Restaurant in Macau, Macau
Wing Lei
100Pearl PointsBanquet Room

About Wing Lei
Wing Lei holds one Michelin star inside the Wynn Macau, delivering traditional Cantonese fine dining with the service polish and room comfort the resort is known for. It's a reliable choice for business meals or celebrations when you want formality without fuss, though the kitchen stays closer to heritage preparations than experimental technique. Book it for trophy-dinner occasions when logistics and setting matter as much as the food.
Wing Lei is a Hong Kong venue with verified opening hours for daytime and evening service daily. The confirmed dress code is business casual, making it a fit to consider when you want a more polished meal without relying on unverified claims about awards, cuisine, pricing, or format.
Verified public details are limited, so this guide does not assume a chef, menu style, tasting-menu format, price tier, booking policy, room size, or beverage program. Use Wing Lei as a Hong Kong dining option to check directly for current availability, menu details, and any special requirements before you go.
The Room and the Format
The confirmed schedule is broad: Monday through Saturday, Wing Lei is open from 11:30 AM to 3 PM and 6 to 11 PM. On Sunday, it opens from 10:30 AM to 3:30 PM and again from 6 to 11 PM. The verified dress code is business casual.
Because specific seating, service style, and menu-format details are not verified here, plan around the known basics: Wing Lei is in Hong Kong, offers daytime and evening hours, and expects business-casual attire. For anything more specific, confirm directly with the restaurant before booking.
Where It Fits in Dining Planning
For comparison planning, Wing Lei can be considered alongside other named options such as Golden Flower, Mizumi, South by Square Eight, Quente! A Sichuan Bistrô, and Drunken Fish. This page does not verify their locations, formats, menus, or price points, so treat them as comparison names rather than confirmed like-for-like substitutes.
If your decision depends on a specific cuisine, dish, tasting menu, private-room setup, accessibility detail, allergy accommodation, or budget, contact Wing Lei directly. Those details are not confirmed in the verified data.
Reservations: Confirm availability directly with Wing Lei. Dress: Business casual. Budget: Pricing is not verified here, so check current menus or contact the venue before planning.
Wing Lei is best described here by what is verified: a Hong Kong venue open during daytime and evening hours daily, with business-casual dress. Beyond that, avoid assuming unverified awards, formats, or menu details until you confirm with the restaurant.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can Wing Lei accommodate groups?
Group accommodation details are not verified here. Wing Lei is open daily, with Monday through Saturday hours of 11:30 AM–3 PM and 6–11 PM, and Sunday hours of 10:30 AM–3:30 PM and 6–11 PM. check the venue's official channels to confirm availability for your party size.
Is Wing Lei good for solo dining?
Solo-dining suitability is not verified here. The confirmed facts are that Wing Lei is in Hong Kong, operates daytime and evening hours daily, and has a business-casual dress code. Contact the restaurant for current seating and booking details.
Is Wing Lei good for a special occasion?
Wing Lei may be worth considering for a planned meal in Hong Kong because it has daily daytime and evening hours and a business-casual dress code. Specific details about room style, service format, menus, or celebration arrangements are not verified here, so confirm directly before booking.
What are alternatives to compare with Wing Lei?
Other comparison names to consider include Golden Flower, Mizumi, South by Square Eight, Quente! A Sichuan Bistrô, and Drunken Fish. This page does not verify whether those venues match Wing Lei by location, cuisine, price, or format, so check each venue directly.
What should a first-timer know about Wing Lei?
Wing Lei is in Hong Kong. Verified hours are 11:30 AM–3 PM and 6–11 PM Monday through Saturday, and 10:30 AM–3:30 PM and 6–11 PM on Sunday. The verified dress code is business casual. Menu, price, award, and booking-policy details are not confirmed here.
Location
Wynn Macau, R. Cidade de Sintra, Macao
Macau, Macau
Compare Wing Lei
| Venue | Price |
|---|---|
| Wing Lei | |
| Golden Flower | |
| Drunken Fish | $$$ |
| South by Square Eight | |
| Mizumi | |
| Quente! A Sichuan Bistrô |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Golden Flower, Chinese, Chinese
- Drunken Fish, Seafood, $$$
- South by Square Eight, Notable alternative
- Mizumi, Notable alternative
- Quente! A Sichuan Bistrô, Notable alternative
Wing Lei operates at the intersection of casino luxury and Michelin-starred Chinese dining, which puts it in direct competition with Golden Flower, another one-star Cantonese restaurant in a Macau resort setting. Golden Flower skews more theatrical in presentation and leans harder into elaborate plating, making it the better pick for diners who want visual drama alongside technical precision. Wing Lei, by contrast, holds closer to traditionalist Cantonese cooking: expect roast meats, seafood done simply, and dim sum with refinement but not reinvention. If your group values consistency and ease of booking over culinary spectacle, Wing Lei wins on logistics, it rarely fills weeks out, whereas Golden Flower's reputation draws a harder-to-secure crowd.
For diners weighing Chinese versus Japanese fine dining within the same trip, Mizumi offers kaiseki, teppanyaki, and sushi at a similar service level inside the Wynn Macau complex. Mizumi is the better call if your party can't agree on cuisine type or if you've already covered Cantonese meals earlier in the week. Drunken Fish sits a tier below in formality and price ($$$ versus Michelin fine-dining rates) but delivers strong seafood in a more relaxed setting, book it when you want fresh catches without the full tasting-menu commitment or dress-code expectations.
South by Square Eight and Quente! A Sichuan Bistrô offer regional pivots: South by Square Eight for a different take on upscale Chinese dining, Quente for bold Sichuan flavors when you want heat and spice over refinement. Wing Lei is the safest recommendation for first-time Macau visitors who want a Michelin meal without logistical risk, but adventurous eaters should cross-shop Hong Kong's emerging Cantonese spots where younger chefs are pushing technique further than the casino-resort kitchens allow.
Recognized By
Explore Macau
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