Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Kam's Roast Goose
850Pearl PointsMichelin roast goose at street-food prices.

About Kam's Roast Goose
Kam's Roast Goose holds a Michelin star and three consecutive Opinionated About Dining Casual Asia top-60 rankings at the $$ price tier — making it one of the most credentialed casual meals in Hong Kong. With only 30 seats and no reservations, arrive at 11:30 AM on a weekday to avoid a serious wait. The roast goose, goose blood pudding, and noodles in goose fat are the orders to make.
Thirty seats. One Michelin star. A queue that will test your patience and reward it.
At the $$ price tier, Kam's Roast Goose on Hennessy Road in Wan Chai is one of the most decorated budget meals in Hong Kong. A single Michelin star since 2024, ranked #44 on Opinionated About Dining's Casual Asia list in 2023, climbing to #50 in 2024 and #58 in 2025, and 4.1 across over 5,400 Google reviews — the data makes a clear case. If roast goose is your reason to visit Hong Kong, this is where you should book.
The third generation of the Kam family runs this shop, carrying forward more than 70 years of roasting tradition. That lineage matters here not as a romantic story but as a quality signal: the technique behind a proper roast goose — crispy skin, rendered fat, juicy flesh, takes decades to master and the awards record confirms they have. For a food enthusiast who wants context, this is a place with a traceable, documented history of doing one thing at a sustained level of quality across generations.
What draws people in from the street
Walk past 226 Hennessy Road at lunch service and you will understand the appeal before you reach the door. The scent of roasting goose fat and caramelised skin carries into the street, it is the kind of smell that stops you mid-step. The window display of lacquered birds and glistening Cantonese barbecue cuts does the rest. With only 30 seats, the gap between arriving and eating can be significant, particularly on weekday lunches and all day Saturday.
Beyond the roast goose
The roast goose is the draw, but it is not the only reason to come. According to Opinionated About Dining's own notes on this venue, the goose blood pudding is silky and worth ordering, and the blanched noodles tossed in goose fat are described as decadent. Other Cantonese barbecue items in the window, roast pork, char siu, are also worth considering. For a food explorer trying to build a complete picture of what this kitchen can do, ordering broadly across the barbecue menu is more instructive than anchoring solely to the goose.
Groups and private dining at Kam's
Here is where the venue's constraints become relevant to your planning. With 30 seats total, Kam's has no private dining room and no group-dedicated space. The editorial angle assigned to this page asks what the group experience delivers versus the main room, and the honest answer is: there is only one room, and it is small. Groups of four or more are possible but require timing, coordination, and a realistic expectation that you will be seated at the discretion of whoever is managing the floor that day. Walk-in groups during peak hours face a meaningful wait. For a large group wanting flexibility and a dedicated space, Kam's is not set up to deliver that. For two to four people who can arrive early or accept a wait, it works well. Solo diners benefit from the casual, counter-service nature of the room, there is no social friction around eating alone at a roast meats shop of this type.
When to go and how to plan
Booking difficulty is rated Hard on Pearl. Kam's opens at 11:30 AM every day of the week and closes at 9:30 PM. Arriving at 11:30 AM is the single most reliable way to get a seat without a prolonged wait. Midweek lunch is your second option. Saturday at any hour is the hardest. The venue operates seven days a week, which gives you flexibility on day choice, but peak demand compresses quickly around the prime lunch window. There is no booking method listed in available data, so treat this as a walk-in venue and plan arrival time accordingly, not booking-window planning in the traditional reservation sense, but arrival-window planning. If you are coming from Central or Causeway Bay, Wan Chai is a short MTR ride or a walkable distance depending on your starting point.
How it sits in Hong Kong's dining context
For the food enthusiast mapping Hong Kong's restaurant scene, Kam's occupies a specific and useful position. It is one of the few Michelin-starred experiences in the city accessible at the $$ price point. The Michelin star places it in credentialed territory alongside venues charging three or four times as much per head, such as Amber, Caprice, and Ta Vie. For anyone building a Hong Kong itinerary that covers multiple price tiers and styles, Kam's is the obvious pick for a credentialed casual lunch. Forum offers a more formal Cantonese dining experience at a higher price point if you want a seated, paced meal with full service. 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana is the reference point for a $$$$ Italian evening in the city, a completely different register. Kam's is not competing with those venues; it is answering a different question: where do you eat the leading roast goose in a credentialed, accessible setting?
Pearl verdict
Book Kam's if: you are in Hong Kong, you want to eat roast goose at a Michelin-starred level without spending $$$, and you are willing to plan your arrival time carefully. Arrive at 11:30 AM on a weekday for the most reliable experience. Come with one to three others for the most practical group size. Do not come expecting a private room, a lengthy wine list, or a leisurely booking process. Come expecting one of the most price-efficient, award-backed meals the city offers.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 226 Hennessy Road, Wan Chai, Hong Kong
- Price range: $$ (budget to mid-range)
- Hours: Monday to Sunday, 11:30 AM – 9:30 PM
- Seats: 30 (no private dining room)
- Booking: No listed booking method, plan as walk-in; arrive at opening for leading access
- Leading group size: 1–4 people
- Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024); OAD Casual Asia #44 (2023), #50 (2024), #58 (2025)
- Leading time to arrive: 11:30 AM weekdays; avoid Saturday peak
For more on eating and staying in the city, see our full Hong Kong restaurants guide, our full Hong Kong hotels guide, and our full Hong Kong experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Kam's Roast Goose?
The roast goose is non-negotiable — that is what the Michelin star and three consecutive Opinionated About Dining top-50 rankings are built on. Beyond that, OAD's own notes on the venue specifically flag the goose blood pudding and the blanched noodles tossed in goose fat as worth ordering. The other Cantonese roast meats on display in the window are also cited as worth trying.
Can Kam's Roast Goose accommodate groups?
Only if you keep it small. With 30 seats total and no private dining room, groups of four or more will likely be split across tables or face a longer queue. This is a counter-and-small-table operation, not a banquet venue. For larger group dinners in Hong Kong, The Chairman or 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana offer dedicated space and booking infrastructure.
Is lunch or dinner better at Kam's Roast Goose?
Lunch at opening (11:30 AM) is the move. Arriving at the start of service is the most reliable way to avoid a long queue at this 30-seat restaurant. Dinner is possible any day through 9:30 PM, but the queue risk is higher during peak evening hours. If your schedule allows, 11:30 AM on a weekday is the lowest-friction option.
Is Kam's Roast Goose good for solo dining?
Yes, and arguably better for solo than for groups. A single diner can typically be seated faster at a 30-seat venue than a group waiting for a full table. You also get the full roast goose experience without needing to coordinate orders. At the $$ price tier, solo lunches here are among the more efficient Michelin-starred meals in Hong Kong.
Is Kam's Roast Goose worth the price?
At the $$ price tier with a Michelin star and three consecutive OAD Casual Asia top-58 rankings, the value case is straightforward. This is one of the few places in Hong Kong where Michelin-level roast technique costs about the same as an ordinary lunch. The queue is the real cost; if your time is limited, factor that into the calculation.
Can I eat at the bar at Kam's Roast Goose?
Kam's does not operate a bar. It is a Cantonese roast meats shop with 30 seats and a focus entirely on food. There is no bar seating or drinks program. Come to eat, not to linger over cocktails.
Does Kam's Roast Goose handle dietary restrictions?
This is a specialist roast meats venue built around goose and other Cantonese barbecue. The menu is protein-focused and roast-centric, so vegetarian or allergy-specific diets are a poor fit. If dietary flexibility matters for your group, Feuille or Ta Vie offer menus with more room for customisation.
Location
226號 Hennessy Rd, Wan Chai, Hong Kong
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Compare Kam's Roast Goose
| Venue | Awards | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Kam's Roast Goose | $$ | |
| Ta Vie | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ |
| 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong) | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$$ |
| Feuille | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$$ |
| The Chairman | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$ |
| Neighborhood | Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 Best | $$ |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Ta Vie, Japanese - French, Innovative, $$$$
- 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong), Italian, $$$$
- Feuille, French Contemporary, $$$
- The Chairman, Chinese, Cantonese, $$
- Neighborhood, International, European Contemporary, $$
At the $$ tier, Kam's Roast Goose sits alongside The Chairman as one of the few venues in Hong Kong delivering a credentialed Cantonese experience without a $$$$ price tag. The Chairman offers a fuller, more formal Cantonese meal with table service and a broader menu; Kam's is faster, tighter, and built around a single category of excellence. If you want a sit-down Cantonese dinner with a wine list and attentive service, The Chairman is the better fit. If you want the best roast goose the city offers at a price that leaves room for a second meal, Kam's wins.
Neighborhood at the same $$ tier offers a European contemporary direction, useful for variety across a multi-day Hong Kong itinerary, but not a direct competitor to what Kam's does. At the $$$ level, Feuille delivers French Contemporary in a more composed dining format. Step up to $$$$ and you are in the territory of Ta Vie (Japanese-French, innovative tasting menus) and 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Italian, one of the city's most formally appointed rooms). Neither competes with Kam's on value; both answer a different question about how you want to spend an evening.
The practical decision is this: Kam's is the hardest to get a seat at relative to its price point, but the reward-to-cost ratio is higher than almost any other starred experience in the city. Book it for lunch, pair it with a $$$$ dinner later in your trip at Ta Vie or Amber, and you will have covered the range of what Hong Kong's dining scene actually delivers.
Hours
- Monday
- 11:30 AM-9:30 PM
- Tuesday
- 11:30 AM-9:30 PM
- Wednesday
- 11:30 AM-9:30 PM
- Thursday
- 11:30 AM-9:30 PM
- Friday
- 11:30 AM-9:30 PM
- Saturday
- 11:30 AM-9:30 PM
- Sunday
- 11:30 AM-9:30 PM
Recognized By
Explore Hong Kong
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