Restaurant in Guangzhou, China
Michelin-recognised noodles at street-food prices.

Two consecutive Michelin Plates at a ¥ price point make Sing Wan Loi Noodle one of the most direct value propositions in Guangzhou. This Liwan District noodle shop earns formal recognition without the cost or formality of occasion dining. Book it for a solo lunch, a Liwan food walk, or a deliberate repeat visit to work through the menu properly.
Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) at a ¥ price point tells you almost everything you need to know about Sing Wan Loi Noodle. This is a Liwan District noodle shop that has earned formal recognition at a price most diners would spend on a casual lunch without a second thought. If you are in Guangzhou and serious about eating well without the formality or cost of a full-service restaurant, this is a direct booking.
Sing Wan Loi Noodle sits on Xizeng Road in Liwan District, the old western quarter of Guangzhou that holds much of the city's most historically grounded food culture. Liwan is where you find many of Guangzhou's most persistent noodle and congee operations, and the address alone signals that this is a venue rooted in neighbourhood tradition rather than tourist positioning. The ¥ price tier places it firmly in the category of everyday Cantonese eating, which makes the back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition more telling: these awards are not given for atmosphere or occasion dining. They signal consistent kitchen quality and a product that holds up under scrutiny.
For a visitor planning more than one meal in the area, Sing Wan Loi Noodle works leading as a deliberate, repeated destination rather than a single tick-box visit. Cantonese noodle shops of this type typically organise their menu around a core set of preparations, and the leading way to understand what the kitchen does well is to return. On a first visit, focus on the foundational items: the broths and the noodle textures that define the shop's identity. On a second visit, you have the context to make sharper comparisons across the menu and to try preparations you passed over the first time. A third visit, if your schedule allows, is where you stop ordering strategically and start ordering instinctively, which is how regulars eat. This multi-visit logic applies to most serious noodle operations, and Sing Wan Loi is no exception.
The ¥ price range means repeat visits carry no financial friction. You can eat here twice in a day and spend less than a single coffee at a hotel lobby. That accessibility is part of what makes Michelin recognition at this tier meaningful: the kitchen does not have margin to hide behind expensive ingredients or elaborate plating. The product has to stand on its own. Two consecutive Plates suggest it does.
Liwan District rewards explorers on foot, and Sing Wan Loi sits within reasonable distance of several other strong noodle operations worth knowing about. Enning Liu Fu Ji (Donghua East Road) and Jian Ji (Liwan) are both worth building into an itinerary if noodles are your focus for the day. Lao Xiguan Laifen (Wenming Road) is another Liwan-area option with a distinct regional character. For rice noodle variety, Liang Jie Nanning Pumiao Shengzha Mifen (Yinghua Street) covers different regional ground, and Xiguan Zhuyuan (Lizhiwan) anchors the broader Xiguan food corridor. A well-planned half-day can take in two or three of these without difficulty.
If you are comparing Sing Wan Loi against noodle-focused venues in other Chinese cities, the benchmark reference points are worth knowing. A Niang Mian Guan in Shanghai and A Xin Xian Lao (Gongnong Road) in Fuzhou operate in comparable territory: high-craft, low-price noodle shops that have attracted formal recognition. Each reflects its own regional tradition, and eating across all three across a broader China trip gives you a clear picture of how noodle culture diverges by region. For wider context on serious dining across Chinese cities, Xin Rong Ji (Xinyuan South Road) in Beijing, 102 House in Shanghai, Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu, Ru Yuan in Hangzhou, Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau, and Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing each represent different tiers and formats of Chinese fine and serious casual dining.
The Google rating of 5 from a single review gives you no meaningful signal on volume or consistency. Rely on the Michelin Plates as your primary quality anchor here, and treat the absence of high review volume as a function of the venue's local-facing positioning rather than a quality warning. Shops like this rarely need to court outside attention.
For planning purposes: Sing Wan Loi is a ¥ noodle operation in Guangzhou, not an occasion-dining restaurant. It is the right answer for a solo lunch, a quick meal before or after other Liwan sightseeing, or a deliberate food-focused detour. It is not the answer if you are looking for a formal dinner setting for a group. For that category in Guangzhou, the comparison section below points to the more appropriate options.
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Quick reference: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025. ¥ price tier. Liwan District, Guangzhou. Easy to book. No reservation likely required for a solo or pair.
Michelin Plate: 2024, 2025. Google rating: 5/5 (1 review, low sample size). Pearl booking difficulty: Easy.
No booking method is listed in our data. For a ¥-tier noodle shop in Guangzhou's Liwan District, walk-in is the standard format. Arrive outside peak lunch hours (before noon or after 1 PM) if you want to avoid a queue. No reservation is expected or likely necessary for parties of one or two.
Address: 40 Xizeng Rd, Liwan District, Guangzhou, Guangdong Province, China, 510160. Price tier: ¥. Cuisine: Noodles. Awards: Michelin Plate 2024 and 2025. No website or phone number available in our data. Dress code: none expected at this price tier and format.
No bar seating data is available for this venue. At ¥-tier noodle shops in Guangzhou's Liwan District, counter seating is common and solo diners are typically well-accommodated. Expect communal or compact table formats rather than a dedicated bar. Walk in and seat yourself as directed by staff.
No tasting menu format is available here. Sing Wan Loi is a ¥-tier noodle shop, not an occasion-dining restaurant. The value case is simple: two Michelin Plates at a price point where most meals cost under ¥50. For a structured tasting experience in Guangzhou, Chōwa or Taian Table operate at ¥¥¥ and ¥¥¥¥ respectively and offer that format.
Yes, and it is one of the better formats for it. Noodle shops in Guangzhou at this price tier are built for efficient solo eating. You will not be asked to order for the table, wait times are short, and the ¥ price means there is no pressure to order broadly. For solo dining with more ambiance, Song at ¥¥ offers a Sichuan alternative with a fuller room feel.
No specific dishes are available in our database, so we will not invent them. At a Michelin Plate noodle shop in Guangzhou, the default approach is to order whatever the staff direct you toward or whatever has the highest turnover on the menu board, as those items will be freshest. On a first visit, stick to one or two core noodle preparations. On a return visit, branch into anything you passed over. This is standard multi-visit strategy for noodle shops of this type.
No advance booking is expected. This is an easy walk-in venue by our assessment. Michelin Plate recognition at a ¥ noodle shop in Liwan does not typically create the reservation queues you would see at a starred restaurant. Go during off-peak hours to avoid a short wait, but do not let booking logistics be a reason to skip it.
No dress code applies. At a ¥-tier noodle shop in Liwan District, smart casual or everyday clothes are entirely appropriate. You are eating at a neighbourhood noodle operation, not a fine-dining room. If your Guangzhou itinerary takes you to a higher-tier dinner afterward, for instance at Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine at ¥¥¥, dress up for that booking rather than this one.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sing Wan Loi Noodle | Noodles | ¥ | Easy |
| Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine | Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Taian Table | Modern European, European Contemporary | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Song | Sichuan | ¥¥ | Unknown |
| Chōwa | Innovative | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Rêver | French Contemporary | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
No bar seating is documented for Sing Wan Loi Noodle. At a ¥-tier Michelin Plate noodle shop in Liwan District, counter or communal table seating is the typical format. Arrive, find a seat, and order — that's the format.
Sing Wan Loi Noodle is a noodle shop, not a tasting-menu venue. At ¥ pricing with two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025), the value proposition is in the bowl, not a multi-course format. Order what's on the menu and keep your expectations calibrated to the category.
Yes — this is one of the better solo dining formats in Guangzhou. A ¥-tier noodle counter in Liwan District suits solo diners well: no group minimum, no pressure, and a quick turnaround. Two Michelin Plates suggest the kitchen is consistent regardless of party size.
Specific dishes are not listed in our data, so we won't speculate. At a Michelin Plate noodle shop in Guangzhou, the noodle dishes are the reason to visit — point at what's moving fast from nearby tables if there's a language barrier.
No reservations appear to be required or offered. Walk-in is standard for a ¥-tier noodle shop in Liwan District. Avoid peak lunch and dinner hours if you want a shorter wait — Michelin Plate recognition at this price tier draws a crowd.
Wear whatever you'd walk around Liwan District in. At ¥ pricing with a noodle-shop format, there is no dress expectation beyond basic tidiness. Leave the business casual for higher-tier venues in Guangzhou.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.