Restaurant in Shanghai, China
唐阁 Tang court
385Pearl PointsLa Liste-ranked Cantonese; know before booking.

About 唐阁 Tang court
Tang Court brings Cantonese fine dining to the heart of Huangpu, backed by La Liste recognition (82 points, 2026). It's a practical choice for business dinners and group occasions where Cantonese cuisine fits the brief. Booking is rated easy, making last-minute reservations more feasible than at comparable Shanghai venues — though private room bookings warrant more lead time.
Should You Book Tang Court?
Without published pricing data, it's difficult to place Tang Court on a precise value curve — but its position on the La Liste global ranking (82 points in 2026, 85 points in 2025) puts it in company that justifies treating a reservation here as a considered occasion spend rather than a casual dinner. If you're planning a business meal, a celebration, or a group event in Shanghai and Cantonese cuisine fits the brief, Tang Court at 740 Hankou Road in Huangpu belongs on your shortlist. Book when you know your date — more on timing below.
The Portrait
Tang Court's address in the Huangpu district places it in the commercial and cultural heart of Shanghai, within reach of the Bund and the city's main business corridors. That location is not incidental: it reinforces this as a venue suited to formal occasion dining, whether that means a client dinner, a milestone celebration, or a group gathering where the setting needs to do some of the work.
The cuisine is Cantonese, a category that, at this tier, typically means careful sourcing, classical technique applied to seafood, poultry, slow-cooked preparations, a kitchen that treats the original Guangdong repertoire as something worth preserving rather than reinterpreting. For diners choosing between Cantonese and, say, the modern European menus at Taian Table or the Italian offering at 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana, the question comes down to what the occasion calls for. Cantonese at this level tends to be quieter in register, refined rather than theatrical, which makes it a strong choice for business meals where conversation matters.
On the sensory front, a kitchen running at this standard typically carries a distinctive aromatic profile: the warm, clean fragrance of steamed preparations and slow-simmered stocks rather than the high-heat wok smoke of casual Cantonese. That's a general characteristic of the style rather than a venue-specific claim, but it shapes the atmosphere in ways that matter for special occasions, it reads calm and considered, not frenetic.
La Liste's scoring system draws on a wide range of published critical and consumer sources globally, so an 82-point position in 2026 reflects consistent recognition across multiple inputs. The slight drop from 85 points in 2025 is worth noting, not as a red flag, but as a signal to verify current form before booking a high-stakes dinner.
Private and Group Dining
For groups and private occasions, Tang Court's Huangpu location and Cantonese positioning make it a practical choice in a city where finding a serious Chinese restaurant that handles private dining well, that international guests or senior local clients will recognise by reputation, can take real effort. La Liste recognition carries weight in business dining contexts, Cantonese cuisine is broadly acceptable across a wide range of dietary and cultural backgrounds, which matters when you're organising for a mixed group.
Specific private room configurations, minimum spends, capacity details are not available in our current data. Contact the restaurant directly to confirm what group sizes they accommodate and whether semi-private or fully private space is bookable on your preferred date. For a group-dining benchmark in Shanghai, 102 House is worth comparing, as is Xin Rong Ji (West Nanjing Road) if Taizhou-style Chinese is acceptable to your group.
If Cantonese group dining is the priority and you want regional comparisons beyond Shanghai, Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau and Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine in Guangzhou operate at a comparable tier. Within China more broadly, Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing and Ru Yuan in Hangzhou round out the picture of where Tang Court sits in the wider Cantonese fine dining conversation.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 740 Hankou Rd, Huangpu, Shanghai 200003
- Cuisine: Cantonese
- La Liste 2026: 82 points (85 points in 2025)
- Booking difficulty: Easy, no evidence of the scarcity that affects venues like Fu He Hui or Taian Table
- How far ahead: For weekend or holiday evenings, 1–2 weeks is a reasonable buffer; for large group or private room bookings, 3–4 weeks minimum
- Phone / Website: Not currently in our database, check Google Maps or the hotel directly for contact details
- Price range: Not published, contact the restaurant to confirm current menu pricing before a high-stakes booking
- Dress code: Not stated, but Cantonese fine dining at La Liste-recognised venues in China typically expects smart casual at minimum; business attire is safe for client dinners
Broader Shanghai Context
Tang Court is one reference point in a rich dining city. For a fuller picture of where to eat, stay, drink, explore, see our full Shanghai restaurants guide, our Shanghai hotels guide, our Shanghai bars guide, our Shanghai wineries guide, and our Shanghai experiences guide. For vegetarian fine dining, Fu He Hui is the strongest Shanghai option at this price tier. For a different angle on precision tasting menus, Taian Table is the modern European benchmark in the city. And if you want to see how Cantonese cooking of this calibre compares to what top-tier kitchens look like in New York, Le Bernardin and Atomix offer useful reference points for the same level of ambition in a different culinary tradition.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can 唐阁 Tang court accommodate groups?
Tang Court's Huangpu location and Cantonese format make it a practical option for group bookings in central Shanghai — Cantonese restaurants at this tier typically offer private rooms for larger parties. check the venue's official channels via its address at 740 Hankou Rd to confirm room availability and minimum spend. For groups that need a guaranteed private dining setup, asking about room configuration when you enquire is worth doing upfront.
How far ahead should I book 唐阁 Tang court?
Book at least two to three weeks out, particularly for weekend evenings — La Liste-ranked venues in Shanghai's Huangpu district fill quickly with both local and business clientele. Mid-week lunch slots typically carry more availability. No online booking portal is listed in current data, so check the venue's official channels at 740 Hankou Rd, Huangpu.
Does 唐阁 Tang court handle dietary restrictions?
Cantonese kitchens at this level generally have the range to accommodate common dietary needs, but Tang Court's specific policy isn't documented in current data. Flag restrictions clearly when booking — Cantonese cuisine uses shellfish, pork, seafood-based stocks extensively, so advance notice matters more here than in some other formats.
What is 唐阁 Tang court known for?
唐阁 Tang court is primarily known for Cantonese Cuisine in Shanghai.
Location
99 Madang Road, Xintiandi, Shanghai 200021, China
Shanghai, China
Compare 唐阁 Tang court
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| 唐阁 Tang court | Cantonese Cuisine | La Liste Top Restaurants (2026): 82pts; La Liste Top Restaurants (2025): 85pts | Easy |
| Fu He Hui | Vegetarian | Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 Best | Unknown |
| Ming Court | Cantonese | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown |
| Polux | French | Unknown | |
| Royal China Club | Chinese, Cantonese | Unknown | |
| Scarpetta | Italian | Unknown |
How 唐阁 Tang court stacks up against the competition.
Also Consider
- Fu He Hui, Vegetarian, ¥¥¥¥
- Ming Court, Cantonese, ¥¥¥
- Polux, French, ¥¥
- Royal China Club, Chinese, Cantonese, ¥¥¥
- Scarpetta, Italian, ¥¥¥
Among Shanghai's La Liste-recognised Chinese restaurants, Tang Court occupies a considered middle ground. Fu He Hui is the stronger choice if your group includes vegetarians or if you want a more conceptual, produce-driven experience, but it books out weeks in advance and commands a ¥¥¥¥ price tag. Tang Court, rated easy to book and rooted in classical Cantonese, is the lower-friction option for a formal Chinese dinner without the advance planning that Fu He Hui demands.
Ming Court and Royal China Club both operate in Cantonese territory at a ¥¥¥ tier and are worth comparing on price, if your budget is the deciding factor, either could deliver a comparable category experience at lower cost. Tang Court's La Liste positioning gives it a clearer credential for high-stakes occasions where the venue's reputation needs to carry weight with guests. For those occasions, Tang Court is the safer call over its ¥¥¥ Cantonese peers.
If Cantonese isn't a requirement, Polux at ¥¥ offers French bistro cooking at a fraction of the price, appropriate for informal entertaining but not a substitute for a formal client dinner. Scarpetta at ¥¥¥ fills the Italian slot if Western cuisine fits the group better. For a special occasion where Cantonese fine dining is specifically the goal and international recognition matters, Tang Court is the most defensible booking in this peer set.
Recognized By
Explore Shanghai
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