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    Restaurant in Las Vegas, United States · Inside Wynn Las Vegas

    Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas

    795Pearl Points

    Skip the casino mediocrity; book this instead.

    Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas, Restaurant in Las Vegas

    About Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas

    Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas is one of the few Chinese fine dining rooms in the US with a La Liste global ranking (79 pts in 2025), and it earns that placement. The Imperial Peking duck tasting at $88 per person is the anchor order; a second visit built around Chef Ming Yu's signature dinner covers a different register entirely. Book for dinner, request a window table, and use the sommelier.

    Wing Lei Delivers More Than Las Vegas Casino Dining — But You Need to Plan Your Visits Carefully

    The common assumption about Wing Lei is that it's a glossy casino restaurant coasting on atmosphere. That assumption is wrong. This is one of the few Chinese fine dining rooms in the United States to appear on La Liste's global leading restaurants list — scoring 79 points in 2025 and 77 in 2026, which puts it in a competitive set closer to Le Bernardin in New York City or Alinea in Chicago than to the average Strip dinner. Book it with that calibration in mind.

    What Wing Lei Actually Is

    Wing Lei sits inside the Wynn Las Vegas on the Strip and serves dinner only. The room, all deep reds, gold leaf, and oversized decorative vases, is designed to signal occasion. It does that effectively without tipping into kitsch, and for a special-occasion dinner in Las Vegas it competes with anything the city has on offer. Chef Ming Yu leads a menu that draws from Cantonese, Shanghainese, and Szechuan traditions, with the kitchen leaning toward composed, ingredient-forward presentations rather than direct American-Chinese adaptations. Sommelier Diego Vasquez oversees a cellar of more than 1,000 bottles across 550 selections and is specifically experienced in pairing wine with Chinese cuisine, a genuinely rare skill set that elevates the dining room beyond what most comparable restaurant programs offer.

    How to Approach Wing Lei Across Multiple Visits

    If you're only coming once, anchor your meal around the Imperial Peking duck tasting at $88 per person (or $133 per person with wine pairing). This is a multi-course format: table-carved Peking duck, duck wonton soup, wok-fried duck, duck chow mein, Peking duck salad, and a dessert of the day. It is the clearest demonstration of what the kitchen does leading and gives you a structured reason to return.

    A second visit is worth structuring around Chef Ming Yu's signature dinner, which moves through chilled Santa Barbara prawns with osetra caviar, truffle pork dumpling, grilled sea bass, braised Wagyu short ribs, and a dessert course. This menu reads as the kitchen's formal statement, higher-luxury ingredients, more technical assembly, and sits in deliberate contrast to the duck tasting's focus on Chinese culinary tradition. Pair it with a recommendation from Vasquez rather than ordering blind from the wine list; his knowledge of the menu's flavor architecture is one of Wing Lei's practical advantages.

    On a third visit, or if you're dining with a group that has already covered the tasting menus, the à la carte side of the menu rewards attention. The braised eggplant with minced pork, mushrooms, and soy reduction is described in the venue's own inspector notes as carrying the complexity of a main course. The shrimp toast with plum sauce and General Tso's chicken represent the menu's more accessible register, though these are refined versions rather than comfort-food replicas.

    Ideal time to visit and Table Strategy

    Wing Lei serves dinner only, which means it fills on weekend evenings when the broader Wynn dining floor is busy. For a more relaxed pace and better service attention, Tuesday through Thursday evenings are preferable. Whenever you arrive, allow time before your table to sit at the bar: the backlit gold liquor display and oversized gold vase installation make it one of the more architecturally distinctive bar settings on the Strip, and it functions well as a pre-dinner aperitif stop. Request a window table when booking, these overlook a series of tropical trees and plants and are materially better than the interior seats for the overall experience quality.

    Practical Details

    Reservations: Easy to book by Las Vegas fine dining standards, plan ahead but this is not a months-out situation. Dress: Business casual minimum; a dress or suit is appropriate and fits the room. Budget: The Imperial Peking duck tasting is $88 per person without wine, $133 with pairing, budget accordingly for a full evening including bar time and à la carte additions. Dining format: Dinner only, every evening. Group size: The room accommodates two-tops through six-person tables comfortably; this is a functional option for business dinners and celebrations alike. Address: 3131 Las Vegas Blvd S, Las Vegas, NV 89109, inside the Wynn Las Vegas.

    Is It Worth Booking?

    Yes, with specificity. Wing Lei earns its La Liste placement through a combination of kitchen technique, a sommelier program that is genuinely specialized for the cuisine, and a room that delivers on occasion without relying on Strip spectacle. It is the right choice if you want Chinese fine dining at a level that has few peers in the American West, closer in ambition to Atomix in New York City (in terms of seriousness of intent, not cuisine) than to the standard casino restaurant. For context on comparable formal dining experiences, see also The French Laundry in Napa, Single Thread Farm in Healdsburg, and Alain Ducasse Louis XV in Monte Carlo. If the format or price point isn't right for your trip, Mott 32 at The Venetian Resort is the most direct Las Vegas alternative for serious Chinese dining. For a full picture of what else is worth booking in the city, see our full Las Vegas restaurants guide, hotels guide, and bars guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas good for solo dining?

    Yes, particularly if you want to eat well without committing to a group format. The bar at Wing Lei — backlit gold display, oversized decorative vases — is a legitimate solo destination, and the dinner-only format means the room runs at a deliberate pace rather than a loud, high-turnover one. At $88 per person for the Imperial Peking duck tasting, solo dining here is straightforward to price out. For solo counter-style dining with a more casual energy, Aburiya Raku on the west side of the Strip offers a different but equally considered experience.

    Can Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas accommodate groups?

    Groups of four to six are well-suited here — the room has dedicated tables at that size, and the atmosphere reads as social rather than strictly intimate despite the fine dining setting. The Imperial Peking duck tasting at $88 per person (or $133 with wine pairing) scales cleanly for groups and gives the table a shared anchor dish. Larger parties should contact Wynn Las Vegas directly to confirm private dining options, as Wing Lei's sommelier program — over 1,000 bottles, 550 selections — makes it a practical choice for a hosted dinner where wine is part of the occasion.

    What is Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas known for?

    Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas is primarily known for Chinese Cantonese in Las Vegas.

    Where is Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas located?

    Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas is located in Las Vegas, at 3131 Las Vegas Blvd S, Las Vegas, NV 89109.

    Location

    3131 Las Vegas Blvd S, Las Vegas, NV 89109

    Las Vegas, United States

    Compare Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas

    Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Wing Lei at Wynn Las VegasChinese CantoneseEasy
    Aburiya RakuJapaneseUnknown
    Bacchanal BuffetInternationalUnknown
    Bardot BrasserieFrenchUnknown
    Bazaar Meat by Jose AndresSteakhouseUnknown
    Blue Ribbon Sushi Bar & GrillJapaneseUnknown

    How Wing Lei at Wynn Las Vegas stacks up against the competition.

    Also Consider

    How Wing Lei Compares to Other Las Vegas Restaurants

    Wing Lei has no direct competitor on the Strip for Chinese fine dining at this level. Mott 32 at The Venetian Resort is the closest parallel, also serious Cantonese cooking in a high-design room, but Wing Lei's La Liste placement and the depth of its sommelier program give it a credentials edge for a celebratory spend. If the question is purely about value per dollar on the Strip, Bacchanal Buffet covers volume and variety at a fraction of the price, but it operates in a completely different category and shouldn't factor into the decision if you're weighing fine dining options.

    Against non-Chinese peers in Las Vegas, Bardot Brasserie offers French fine dining at a comparable occasion level with arguably easier booking. Bazaar Meat by Jose Andres is the right choice if your group wants a high-energy, meat-focused format rather than a composed tasting experience. For diners who want serious Japanese cooking rather than Chinese, Aburiya Raku and Blue Ribbon Sushi Bar & Grill are both strong, with Aburiya Raku in particular offering a more intimate, chef-counter format that suits solo diners or couples better than Wing Lei's larger room.

    The clearest recommendation: if Chinese cuisine is your target and the occasion warrants fine dining spend, Wing Lei is the correct booking in Las Vegas. If you're flexible on cuisine and prioritizing ease of booking or a more casual atmosphere, Bardot Brasserie or Bazaar Meat will serve you well without the need to plan around a specific menu format. Wing Lei rewards diners who come with intention, knowing which tasting to anchor on and using the sommelier, rather than those who want a flexible, drop-in-style dinner. See also Amata Modern Thai if you want Asian fine dining at a lower price point, and Lazy Bear in San Francisco or Emeril's in New Orleans as reference points for what serious American fine dining looks like at this tier.

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