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    Restaurant in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

    Hide

    685Pearl Points

    13 seats, serious cooking, book early.

    Hide, Restaurant in Kuala Lumpur

    About Hide

    Kuala Lumpur's first chef's table concept, Hide operates at 13 seats with an open kitchen on Jalan Ampang and has earned back-to-back Tatler Best 20 Asia-Pacific placements (2025–2026) and a 2025 Michelin Plate. At $$$$ and with a fixed tasting menu, it is the right choice for a serious special occasion dinner — but book 3–4 weeks ahead minimum. Seats fill fast and walk-ins are not realistic.

    Verdict: Book Hide for a Special Occasion, but Know What You're Walking Into

    The common misconception about Hide is that its Ritz-Carlton Residences address makes it a hotel restaurant — the kind of place you end up at by default, not by choice. That framing is wrong. Hide operates as a fully independent chef's table concept that happens to occupy a small corner of the Ritz-Carlton Residences concourse on Jalan Ampang, and it has earned two consecutive Tatler Leading 20 Asia-Pacific placements (2025 and 2026) on its own terms. This is one of the most deliberately constructed fine dining experiences in Kuala Lumpur, and it rewards the effort you put into booking it.

    Four Years In, Hide Has Defined a Format

    Hide opened in 2021 as Kuala Lumpur's first chef's table concept with an open kitchen format, and at 13 seats, it remains one of the smallest serious dining rooms in the city. Four years in, that constraint has become an asset. The intimacy of the counter means you are watching the kitchen work in real time — every plate assembled in front of you. For a celebratory dinner, a significant date, or a business meal where the experience should do the talking, that format carries weight that a conventional dining room simply cannot replicate.

    Chef Ng Yi Shaun leads the kitchen, and Tatler's assessment of the cooking is direct: precise, balanced, and technically executed, with playful plating and inventive flavour combinations. The cuisine is classified as innovative contemporary, which in practice means a menu that draws on technique rather than any single culinary tradition. At the $$$$ price tier, you are paying for that technical precision and for an experience that 13 seats and an open kitchen format can deliver in a way that larger venues cannot.

    Why This Matters on Jalan Ampang

    Jalan Ampang is Kuala Lumpur's diplomatic and luxury corridor, running through the KLCC neighbourhood with a concentration of embassies, five-star hotels, and high-end residential developments. Most serious dining in KL clusters further south toward Bangsar or east toward Damansara, which makes Hide's position on Ampang both deliberate and slightly counter-intuitive. It is not trading on foot traffic or casual walk-ins , 13 seats means the room fills on reservations alone, and the KLCC-adjacent address is more likely to serve hotel guests in the Ritz-Carlton Residences and the broader Ampang diplomatic community than the wider KL dining public.

    That positioning matters for your decision. If you are staying in the KLCC area, Hide is a 10-minute walk or a short drive. If you are based in Bangsar or Damansara, factor in the travel against the experience: the combination of format, technical cooking, and recognition at this price point makes the journey worth making once, particularly for a meal that needs to feel considered rather than convenient.

    For broader context on where to eat and stay in the city, see our full Kuala Lumpur restaurants guide, our full Kuala Lumpur hotels guide, and our full Kuala Lumpur bars guide. If you are planning a longer trip through Malaysia, Auntie Gaik Lean's Old School Eatery in George Town, Christoph's in Penang, and The Planters at The Danna in Langkawi are all worth building around. For regional innovative dining benchmarks, alla prima in Seoul and Soigné in Seoul offer a useful calibration for what Asia-Pacific innovative fine dining looks like at this tier.

    Booking and Practical Details

    With 13 seats and a format that fills by reservation, Hide is genuinely hard to book. Plan at least three to four weeks in advance for a weekend slot; weekday availability opens up slightly, but this is not a venue you can approach casually. The restaurant opened in 2021 and has operated for four years with a consistent format, which means the reservation cadence is well-established and demand has not dropped off.

    The price range is $$$$, placing it in the same tier as Molina, Dewakan, and Nadodi among KL's top-tier fine dining options. The tasting menu format is the point , this is not a venue where you arrive for a single dish. If that format does not suit your group, Ling Long or Seed offer more flexible ordering structures at comparable quality levels.

    Google review score: 4.6 from 89 reviews. Contact for reservations: +6019 900 0022. Website: hidekl.com.

    Also worth exploring in KL and beyond: Lavo and Lavo Gallery in Petaling Jaya, Bee See Heong in Seberang Perai, The Datai Langkawi in Kedah, and our guides to Kuala Lumpur wineries and Kuala Lumpur experiences.

    Quick reference: $$$$ | 13 seats | Chef's table, open kitchen | Jalan Ampang, KLCC | Reservations essential, book 3–4 weeks out | Contact: +6019 900 0022

    How It Compares

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Hide?

    At $$$$ pricing with only 13 seats and a Tatler Best 20 ranking for two consecutive years (2025 and 2026), Hide is priced like a destination meal and largely delivers on that. Chef Ng Yi Shaun's approach is described by Tatler as precise, balanced, and technically driven — which is the right format if you want a single-focus, chef-led progression rather than a la carte choice. If you're comparing on pure value against KL's broader fine dining tier, it competes directly with Dewakan and DC. by Darren Chin, both of which also run tasting-only formats at similar price points.

    What should a first-timer know about Hide?

    Hide is KL's first chef's table concept with an open kitchen, seated at 13 people maximum — so the experience is closer to watching a performance than dining in a restaurant. It opened in 2021 and sits in the Concourse of the Ritz-Carlton Residences on Jalan Ampang, which can make it easy to miss if you're not looking for it. Book three to four weeks out minimum for a weekend slot; this is a reservation-only format and walk-ins are not a realistic option given the seat count.

    Is Hide good for solo dining?

    Yes — the 13-seat counter-style chef's table format is one of the more comfortable solo dining setups in KL. You're oriented toward the open kitchen rather than across a table from an empty seat, which means the format works naturally for one. Solo diners should still book in advance; at 13 seats, the room fills regardless of party size.

    What should I order at Hide?

    Hide runs a set chef's table format, so there is no a la carte ordering — the kitchen decides the progression. This is standard for chef's table concepts globally and is the entire premise of the venue. If you need menu flexibility or want to order independently, this is not the right format; consider Beta or DC. by Darren Chin instead.

    What are alternatives to Hide in Kuala Lumpur?

    Dewakan is the closest direct comparison — Malaysian-ingredient-focused tasting menus with a similar level of editorial recognition and a comparable price tier. DC. by Darren Chin runs a more intimate, chef-driven format with a longer track record in KL. Beta sits at a slightly more accessible price point and takes a more experimental approach to local ingredients. Molina is the option if you want European-leaning cooking in a more relaxed setting. Ah Hei Bak Kut Teh is a completely different category — traditional bak kut teh, not a tasting menu alternative.

    Location

    Concourse, Ritz-Carlton Residences, 105, Jln Ampang, Kuala Lumpur, 50450 Kuala Lumpur, Wilayah Persekutuan Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

    Compare Hide

    Award Winners Like Hide
    VenueAwardsPrice
    Hide$$$$
    DewakanMichelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best$$$$
    BetaMichelin 1 Star$$$
    MolinaMichelin 1 Star$$$$
    DC. by Darren ChinMichelin 1 Star$$$$
    Ah Hei Bak Kut Teh$

    How Hide stacks up against the competition.

    Also Consider

    How Hide Compares to Other Fine Dining Options in Kuala Lumpur

    At the $$$$ tier, Hide's closest peer in Kuala Lumpur is Molina, which also takes an innovative contemporary approach. The practical difference is format: Molina operates as a conventional dining room and is generally easier to book than Hide's 13-seat counter. If you want technical modern cooking and flexibility in how you order, Molina is the better choice. If the chef's table format and the intimacy of watching the kitchen work in real time is what you are paying for, Hide wins on experience design. Dewakan, also at $$$$, is the better option if Malaysian culinary identity is your priority, its cooking is grounded in local ingredients and tradition in a way that Hide's more technique-driven menu is not.

    For diners who want a $$$$ French contemporary experience rather than an innovative open-kitchen format, DC. by Darren Chin offers a more classical structure. It suits business meals where a conventional dining room and à la carte flexibility matter. Nadodi offers another strong alternative at the top of the KL market, with a South Indian fine dining approach that is genuinely different from anything else at this price tier in the city.

    If the $$$$ tier is a stretch, Seed and Ling Long both deliver serious cooking with easier booking and lower per-head costs. For the most affordable meal in this peer set, Ah Hei Bak Kut Teh at $ is an entirely different category, strong at what it does, but not a substitute for the chef's table format at Hide. Bottom line: book Hide specifically for the open-kitchen chef's table experience and the technical cooking. For everything else, the peer set above covers the alternatives by profile and budget.

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