific dietary accommodation policy is documented for BingSheng Mansion. Given the formal private dining format and the complexity of pre-order dishes like fish maw and ginseng soup, raising restrictions at the time of reservation — not on arrival — is the practical move. Cantonese cuisine at this tier typically involves broths, shellfish, and pork as foundational ingredients, so thorough advance communication matters.
Is BingSheng Mansion (Xiancun Road) good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it is one of the stronger cases for it in Guangzhou's ¥¥¥ tier. The combination of 32 private rooms, Michelin recognition, and handcrafted dim sum gives the meal both privacy and culinary credibility. For a birthday, business dinner, or family celebration requiring a dedicated room, BingSheng outperforms peers like Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine on sheer private dining capacity — though both operate at a comparable price point.
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