Restaurant in Guangzhou, China
Michelin-recognised Hunan cooking, easy to book.

Cheers on Kaichuang Avenue holds back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) for Hunanese cooking at a ¥¥ price point — among the better-value credentialled options in Guangzhou's eastern Huangpu district. Booking is easy, the cuisine is bold and chilli-forward, and groups of four or more will get the most from the shared-table format.
Getting a table at Cheers on Kaichuang Avenue is not a battle. Booking difficulty here is low by the standards of Guangzhou's most decorated dining rooms, which makes its back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025 all the more useful to know: this is a venue the guide's inspectors have returned to, at a price point (¥¥) that puts it well below most of Guangzhou's award-recognised competition. If you're visiting Huangpu District or based on the eastern side of the city, there is a clear case for booking this ahead of a more expensive alternative closer to the centre.
Hunan cuisine occupies a distinct position among China's regional traditions. Where Cantonese cooking prioritises freshness and restraint, Hunanese food is built around chilli heat, fermented depth, and bold preservation techniques — smoked meats, pickled vegetables, and the sharp mineral edge of doubanjiang-adjacent pastes. The flavour profile is direct and high-contrast: fat tempered by acid, heat layered with smoke. If that register is new to you, Cheers is a competent and accessible place to encounter it; if you already follow Hunan food closely, the Michelin Plate credential signals that the kitchen is executing at a level above the average neighbourhood Xiang cai house.
For a broader frame of reference: if you have eaten at Furong or In Love (Gongti East Road) — both Michelin-recognised Hunanese operations in Beijing , you have a reasonable basis for comparison. Cheers sits in a similar tier: mid-price, serious about the cuisine, and credentialled enough to justify a deliberate visit rather than a casual drop-in.
The restaurant is on Kaichuang Boulevard in Huangpu, Guangzhou's eastern development zone. This is not a tourist-facing part of the city. It is a district built around commerce and technology business, and the dining audience here skews heavily local and professional. That context matters: you are not in the high-footfall dining belt of Tianhe or the old-city restaurant clusters of Yuexiu. Getting here requires a deliberate journey, and that journey is most justified if you are already in Huangpu for work or accommodation. For visitors staying centrally, the time cost is a real consideration , weigh it against Hunan Cuisine or other Xiang-focused options closer to the hotel districts. No website or phone number is publicly listed in our data, so confirm the booking directly on arrival or through your hotel concierge if you need a specific time.
The PEA-R-10 angle applies here with real practical relevance. Hunanese cuisine is at its leading when ordered across a wide spread of dishes, which means larger tables extract more value from the menu than solo diners or tight couples. A group of four to six is the format that makes most sense for this style of kitchen: you can cover the core pillars , a smoked or cured meat dish, a wok-fired green, a braised protein, something fermented , without over-ordering, and you get the full contrast of the Hunan flavour palette in a single sitting.
Whether Cheers has a dedicated private room is not confirmed in our data, but the Huangpu location and the professional-business character of the neighbourhood make it a reasonable assumption that some degree of semi-private or booth-style seating exists for corporate lunches. If a private dining setup is critical to your booking, confirm this directly before committing. For a group special occasion in the mid-price range, this is a better value call than most ¥¥¥ alternatives in the city , the Michelin Plate credential gives you something to point to when the booking is questioned by guests.
For other group-friendly options across Guangzhou, Guo Fan Jia Yan and Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine are worth comparing on format and price before you decide. Our full Guangzhou restaurants guide covers the wider field.
Two consecutive Michelin Plate recognitions , 2024 and 2025 , are the most concrete trust signal here. A Michelin Plate is not a star; it denotes a kitchen that the Guide considers to be cooking well, without yet reaching the one-star threshold. In a city as competitive as Guangzhou, which has a deep bench of Cantonese and regional Chinese kitchens holding full stars, a Plate at the ¥¥ price point is a useful signal: good enough to be noticed, accessible enough to be a regular choice. Comparable Michelin-recognised Hunanese venues for benchmarking include Furong in Beijing and, for a sense of what the cuisine looks like when it scales into a more formal register, Xin Rong Ji (Xinyuan South Road) in Beijing , though that is a different cuisine entirely and a step up in price.
Price tier: ¥¥. Booking difficulty: low. Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025. Location: Kaichuang Boulevard, Huangpu District , eastern Guangzhou, not centrally located. Leading suited to groups of four or more who want Hunanese cooking at a credentialled, accessible price point. No confirmed website or reservations line in our data , approach through your hotel or visit in person. For drinks and bars in the area, our full Guangzhou bars guide has current options, and our full Guangzhou hotels guide can help if you are planning a stay in the city around this meal.
If Hunanese cooking is what you are after elsewhere in China, 102 House in Shanghai and Cicada in Guangzhou itself are worth adding to your research. For a wider view of regional Chinese dining across the country, Ru Yuan in Hangzhou, Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu, Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau, and Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing represent comparable tiers of ambition in their respective cities. Our full Guangzhou experiences guide and wineries guide are also available if you are planning a fuller trip.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cheers (Kaichuang Avenue) | Hunanese | ¥¥ | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine | Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Taian Table | Modern European, European Contemporary | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 2 Star | Unknown | — |
| Chōwa | Innovative | ¥¥¥ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Imperial Treasure Fine Teochew Cuisine | Chao Zhou | ¥¥¥ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Rêver | French Contemporary | ¥¥¥¥ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
How Cheers (Kaichuang Avenue) stacks up against the competition.
It works for a low-key celebration, particularly for groups who want to eat well without the formality or cost of a starred room. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) give it credibility, and Hunanese cuisine lends itself to sharing-style spreads that suit celebratory tables. If you need a grand dining room or tasting menu format, look elsewhere — this is a practical, flavour-forward choice rather than a white-tablecloth occasion.
Hunanese cooking relies heavily on chilli, cured meats, and fermented ingredients, which limits flexibility for vegetarians, those avoiding pork, or diners with chilli sensitivities. No dietary accommodation data is on record for this venue. If restrictions are significant, confirm directly before booking — Hunanese kitchens are generally less adaptable than Cantonese ones.
No bar seating is documented for this venue. Cheers on Kaichuang Avenue operates as a Hunanese restaurant in a commercial district context — counter or bar dining is not a feature associated with this format. Table booking is the expected approach.
At ¥¥ pricing with back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 and 2025, the value case is strong. You are getting assessed-quality Hunanese cooking at mid-range spend, which is a rare combination in a city where Michelin-adjacent dining often sits at ¥¥¥ or above. For the Huangpu area specifically, this is one of the few options with independent culinary credentials at this price point.
The restaurant is on Kaichuang Boulevard in Huangpu, eastern Guangzhou — not a tourist area, so plan your route. Hunanese cuisine is bolder and spicier than the Cantonese food most visitors default to in Guangzhou; ordering a range of dishes across the table gives the best read on the kitchen. Booking difficulty is low, so advance reservations are not a pressing concern, but confirming availability is sensible given the Michelin Plate profile.
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