Restaurant in San Francisco, United States
Award-winning Chinese dining at an honest price.

Esquire's number-one new restaurant in the US for 2024, Four Kings delivers seriously credentialed Chinese cooking at a $$ price point that makes it the strongest value proposition in San Francisco's Chinese dining scene. Back-to-back Michelin Plates and an Opinionated About Dining Casual nod confirm this is not an accident. Book a week or two out — it's easy to get a table, and the cooking earns every award it has collected.
If you've already eaten at Mister Jiu's and want to see what Chinese cooking looks like at the casual end of the award circuit, Four Kings at 710 Commercial St in San Francisco's Financial District is your next stop. This is the right restaurant for a Tuesday dinner with someone who eats seriously but doesn't want the ceremony of a tasting menu format. It's also a strong pick for a return visit if you came once and ordered conservatively — the $$ price point means you can eat more adventurously without the bill becoming a decision.
Timing matters here. Weekday evenings tend to give you the leading version of the room: the pacing is calmer, the kitchen has more bandwidth, and the visual experience of watching a focused service unfold at this scale is easier to absorb than on a packed weekend. If you're planning a weekend visit, aim for early seating rather than peak hours. Booking is direct , this is not a restaurant where you need to camp a reservation system at midnight , so planning a week or two out should secure you a table without stress.
The credentialing here is worth taking seriously. Esquire named Four Kings the number-one new restaurant in the United States in 2024. That's a national ranking, not a regional nod, and it came alongside back-to-back Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025, an Opinionated About Dining Casual recognition for North America in 2025, and a Pearl Recommended designation. For a $$ Chinese restaurant in Chinatown-adjacent San Francisco, that's a credential stack that would be notable at any price tier.
The kitchen is led by Franky Ho and Michael Long , a dual-chef structure that, in this format, tends to produce menus with real range rather than a single dominant voice. The Chinese cuisine framing covers meaningful ground, and the casual positioning means the cooking doesn't have to perform refinement at the expense of directness. At this price point, you're not paying for theater; you're paying for the cooking itself, which is where the value sits.
Room reads as deliberately unfussy when you walk in. The visual register is spare rather than designed-to-impress, which either reads as confident restraint or as a mismatch if you're expecting something that signals its ambitions through the decor. For a repeat visitor, this is actually useful: the room doesn't distract from the food, and the service style , which at $$ pricing tends toward efficient and direct rather than guided and explanatory , is honest about what this place is. If you want a server to walk you through a tasting narrative, this is not the format. If you want to eat well without being managed through the meal, it works.
Google rating sits at 4.1 across 225 reviews, which for a restaurant with this level of critical recognition is lower than you might expect. That gap between critic consensus and public rating is often a signal worth examining: it can mean the restaurant is cooking for a specific audience rather than for the broadest possible approval. At a $$ Chinese restaurant with a national Esquire ranking, the most likely explanation is that some diners arrive expecting something more accessible and find the cooking more pointed than anticipated. For a reader who already knows what they want from serious Chinese cooking, that gap should read as a positive rather than a warning.
For context outside San Francisco, the tier of cooking Four Kings is operating in at the casual price point compares interestingly with what you'd find at Restaurant Tim Raue in Berlin or VELROSIER in Kyoto , both of which apply serious technique to Chinese culinary traditions at much higher price tiers. Four Kings is doing something rarer: keeping the price accessible while collecting credentials that run well above its bracket. Among San Francisco Chinese options, it sits clearly above China Live on cooking ambition, and operates in a different register from the regional specialists like Chuan Yu or the dumpling-focused Dumpling Home. If you're building a San Francisco eating itinerary, check our full San Francisco restaurants guide to see how it fits against the broader field.
At $$, Four Kings is not asking you to spend a lot. That changes the service calculus. You are not paying for the hospitality infrastructure of a fine-dining room , and the service style reflects that honestly. What you get instead is a kitchen that is working at a level several tiers above its price, which is a better trade than the reverse. The Michelin Plate designation confirms technical competence; the Esquire ranking confirms it translates to the plate in a way that registers nationally. If you've eaten at restaurants like The French Laundry in Napa or Alinea in Chicago and want to see what serious cooking looks like without the formal apparatus, Four Kings makes the point clearly.
The value case is strong. At the $$ tier, you can order broadly and the bill stays manageable. For a return visitor who was cautious on the first visit, this is the dinner to use as a tasting exercise: order more than you think you need, work across the menu, and treat the meal as a chance to understand the range of the kitchen rather than just the safest items. The Golden Gate Bakery nearby is a useful pre-or-post stop if you want to anchor the evening in the neighbourhood. For planning the rest of your time in the city, our guides to San Francisco hotels, bars, wineries, and experiences cover the broader picture.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Four Kings | Chinese | $$ | Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America (2025); Michelin Plate (2025); Pearl Recommended Restaurant (2025); Michelin Plate (2024); Esquire Best New Restaurants #1 (2024) | Easy | — |
| Lazy Bear | Progressive American, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Atelier Crenn | Modern French, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Benu | French - Chinese, Asian | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
| Quince | Italian, Contemporary | $$$$ | Michelin 3 Star | Unknown | — |
| Saison | Progressive American, Californian | $$$$ | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown | — |
Comparing your options in San Francisco for this tier.
Book at least two to three weeks out. Four Kings earned Esquire's number-one new restaurant spot in the United States for 2024, and that recognition drives real demand. At $$ pricing, tables move quickly and the restaurant draws a crowd well beyond the local Chinatown neighbourhood. Check availability early in the week for the best slot selection.
check the venue's official channels at 710 Commercial St before your visit, as specific dietary accommodation details are not publicly documented. Chinese kitchens at this calibre typically work with common restrictions when given advance notice, but given the casual format and $$ price point, do not assume the flexibility of a fine-dining operation. Flag your needs when booking.
Tasting menu details are not confirmed in available records for Four Kings. At $$ pricing, the restaurant's award case — Esquire #1 new restaurant in the US (2024), Michelin Plate (2024 and 2025), and Opinionated About Dining Casual recognition (2025) — suggests strong value regardless of format. If a tasting menu is offered, that credential stack makes it worth serious consideration at this price tier.
Specific menu items are not documented in current records, and Four Kings' menu evolves under chefs Franky Ho and Michael Long. The safest approach is to ask the server what the kitchen is running well that day, and to trust the seasonal direction — that editorial and award recognition from Esquire and Michelin did not come from a static menu.
Yes, clearly. At $$, Four Kings is one of the stronger value propositions in San Francisco's award restaurant circuit. Esquire called it the number-one new restaurant in the country in 2024, and it holds a Michelin Plate alongside Opinionated About Dining Casual recognition in 2025. You are getting a nationally credentialed kitchen at a price point that removes the risk from the decision.
Dress casually. Four Kings operates at the $$ price tier in a Chinatown address, and its award recognition — OAD Casual, Michelin Plate — signals a room that values food over formality. Clean, comfortable clothes are appropriate. There is no case for dressing up here the way you would for Atelier Crenn or Quince.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.