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    Restaurant in Hong Kong, Hong Kong

    Rùn

    1,695pts

    Serious Cantonese worth the $$$.

    Rùn, Restaurant in Hong Kong

    About Rùn

    Rùn at the St. Regis Wan Chai is one of Hong Kong's most complete Cantonese propositions at the $$$ price point — Black Pearl Diamond recognised, with serious dim sum at lunch, full-range Cantonese at dinner, and two private dining rooms that handle group occasions better than most comparable rooms in the city. Book well ahead; availability is tight.

    Verdict: Book Rùn if You Want Serious Cantonese in a Setting That Matches the Food

    Rùn holds a Black Pearl Diamond (2025) and 84 points on La Liste's 2026 global ranking, placing it firmly in the upper tier of Cantonese dining in Hong Kong — a city where that designation means something. At $$$ per head, it costs less than the four-star Michelin rooms such as Lung King Heen or Tin Lung Heen, and it delivers a level of space and polish that most Cantonese restaurants at this price point do not. If you are visiting Hong Kong for the first time and want one Cantonese meal that covers the full range of the cuisine — dim sum, roasted meats, whole fish, double-boiled soups , this is a reliable choice.

    The Room and What to Expect as a First-Timer

    Rùn sits inside the St. Regis Hong Kong at 1 Harbour Drive, Wan Chai. The room was designed by Fu Tung-Chieh, and the aesthetic runs to beige and bronze tones, warm wood, and contemporary glass Chinese lanterns that shift the atmosphere noticeably at night. Unlike the compressed floor plans common across Hong Kong's mid-range and even high-end Cantonese rooms, the tables here are well spaced , you will not be listening to the conversation next to you. If you want natural light and a degree of privacy, request the back left corner table when booking. If a soft banquette seat matters more to you, ask for an inner table instead.

    The dress code is smart casual. That means no sportswear, but it does not require a suit. Given the St. Regis setting, err toward the smarter end of the range, particularly for dinner.

    Tea is central to the experience here in a way that goes beyond the standard pot on arrival. Resident tea master Kezia Chan oversees a list of 28 blends and can arrange a structured tea-pairing experience if you request one. The tea-infused cocktail programme is worth noting for guests who want something with alcohol that still connects to the restaurant's identity. This is not a detail you will find at comparable Cantonese rooms such as Lai Ching Heen or T'ang Court, and it gives Rùn a specific character worth using.

    Private Dining: Where Rùn Has a Clear Advantage

    The private dining offering at Rùn is one of the more practical in this category. Two private rooms are available, each with its own seating area, a large circular table with a lazy Susan, and a private bathroom. For groups celebrating a special occasion , or anyone travelling with young children or a large party where noise and shared plates are both concerns , the private rooms resolve most of the logistical problems that Chinese restaurant group dining typically creates. The circular table with a lazy Susan is not a stylistic flourish; it is functionally important for a menu built around sharing dishes.

    Compared with private dining options at Forum or the more casual formats at other Wan Chai Cantonese rooms, the St. Regis infrastructure means you get a dedicated bathroom and a sitting area , details that matter for longer meals or formal occasions. If you are organising a business dinner, a milestone birthday, or a family gathering with guests from outside Hong Kong, the private rooms here are worth requesting directly at the time of booking.

    What to Order

    The menu spans dim sum, roasted meats, steamed fish, double-boiled soups, and Chinese petit fours. The har gow (shrimp dumplings), steamed lobster dumplings with gold flakes, and deep-fried cod fish rolls with green apple are noted highlights in the dim sum section. For roasted meats, the char siu pork , marinated in honey for a sweet-savoury profile , is a consistent reference point. For dinner, the whole blue lobster and the roasted salted crispy chicken are the dishes most frequently cited. A chef's seasonal set menu is available and provides an efficient way to cover the kitchen's range if this is your first visit.

    One specific detail worth knowing: Rùn makes its XO sauce in-house, and the hotel sells it as a souvenir item. For first-timers who want to take something concrete away from the meal, this is a more useful purchase than most hotel gift-shop alternatives.

    Booking and Timing

    Rùn operates seven days a week: lunch runs 12:00–2:30 pm, dinner 6:00 pm–midnight. The midnight closing time gives it one of the longer dinner windows among comparable Cantonese rooms in Wan Chai, which is useful if your schedule is compressed earlier in the evening.

    Booking difficulty is rated Near Impossible, which reflects both the St. Regis context and the restaurant's award recognition. Plan well ahead , this is not a walk-in venue. For private dining rooms specifically, contact the restaurant directly and as far in advance as possible; these rooms are in demand for corporate and celebration bookings.

    For broader context on dining in the city, see our full Hong Kong restaurants guide. For hotel and bar options in the same area, our full Hong Kong hotels guide and our full Hong Kong bars guide cover the relevant territory. If you are extending your trip and want comparable Cantonese experiences in the region, Jade Dragon in Macau, Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau, and Summer Pavilion in Singapore offer useful points of comparison. In Taipei, Le Palais is the closest equivalent in terms of formal Cantonese positioning. For Cantonese dining in Shanghai, 102 House, Bao Li Xuan, and Canton 8 (Huangpu) represent different price-tier options worth considering.

    If tea culture is a specific interest, Le Salon de Thé de Joël Robuchon in Central takes a French approach to the same ritual. For a broader view of Hong Kong's experiential offerings beyond restaurants, see our full Hong Kong experiences guide and our full Hong Kong wineries guide.

    Quick reference: $$$ | Wan Chai, Hong Kong | Lunch 12–2:30 pm, Dinner 6 pm–midnight daily | Smart casual | Book well in advance | Private rooms available on request.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is lunch or dinner better at Rùn?

    • Lunch is the better entry point for first-timers. The dim sum programme is most relevant at lunch, and the price-per-head will generally be lower than a full dinner order. Dinner is worth it if you want the roasted meats and whole seafood dishes , particularly the blue lobster and crispy chicken , or if you are using the private dining rooms for a group occasion, where the longer midnight closing gives you more flexibility.

    Can Rùn accommodate groups?

    • Yes, and the setup is well suited to it. Two private dining rooms are available, each with a circular table, lazy Susan, dedicated sitting area, and private bathroom. For groups of 8 or more, or for any occasion where privacy matters, request a private room at the time of booking. The main dining room's well-spaced tables also handle smaller groups of 4–6 more comfortably than most comparable Cantonese rooms in Hong Kong.

    What should I wear to Rùn?

    • Smart casual is the stated dress code. Given the St. Regis setting and the Black Pearl Diamond recognition, interpret that as polished casual for lunch and closer to business casual for dinner. No sportswear, no flip-flops. A blazer for dinner is appropriate but not required.

    What should a first-timer know about Rùn?

    • Three things: first, book the tea-pairing or at minimum ask for a recommendation from the tea master , it is a genuine differentiator at this price point. Second, if you want natural light and extra privacy in the main room, request the back left corner table. Third, the seasonal set menu is the most efficient way to sample the kitchen's full range on a first visit, and it removes the ordering pressure that can slow down a table unfamiliar with the menu.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Rùn?

    • At $$$ pricing with a Black Pearl Diamond and La Liste recognition, the chef's seasonal set menu represents fair value relative to the Michelin two-star rooms in Hong Kong that charge $$$$ for a comparable format. If you are comparing to Lung King Heen or Tin Lung Heen, Rùn costs less and delivers a broader setting experience. The set menu is the recommended format for first-timers who want coverage of the kitchen's range without having to navigate an unfamiliar à la carte.

    Compare Rùn

    Value Check: Rùn and Peers
    VenuePriceBooking DifficultyValue
    Rùn$$$Near Impossible
    Ta Vie$$$$Unknown
    8 1/2 Otto e Mezzo Bombana (Hong Kong)$$$$Unknown
    Feuille$$$Unknown
    The Chairman$$Unknown
    Neighborhood$$Unknown

    Comparing your options in Hong Kong for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is lunch or dinner better at Rùn?

    Lunch is the stronger booking for dim sum: har gow, steamed lobster dumplings, and the deep-fried cod fish rolls are lunch-format dishes. Dinner opens up the full menu including whole blue lobster and roasted salted crispy chicken, and Rùn runs until midnight — one of the longer dinner windows in this category. If you want to work through the full range, dinner gives you more time and more options.

    Can Rùn accommodate groups?

    Yes, and the setup is well-suited for it. Rùn has two private dining rooms, each with its own seating area, private bathroom, and a large circular table with a lazy Susan — practical for sharing Cantonese dishes across a group. Private rooms are the right call for parties celebrating a special occasion or anyone bringing young children.

    What should I wear to Rùn?

    Smart casual is the stated dress code. In practice, that means no shorts or sportswear — the St. Regis setting and the $$$ price point both signal a step above casual. Business-casual attire is a safe baseline.

    What should a first-timer know about Rùn?

    The tea programme is a genuine draw, not just table dressing — resident tea master Kezia Chan oversees 28 blends and can arrange a tea-pairing experience. Tables are well-spaced for a Hong Kong restaurant of this calibre (Black Pearl Diamond 2025, 84pts La Liste 2026), so you won't feel crowded. Ask for the back left corner for natural light and privacy, or an inner banquette if you prefer a softer seat.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Rùn?

    The chef's seasonal set menu is the efficient route in at $$$, covering the kitchen's range — roasted meats, steamed fish, dim sum — with the option to pair with wines or teas. If you're a first visit and want to cover ground without ordering blind, the set format makes sense. For regulars who know what they want, ordering à la carte around the char siu and whole blue lobster is the better move.

    Hours

    Monday
    12–2:30 pm, 6 pm–12 am
    Tuesday
    12–2:30 pm, 6 pm–12 am
    Wednesday
    12–2:30 pm, 6 pm–12 am
    Thursday
    12–2:30 pm, 6 pm–12 am
    Friday
    12–2:30 pm, 6 pm–12 am
    Saturday
    12–2:30 pm, 6 pm–12 am
    Sunday
    12–2:30 pm, 6 pm–12 am

    Recognized By

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