Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Ho Hung Kee Congee & Noodle
625Pearl PointsMichelin-starred congee under HK$100.

About Ho Hung Kee Congee & Noodle
A Michelin-starred wonton noodle and congee institution that has been running since the 1940s, now in Causeway Bay at a firmly $$ price point. Ranked in Opinionated About Dining's Casual Asia top 50 for multiple years, it is one of Hong Kong's most credentialled affordable meals. Go at lunch for dim sum alongside the noodles; arrive early to avoid the queue.
The Verdict
Ho Hung Kee is one of the few places in Hong Kong where you can sit down to a Michelin-starred bowl of wonton noodles for well under HK$100. At the $$ price point, with a Michelin 1 Star (2024) and back-to-back Opinionated About Dining Casual Asia rankings (#41 in 2023, #47 in 2024, #80 in 2025), this Causeway Bay institution earns its place on any serious Hong Kong itinerary. Book it for a weekday lunch and go early: the queue builds fast and seats at the 12th-floor room on Hennessy Road are not unlimited.
About Ho Hung Kee
Ho Hung Kee has been part of Hong Kong's food culture since the 1940s, when it first opened in Wan Chai. That origin story matters for context, not nostalgia: a shop that has survived decades of Hong Kong's relentless restaurant turnover and still earns Michelin recognition is doing something that holds up. The current Causeway Bay address on Hennessy Road represents a relocation and modest reinvention — the room carries a more contemporary aesthetic than the original shophouse format, and the menu has expanded to include dim sum and select Cantonese dishes alongside the wonton noodles and congee that made the name.
The wonton noodles remain the draw. Hong Kong-style wonton noodle soup is a specific discipline: the noodles should have a pronounced spring to them, the wontons should be plump with prawn, and the broth should taste clean and naturally sweet from dried flounder and other traditional aromatics. Ho Hung Kee's version has carried this reputation for generations, and the Michelin recognition confirms the kitchen is maintaining the standard at the new address. If you are visiting Hong Kong specifically to eat well across a range of price points — and you should be , this is the $$ anchor that balances out a week that might also include Caprice or Amber.
The expanded menu gives you more reasons to linger. Dim sum service during lunch hours means you can turn a quick noodle stop into a fuller meal, and the Cantonese dishes add range for groups with different appetites. This positions Ho Hung Kee closer to an all-in Cantonese lunch venue than a strict noodle shop, which is useful if you are travelling with people who want more choice. For a purer, more stripped-back noodle experience without the broader menu, Tasty (Central) is worth considering as an alternative. For congee specifically, Trusty Congee King (Wan Chai) covers the category with equal seriousness.
Drinks and the Bar Program
Ho Hung Kee is not a drinks destination. The format here is a Cantonese noodle and congee shop with Michelin credentials, and the drinks list reflects that: expect tea, standard soft drinks, and possibly basic Chinese spirits or beer, as is conventional in this category. If you are planning a meal where the drinks program carries equal weight to the food, this is the wrong venue. For that kind of experience in Hong Kong, the bar guides at our full Hong Kong bars guide will serve you better. At Ho Hung Kee, order the tea, focus on the noodles, and judge the visit on those terms.
Practical Details
The restaurant is on the 12th floor of 500 Hennessy Road, Causeway Bay , note the elevator access rather than street-level entry. Hours run 11 AM to 10 PM daily, seven days a week, which gives you flexibility for both lunch and an early dinner. The price range sits firmly at $$, making it one of the more accessible Michelin-starred meals you will find anywhere in Asia. No phone or website is listed in our database, so walk-in or in-person inquiry is the practical approach if you cannot book through a third-party platform. Given the venue's profile and the volume of visitors it attracts, arriving at opening (11 AM) or before the peak lunch rush is the safest strategy. Google reviewers rate it 3.9 from over 1,400 reviews, which is a reasonable signal for a venue operating at this price and volume , the score reflects occasional service inconsistency and wait times, not a problem with the food.
For broader context on eating in the area, see our full Hong Kong restaurants guide. If you are planning around hotels, our full Hong Kong hotels guide covers the city's accommodation across all price tiers. Causeway Bay is also worth a full day , pair the lunch here with a walk to Victoria Park or a visit to a nearby tea house, then carry the itinerary into the evening with something from our full Hong Kong experiences guide.
Travellers interested in how this format compares across the region can look at Ho Hung Kee in Shanghai, Ding Te Le Zhou Mian Guan in Shanghai, Lok Kei Noodles in Macau, Ngao Kei Ka Lei Chon in Macau, Tong Ji in Guangzhou, and Khao Tom Thanon Di Buk in Phuket for regional congee and noodle benchmarks. For a very different Michelin-calibre experience at a comparable prestige level but completely different price tier, Le Salon de Thé de Joël Robuchon in Central offers an instructive contrast. And if the combination of institutional heritage and serious food credentials interests you beyond this region, Le Bernardin in New York City is the clearest Western parallel in terms of longevity matched with sustained critical standing.
Quick reference: Michelin 1 Star (2024) | OAD Casual Asia #80 (2025) | $$ | 11 AM–10 PM daily | 12F, 500 Hennessy Rd, Causeway Bay | Walk-in or third-party booking | No dress code listed.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Ho Hung Kee Congee & Noodle handle dietary restrictions?
Ho Hung Kee is a traditional Cantonese noodle and congee shop, so the menu is built around pork, seafood, and poultry-based broths. Strict vegetarians and those avoiding shellfish will find the options narrow. The format here is not well-suited to complex dietary requests — if that is a concern, The Chairman or Feuille offer more flexibility at a higher price point.
Is lunch or dinner better at Ho Hung Kee Congee & Noodle?
Lunch is the stronger call for most visitors. The venue opens at 11 AM daily, and the combination of wonton noodles and dim sum plays well as a midday meal. Evening visits are perfectly valid — hours run until 10 PM every day — but this is a daytime Cantonese format at heart, and the energy reflects that earlier in the day.
Can I eat at the bar at Ho Hung Kee Congee & Noodle?
Ho Hung Kee is a restaurant-format Cantonese noodle shop, not a bar-anchored venue, so there is no bar counter to sit at. The dining room is on the 12th floor of 500 Hennessy Road — enter via elevator. Solo diners are common and well-accommodated at regular tables given the quick-service nature of the format.
What should I wear to Ho Hung Kee Congee & Noodle?
Casual clothes are fine. Despite holding a Michelin 1 Star and an OAD Casual Asia ranking, Ho Hung Kee operates as a straightforward Cantonese noodle shop at $$ prices — there is no dress expectation beyond being presentable. Treat it like any good Hong Kong cha chaan teng in terms of how you show up.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Ho Hung Kee Congee & Noodle?
Ho Hung Kee does not operate a tasting menu format. This is a Cantonese noodle and congee shop where you order from a regular menu — wonton noodles, congee, and Cantonese dishes. The value case is the opposite of a tasting menu: Michelin 1-star quality at $$ prices, ordered à la carte. If a multi-course format is what you want, Ta Vie or 8½ Otto e Mezzo are the appropriate alternatives in Hong Kong.
Location
12F, 500號 Hennessy Rd, Causeway Bay, Hong Kong
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Compare Ho Hung Kee Congee & Noodle
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ho Hung Kee Congee & Noodle | Noodles and Congee | $$ | Hard | |
| Ta Vie | Japanese - French, Innovative | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong) | Italian | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Feuille | French Contemporary | $$$ | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| The Chairman | Chinese, Cantonese | $$ | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Neighborhood | International, European Contemporary | $$ | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
A quick look at how Ho Hung Kee Congee & Noodle measures up.
Also Consider
- Ta Vie, Japanese - French, Innovative, $$$$
- 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong), Italian, $$$$
- Feuille, French Contemporary, $$$
- The Chairman, Chinese, Cantonese, $$
- Neighborhood, International, European Contemporary, $$
How It Compares
Ho Hung Kee operates in a completely different bracket from most of Hong Kong's recognised dining options. At $$, it is the most accessible Michelin-starred meal in the city, a direct comparison to The Chairman (also $$, Chinese Cantonese) is the most useful one for budget-conscious visitors. The Chairman carries stronger OAD rankings in recent cycles and a more polished room, but Ho Hung Kee wins on price-per-bite efficiency for a quick, focused meal. For a group deciding between the two at the $$ level, The Chairman is the better choice for a full sit-down dinner; Ho Hung Kee is the better choice for a fast, serious lunch anchored to one or two signature dishes.
Neighborhood ($$, European Contemporary) sits in the same price tier but is a different proposition entirely, it is the option if you want natural wine and bistro cooking rather than Cantonese tradition. Step up to $$$ and Feuille (French Contemporary) offers a more structured, produce-driven experience with a harder booking window. At $$$$ you have Ta Vie and 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana, both requiring advance planning and a significantly higher spend per head.
The decision is simple: if you want Cantonese cooking at a price that leaves room in the budget for a high-end dinner later in the week, Ho Hung Kee is the right call. If you want one considered, full-evening Cantonese experience and cost is secondary, The Chairman edges it. If the rest of your Hong Kong dining is already $$$–$$$$, Ho Hung Kee provides the most useful counterpoint, credentialled, affordable, and genuinely representative of what the city does at its everyday best.
Hours
- Monday
- 11 AM-10 PM
- Tuesday
- 11 AM-10 PM
- Wednesday
- 11 AM-10 PM
- Thursday
- 11 AM-10 PM
- Friday
- 11 AM-10 PM
- Saturday
- 11 AM-10 PM
- Sunday
- 11 AM-10 PM
Recognized By
Explore Hong Kong
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