Restaurant in Miami, United States
Hakkasan Miami
775ptsMiami's most serious Cantonese kitchen. Book ahead.

About Hakkasan Miami
Hakkasan Miami holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and ranks in the Opinionated About Dining Top 400 in North America — making it the most credentialed Cantonese restaurant in South Florida. Inside the Fontainebleau, it delivers Guangdong-rooted cooking built for group dining at the $$$ tier. Book four to six weeks out for weekends during Miami's peak season.
Verdict
If you want the most serious Cantonese cooking currently available in Miami, Hakkasan at the Fontainebleau Miami Beach is the answer. This is not a hotel restaurant you tolerate because the location is convenient — it holds a Michelin Plate (2025) and ranks #383 on the Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in North America list (2024), which puts it in a very small category of Chinese restaurants in Florida with independently verified quality. Book it for groups, for celebrations, or any occasion where you want to spend at the $$$ tier and come away feeling the money was justified. The catch: weekends fill fast, and this is a hard reservation to land on short notice.
What You're Actually Booking
Hakkasan Miami's cooking is rooted in the Guangdong Province and Hong Kong tradition — Cantonese in the classical sense, which means clean technique, seafood-forward execution, and dishes designed for communal sharing rather than individual plates. The Michelin inspector's own notes call out the braised Japanese abalone with sea cucumber and the braised luffa melon with crispy scallops as the kind of dishes that push past the usual Cantonese-American comfort zone. If you've been once and ordered the familiar stir-fry or dim sum brunch, the menu rewards a more adventurous second visit: the Guangdong-style banquet dishes are where this kitchen earns its credentials. For dim sum specifically, a weekend brunch visit is a distinct experience from dinner , and both are worth planning around.
The room matches the Fontainebleau's register: sleek, low-lit, and polished in a way that reads as Miami Beach chic rather than stuffy. It is neither a casual neighbourhood Chinese restaurant nor an austere tasting-room format. Smart casual is the dress code, which in practice means dressing for a South Beach night out , no beach shorts, no need for a jacket. The wine list runs to around 600 selections (9,000 bottles of inventory), priced at the $$$ tier with a corkage fee of $60 if you bring your own bottle. Wine Director Charly Naranjo and Sommelier Erica Lozano manage a list with California, France, and Italy as its core strengths , more than you'd expect from a Chinese restaurant, and useful if your table wants to pair seriously. General Manager Fahad Khan oversees the floor, and the overall service standard is consistent with a Forbes Travel Guide Recommended property.
Seasonal and Timing Considerations
Miami's restaurant season runs roughly October through April, when the city's population swells with visitors and the social calendar accelerates. During that window, Hakkasan becomes considerably harder to book , the Fontainebleau's hotel guests alone generate steady cover pressure on weekends. If you're visiting between November and March, treat this as a four-to-six-week advance booking, not a week-out decision. Summer and early autumn represent the easier window: Miami is quieter, tables are more available midweek, and you are more likely to experience the room at a pace that does the food justice. Cantonese cooking, particularly the seafood-forward dishes Hakkasan emphasises, maps naturally to warm-weather dining , light preparations, clean flavours, nothing heavy , so a summer visit is not a compromise. The braised and slow-cooked dishes on the menu are worth noting for cooler months when that register feels more fitting.
For repeat visitors: if your first visit was a weekend dim sum brunch, the dinner menu is a substantively different experience and worth treating as a separate reservation. The kitchen's range only becomes clear across both formats. Groups of four or more are the natural unit here , order several dishes across the menu, include at least one of the more ambitious seafood preparations, and plan to spend accordingly at the $$$ tier (two courses per person without drinks runs $66 or more by the venue's own pricing definition).
Booking and Practical Details
Reservations are available through OpenTable. Weekdays are manageable with reasonable notice; weekends during peak season require four to six weeks minimum. This is a hard booking during Miami's high season, and walk-in availability at the Fontainebleau is unpredictable. Call the restaurant directly if you have a large group or specific requirements , the team can advise on group minimums and private dining options. Dress code is smart casual: think South Beach evening wear, not resort casual. The address is 4441 Collins Ave, Miami Beach, FL 33140, inside the Fontainebleau hotel on Collins Avenue.
For a broader look at Miami's dining options, see our full Miami restaurants guide. If you're staying in Miami and want accommodation context, our full Miami hotels guide covers the hotel landscape. For cocktail bars and nightlife around Miami Beach, our full Miami bars guide is the starting point.
How Hakkasan Compares Nationally
For context on where Hakkasan Miami sits in the broader category: serious Chinese cooking at the fine-dining tier in the United States is a short list. Mister Jiu's in San Francisco is the clearest peer in terms of ambition and Michelin recognition, though its format is more chef-driven and less hotel-integrated. Restaurant Tim Raue in Berlin represents the European benchmark for Asian-influenced fine dining, operating at a different scale entirely. Within Miami, Hakkasan has no direct Cantonese competitor at its price point. For contrast with other high-end Miami options , including French technique at L'Atelier de Joël Robuchon Miami or the broader Miami fine dining field at Ariete and Boia De , see the comparison section below. For more grounded Cantonese and Chinese cooking in Miami at a lower price point, Tropical Chinese is the reference. For something that bridges South American and Asian traditions at the chef-driven end, ITAMAE is worth knowing about.
If you want benchmarks from the broader national fine dining scene, Le Bernardin in New York and The French Laundry in Napa represent the upper boundary of the award tier Hakkasan aspires to, while Lazy Bear in San Francisco and Alinea in Chicago show what chef-driven tasting-room formats look like at a similar spend. Hakkasan Miami operates in a different register , more accessible, more group-friendly, less dependent on a single chef's vision , which is either a feature or a limitation depending on what you want from the meal.
Compare Hakkasan Miami
| Venue | Awards | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hakkasan Miami | Located inside the Fontainebleau Miami Beach, Hakkasan Miami is the Florida outpost of the high-end restaurant chain that originated in London.; Miami Beach’s iconic Fontainebleau Hotel is home to arguably one of the best modern Chinese restaurants in the area. Hakkasan is known for its beautiful interior design, delicious Dim Sum brunch, and...; Michelin Plate (2025); **Our Inspector's Highlights The cuisine here is inspired by the Guangdong Province and Hong Kong. Cantonese cooking is noted for its soups, seafood and banquet-style dishes.Why not break out of your crispy chicken with orange sauce or stir-fried lobster with xo sauce routine? Here, you can step out of your culinary comfort zone by trying braised Japanese abalone with sea cucumber or braised luffa melon with crispy scallops.Much like the Fontainebleau itself, Hakkasan Miami’s décor is sleek, chic and just a tad mysterious.** **Things to Know While you’ll still find Cantonese appetizers and entrées on the menu, a meal here is best appreciated when shared — so go with a group and order several dishes.The dress code at Hakkasan Miami is smart casual. While you don’t want to show up dressed for the beach (which is right outside the restaurant’s doors), you needn’t be overly formal at this Forbes Travel Guide Recommended restaurant either. To ease confusion, simply dress for a night out in Miami Beach.To reserve a table at Hakkasan Miami, call the restaurant directly or log on to OpenTable.com. While the Forbes Travel Guide Recommended restaurant inside the Fontainebleau Miami Beach is fairly easy to book during the week, the weekends tend to fill up quickly.The restaurant’s name has special meaning. It pays tribute to the Hakka people from the New Territories of Hong Kong, while the “san” is the respectful Japanese form of address.** **Amenities:** 4441 Collins Avenue, Miami Beach, Florida 33140; WINE: Wine Strengths: California, France, Italy Pricing: $$$ i Wine pricing: Based on the list\'s general markup and high and low price points:$ has many bottles < $50;$$ has a range of pricing;$$$ has many $100+ bottles Corkage Fee: $60 Selections: 600 Inventory: 9,000 CUISINE: Cuisine Types: Cantonese, Chinese Pricing: $$$ i Cuisine pricing: The cost of a typical two-course meal, not including tip or beverages.$ is < $40;$$ is $40–$65;$$$ is $66+. Meals: Dinner STAFF: People Wine Director: Charly Naranjo Sommelier: Erica Lozano General Manager: Fahad Khan; Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Ranked #383 (2024); Michelin Plate (2024); Opinionated About Dining Top Restaurants in North America Recommended (2023) | $$$ | — |
| Ariete | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Boia De | Michelin 1 Star | $$$ | — |
| Cote Miami | Michelin 1 Star | $$$ | — |
| Stubborn Seed | Michelin 1 Star | $$$$ | — |
| Los Fuegos by Francis Mallmann | $$$$ | — |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Hakkasan Miami?
Bar seating exists at Hakkasan Miami, but the food program is built for the dining room — Cantonese dishes designed to be shared across several plates work better at a table. If you want a full meal, book a table; the bar is more useful for a drink before or after dinner at the Fontainebleau.
Can Hakkasan Miami accommodate groups?
Yes, and groups are actually the preferred format here. The Cantonese menu is structured for sharing, so a table of four or more lets you cover meaningful ground across appetizers, mains, and dim sum. Weekday group bookings are manageable with standard notice; weekend parties during Miami's October-to-April peak season should book four to six weeks out via OpenTable.
Is Hakkasan Miami good for a special occasion?
It works well for a special occasion — the setting inside the Fontainebleau is sleek, the service is structured, and a Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) gives you a credible reason to choose it over a generic upscale dinner. The dress code is smart casual, so the formality level is high enough to feel like an occasion without requiring black tie.
Is Hakkasan Miami worth the price?
At $$$ (typical two-course meal above $66, not including drinks), Hakkasan is priced at the top of Miami's Chinese restaurant tier — and it earns that position. Opinionated About Dining ranked it #383 among top North American restaurants in 2024, and it holds a Michelin Plate. If serious Cantonese cooking is what you're after, the price is justified; if you want a casual Chinese dinner, it isn't the right room.
Does Hakkasan Miami handle dietary restrictions?
The database does not specify a detailed dietary accommodation policy for Hakkasan Miami. Given the format — a high-end Cantonese kitchen with a structured menu — check the venue's official channels via OpenTable or phone before booking if dietary restrictions are a factor, rather than assuming flexibility on arrival.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Hakkasan Miami?
The menu is built around shared Cantonese dishes rather than a formal tasting menu format, so the better question is whether you're booking with a group willing to order several plates. Dishes like braised Japanese abalone with sea cucumber represent the kitchen's range — if that register interests you, ordering broadly across the menu is where the value is.
What are alternatives to Hakkasan Miami in Miami?
For a different cuisine at a comparable price point and critical standing, Boia De and Cote Miami are both serious options in the Miami fine-dining tier. Neither replicates Cantonese cooking, but both have strong track records for execution at the $$$ level. If Cantonese specifically is the draw, Hakkasan is currently the clearest answer in the Miami market.
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