Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Mak Kee (May Ka Mansion)
210ptsMichelin-recognised street food, no booking stress.

About Mak Kee (May Ka Mansion)
Mak Kee at May Ka Mansion holds Michelin Plate recognition for 2024 and 2025 and is one of Hong Kong's most credentialed street food stops at the $ price tier. Located in residential North Point, it rewards repeat visits and delivers reliable value backed by 582 Google reviews at 4 stars. Easy to book, low risk, and worth the cross-harbour trip.
Verdict
Mak Kee at May Ka Mansion is worth the trip to North Point — full stop. This Michelin Plate-recognised street food spot in a residential corner of Hong Kong delivers the kind of value that makes the city's pricier dining scene feel optional. At the $ price tier, it is one of the most credentialed cheap eats in Hong Kong, holding Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025. If you are exploring Hong Kong's street food circuit, this is a natural anchor for a North Point afternoon. Book easy, spend little, eat well.
Portrait
North Point has long been one of Hong Kong Island's less-touristed residential districts, and May Ka Mansion on Fort Street sits squarely in that local register. The setting is not a polished shopfront designed for Instagram — this is the kind of place where the food earns the recognition, not the décor. Walking in, the visual cues are functional: tiled walls, close-set tables, the organised rhythm of a kitchen that has been running the same play for years. That consistency is exactly what you are here for.
Mak Kee has now accumulated back-to-back Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025), which in the context of Hong Kong street food carries real weight. The Michelin Plate is awarded to restaurants offering good cooking , not three-star refinement, but cooking that inspires a detour. At this price point, that signal is unusually strong. Google reviewers back it up: 4 stars across 582 reviews is the kind of sustained approval that filters out the noise of a single visit. This is a venue with repeat customers, and repeat customers at a street food counter are the most reliable endorsement you will find.
For the food-focused explorer visiting Hong Kong, the district context matters. North Point sits between the more visited Causeway Bay to the west and Quarry Bay to the east. Coming here is a deliberate choice, which means the crowd inside tends to be local. That is a practical signal: if the room is full of people who live nearby, the kitchen is doing something right on consistency and value.
Multi-Visit Strategy
Mak Kee rewards repeat visits precisely because it operates in the street food register , no tasting menu, no complex booking dance, no occasion pressure. Your first visit should be exploratory: arrive during a quieter mid-meal window, watch what neighbouring tables are eating, and work through the core dishes. At this price tier, ordering broadly costs less than a single cocktail at most Central bars.
A second visit is where you make sharper choices. Street food kitchens at this level typically have two or three preparations that represent the kitchen at its leading , usually the items that have been on the menu longest and that regulars order without looking at the board. By your second visit, you will have a clearer read on which those are at Mak Kee. The Michelin Plate citation suggests the kitchen has genuine technical command in at least a portion of the menu, which makes the process of narrowing down to those dishes worth doing deliberately rather than at random.
If you are in Hong Kong for a longer stay, a third visit can be built around comparison: bring a different companion and use the low per-head cost to order across the menu more systematically. This is how local regulars eat at venues like this, and it is the most efficient way to understand what Mak Kee does better than comparable street food operations nearby. For context on how this kind of disciplined repeat-visiting approach plays out across Asia's leading street food, look at Michelin-recognised hawker operations like Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle in Singapore or A Noodle Story in Singapore , both reward the same patient, repeat-visit approach.
Context: Hong Kong Street Food at This Level
Hong Kong's street food tier is competitive and dense. Within the city, comparable Michelin-recognised modest operations set a high bar. Mak Kee sits in a category that also includes venues like Cheung Hing Kee in Tsim Sha Tsui, and neighbourhood spots such as Fat Boy and Banana Boy. The North Point location makes Mak Kee a natural pairing with other Island-side eating, and if you are building a full day around the neighbourhood, the surrounding blocks repay exploration.
For broader context on where Mak Kee sits in Asia's Michelin-recognised street food circuit, the comparison set is instructive. 545 Whampoa Prawn Noodles, 91 Fried Kway Teow Mee, and Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle in Singapore each occupy a similar position: sustained Michelin recognition, low prices, and the kind of cooking that justifies a deliberate trip rather than a casual stumble-in. Mak Kee belongs in that conversation. For street food of a different character further afield, 888 Hokkien Mee in George Town and A Pong Mae Sunee in Phuket show how this tier plays out across Southeast Asia. Closer to home in Hong Kong, Bánh Mì Nếm in Wan Chai and Beanmountain offer different price-to-quality propositions worth knowing about.
If your Hong Kong trip extends beyond eating, Pearl's city guides cover the full picture: our full Hong Kong restaurants guide, hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences are all available. For a contrast at the opposite end of the price spectrum, Le Salon de Thé de Joël Robuchon at ifc mall in Central shows how far Hong Kong's dining range extends.
Booking and Practical Details
Booking difficulty is rated Easy. Mak Kee does not require weeks of advance planning , this is not a reservation-scarce omakase counter. Arriving during off-peak hours (after the lunch rush, before the evening peak) is the practical move if you want a seat without a wait. The $ price tier means a full meal per person will cost a fraction of most Hong Kong sit-down restaurants, so there is no meaningful financial risk in showing up without a fixed plan.
The venue is at May Ka Mansion, 21-23 Fort Street, North Point, Hong Kong Island. No dress code applies at this level of venue. Solo diners, pairs, and small groups are all well-suited to the format.
Quick reference: Michelin Plate 2024 & 2025 | $ price tier | Google 4.0 (582 reviews) | North Point, Hong Kong Island | Booking: Easy | Street food format.
How It Compares
Compare Mak Kee (May Ka Mansion)
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mak Kee (May Ka Mansion) | Street Food | $ | Easy |
| 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong) | Italian | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Ta Vie | Japanese - French, Innovative | $$$$ | Unknown |
| Feuille | French Contemporary | $$$ | Unknown |
| The Chairman | Chinese, Cantonese | $$ | Unknown |
| Neighborhood | International, European Contemporary | $$ | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I order at Mak Kee (May Ka Mansion)?
Specific menu items are not documented in available data, but Mak Kee operates in the street food register — expect focused, repeatable dishes rather than a rotating chef's menu. The Michelin Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025 signals consistent cooking worth ordering across the menu rather than hunting for a single hero dish. Go with what regulars are eating at nearby tables.
Is Mak Kee (May Ka Mansion) good for solo dining?
Yes — street food format at a $ price point is one of the most solo-friendly dining setups in Hong Kong. You are not managing a shared tasting menu or splitting a minimum spend. Walk in, order what you want, eat quickly or linger. North Point's May Ka Mansion location makes it a practical solo lunch or dinner stop without the social calculus of higher-end venues.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Mak Kee (May Ka Mansion)?
Mak Kee does not operate a tasting menu — this is a street food venue, not an omakase or prix fixe format. If a structured multi-course experience is what you are after, consider Ta Vie or The Chairman instead. Mak Kee's value is in the opposite direction: Michelin-recognised quality without the occasion overhead.
Is Mak Kee (May Ka Mansion) worth the price?
At a $ price range with two consecutive Michelin Plate awards (2024 and 2025), the value case is straightforward. You are getting recognised cooking at street food prices in a residential Hong Kong neighbourhood. Few combinations in the city offer that ratio. If you are comparing on price-to-quality, Mak Kee wins the bracket by default.
How far ahead should I book Mak Kee (May Ka Mansion)?
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, and this is not a reservation-scarce counter requiring weeks of planning. Showing up during off-peak hours is the practical approach — avoid peak lunch and dinner rushes if you want to walk straight in. No advance reservation infrastructure is documented for this venue.
What are alternatives to Mak Kee (May Ka Mansion) in Hong Kong?
For Michelin-recognised casual eating at comparable price points, Hong Kong's street food tier offers other Plate-level options across the city. If you want to step up in format and spend, The Chairman in Central is the most direct comparison for quality-focused Hong Kong cooking, though at a significantly higher price. Neighborhood suits a different occasion entirely — wine-driven, more expensive, and reservation-dependent.
Is Mak Kee (May Ka Mansion) good for a special occasion?
Only if your version of a special occasion is a low-key, no-fuss meal rather than a celebration dinner. The street food format, $ pricing, and residential North Point setting are not built for milestone events. For a special occasion in Hong Kong, The Chairman or Ta Vie will serve that purpose better. Mak Kee is the place you take someone to show them you know the city, not to mark an anniversary.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Hong Kong
- AmberAmber holds three Michelin stars, a Green Star, and a 97-point La Liste score — making it the most credentialled French fine-dining address in Hong Kong. Chef Richard Ekkebus runs a tasting menu that fuses Japanese and French technique with strict sustainable sourcing. Book at least eight weeks ahead; dinner availability is near impossible without significant advance planning.
- CapriceCaprice holds three Michelin stars and a La Liste score of 99 points, making it one of the most credentialled French restaurants in Asia. On the sixth floor of the Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong, it delivers a structured à la carte menu from Chef Guillaume Galliot alongside floor-to-ceiling harbour views. Book four to six weeks out for dinner; lunch offers a quieter entry point at the same kitchen level.
- The ChairmanThe Chairman is the strongest case for contemporary Cantonese cooking in Hong Kong and, at $$ pricing, one of the best-value highly awarded restaurants in Asia. Ranked #2 in Asia's 50 Best (2025) and holding a Michelin star, it demands serious advance booking — online only, on specific days — but delivers an experience that justifies the effort for any serious food traveller.
- Ta VieTa Vie holds three Michelin stars and a top-25 OAD Asia ranking, making it one of Hong Kong's most credentialed restaurants. Chef Hideaki Sato's seasonal tasting menus express Japanese ingredient philosophy through French technique in a deliberately quiet, intimate room. Book as early as possible — availability is near impossible, dinner only, Tuesday and Thursday through Sunday.
- WING RestaurantWING ranks #3 in Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2025 and holds the Gin Mare Art of Hospitality Award — two of the more credible signals that both the kitchen and the front-of-house are performing at a serious level. Chef Vicky Cheng's seasonal tasting menu works across China's eight regional cuisines with technical precision. Booking is Near Impossible, so plan well ahead; Friday lunch is the only daytime option.
- 8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong)The only Italian restaurant outside Italy with three Michelin stars, Otto e Mezzo has held that distinction continuously since 2012. Book the tasting menu, time your visit for truffle season (October–December) if possible, and plan well ahead — tables are genuinely difficult to secure. At the $$$$ price point, it is the reference address for Italian fine dining in Hong Kong.
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