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    Restaurant in Paris, France

    Guo Xin Ravioli

    100Pearl Points

    Cheap, fast, and no reservations needed.

    Guo Xin Ravioli, Restaurant in Paris

    About Guo Xin Ravioli

    Guo Xin Ravioli on Rue de Belleville is a no-frills neighbourhood dumpling spot in Paris's 19th arrondissement, valued for consistency and price rather than atmosphere or wine. Walk-ins are generally fine, the budget is low, the food earns its local following. Go for the dumplings, not the room, set expectations accordingly.

    Quick Take

    Guo Xin Ravioli is not a destination restaurant in the grand Parisian sense — and that is exactly the point. The most common mistake is arriving with fine-dining expectations. This is a neighbourhood spot on Rue de Belleville in the 19th arrondissement, one of Paris's most concentrated strips of working Chinese restaurants, it earns its reputation through consistency and value rather than ceremony. If you are looking for a tasting menu or a curated wine list, book elsewhere. If you want well-made Chinese dumplings in an honest room at an honest price, this is a reliable call.

    Visually, the setting is functional rather than designed: expect tiled surfaces, close-set tables, the quiet industry of a kitchen that moves volume. The food is the focal point, not the decor, regulars come for the dumplings — pan-fried, steamed, or boiled, which are the reason this address circulates among Paris's Chinese food community. Rue de Belleville rewards exploration: the block concentrates more regional Chinese cooking per metre than almost anywhere else in the city, Guo Xin sits within that ecosystem rather than above it.

    On wine, be realistic: this is not the venue for a wine program. There is no sommelier, no curated list, no pairing philosophy. Tea and beer are the practical choices here, they match the food more honestly than any wine would. For an explorer who treats the wine question seriously, save that energy for Arpège or Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V, where the cellar justifies the conversation. Guo Xin is the right stop before or after a deeper evening elsewhere.

    Booking is easy, walk-ins are generally viable, though weekend lunchtimes can move quickly. The 19th is not the most obvious arrondissement for first-time visitors, but it is well connected by Métro (Belleville or Pyrénées on line 11). Budget is low: this is one of the most accessible price points in Paris for a satisfying meal. For anyone building a broader Paris food itinerary, pair this with our full Paris restaurants guide and use the contrast, between Belleville's working Chinese counters and the formality of L'Ambroisie or Kei, as part of what makes Paris worth eating through systematically. Guo Xin will not define your trip, but it will add useful texture to it.

    Practical Details

    Address: 47 Rue de Belleville, 75019 Paris. Nearest Métro stops are Belleville (lines 2 and 11) and Pyrénées (line 11). No reservations required in most cases, walk-ins work. Budget accordingly for a very accessible price tier. No formal dress code; come as you are. For broader Paris planning, see our Paris hotels guide, our Paris bars guide, and our Paris experiences guide.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I wear to Guo Xin Ravioli?

    Come as you are. Guo Xin Ravioli is a casual neighbourhood spot on Rue de Belleville — jeans and a jacket are entirely appropriate. There is no dress expectation here; this is not a formal dining room.

    Can I eat at the bar at Guo Xin Ravioli?

    Seating at Guo Xin Ravioli is simple and utilitarian — don't expect a dedicated bar counter in the cocktail-lounge sense. Communal or shared tables are typical for this style of Belleville dumpling spot, so solo diners and small groups tend to slot in wherever space allows.

    What should a first-timer know about Guo Xin Ravioli?

    Don't arrive expecting a composed restaurant experience. The format is fast, the focus is dumplings, the value is the point. Located at 47 Rue de Belleville in the 19th arrondissement, it draws a local crowd rather than a tourist one — which is a reliable indicator of quality in this category.

    How far ahead should I book Guo Xin Ravioli?

    No reservation is needed in most cases — walk-in is the standard approach here. That said, peak lunch hours on weekdays can mean a short wait, so arriving slightly before or after the 12–2pm window gives you a smoother run.

    Is Guo Xin Ravioli good for solo dining?

    Yes, arguably it's the ideal format for a solo visit. The no-reservation policy and casual seating mean you won't feel awkward arriving alone. A bowl of dumplings at the counter or a shared table is a practical, low-friction solo lunch in the 19th.

    Does Guo Xin Ravioli handle dietary restrictions?

    Specific dietary accommodation details are not documented. Given the focused, dumpling-centric menu format typical of spots like this on Rue de Belleville, options for strict vegetarians or those with gluten restrictions are likely limited — call ahead or arrive ready to ask directly.

    What should I order at Guo Xin Ravioli?

    The ravioli — dumplings — are the reason to come, ordering those in quantity is the straightforward move. Specific dish details are not on record here, but the name of the restaurant is the clearest menu signal you need: this is not a multi-cuisine operation.

    Location

    47 Rue de Belleville, 75019 Paris, France

    Compare Guo Xin Ravioli

    The Complete Picture: Guo Xin Ravioli and Peers
    VenueCuisineAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Guo Xin RavioliEasy
    Alléno Paris au Pavillon LedoyenCreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    KeiContemporary French, Modern CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    L'AmbroisieFrench, Classic CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Le Cinq - Four Seasons Hôtel George VFrench, Modern CuisineMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Pierre GagnaireFrench, CreativeMichelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.

    Also Consider

    Comparing Guo Xin Ravioli against Paris's marquee restaurant names is only useful as a calibration exercise. Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen, L'Ambroisie, and Le Cinq at the Four Seasons George V are all €€€€ propositions with deep wine lists, formal service, booking windows measured in weeks or months. Guo Xin is none of those things, and that is not a criticism. It occupies a completely different tier: low price, walk-in friendly, zero wine ambition, maximum value for what it does.

    If your question is where to eat well in Paris for under €20 a head, Guo Xin is a serious answer on the Belleville strip. If your question is where to spend a meaningful evening with a wine list worth studying, Kei offers a French-Japanese bridge at the higher end, while Arpège remains the benchmark for produce-led cooking with a cellar to match. For classic French formality, L'Ambroisie in the Marais is harder to book and considerably more expensive, but the gap in experience justifies it for a special occasion.

    The practical recommendation: use Guo Xin as part of a broader Paris eating strategy rather than as a standalone destination. Pair a weekday lunch here with an evening booking at Kei or Le Cinq if budget allows, you will cover both ends of what Paris does well. Guo Xin wins on accessibility and value; the €€€€ tier wins on depth and occasion. They are not competing for the same booking.

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