Restaurant in Shanghai, China
Wujie
100Pearl PointsEasy-Plan Meal

About Wujie
Wujie is worth booking if Xuhui convenience matters more than a heavily documented destination-restaurant case. It is a practical Shanghai choice for a lower-friction meal near Tianping Road, but diners seeking a clearly defined Shanghainese or Cantonese brief should also compare Hao Sheng, Jesse (Xin Jishi), and Hang Yuen Hin.
Is Wujie in Shanghai worth considering? It can be, especially when the priority is a practical dining plan in Shanghai with clear daily hours. The verified details are limited, so the safest way to think about Wujie is as a direct option rather than a page built around unverified claims about cuisine, awards, chef identity, price, or signature dishes.
A Shanghai choice for a lower-friction meal
The clearest case for going is practical: Wujie is listed as open daily from 10 AM to 10 PM, which gives diners a broad window for planning. The verified dress code is smart casual. Beyond those basics, there are no confirmed details here for awards, chef profile, price tier, menu format, or specific dishes, so treat it as a convenience-led choice and confirm current details directly with the venue before making firm plans.
For travelers comparing dining options, the safer move is to match the plan to the occasion. Choose Wujie when the daily 10 AM–10 PM schedule and smart-casual setting fit the itinerary. You can also compare it with Hao Sheng, Jesse (Xin Jishi), or Hang Yuen Hin if you want to weigh other dining options before deciding.
Who should book it, who should cross-shop
Book here when the meal needs to be easy to fit into a Shanghai itinerary. Wujie suits diners who value clear daily hours and a smart-casual expectation more than a heavily documented culinary identity. It is less convincing for a once-per-trip dinner where price, awards, chef reputation, signature dishes need to be clear before committing.
If this is a special occasion, cross-shop first. The Merchants 大酉 and LA BELLA VITA may be worth comparing when you want to consider other options, though the available verified details do not support a like-for-like price, cuisine, or format comparison. For a broader scan, use our full Shanghai restaurants guide; travelers building the rest of the trip can also check other Shanghai guides for hotels, bars, experiences.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Wujie?
For a smooth plan, contact Wujie ahead of time. Its verified hours are 10 AM–10 PM every day, which gives diners a broad window to fit it into a Shanghai itinerary.
Is Wujie good for a special occasion?
It can work if the occasion is about keeping the plan simple and practical. The verified details support daily 10 AM–10 PM hours and a smart-casual dress code, but they do not confirm awards, price, cuisine, menu format, or signature dishes.
Is lunch or dinner better at Wujie?
Wujie is listed as open from 10 AM to 10 PM every day, so both daytime and evening plans may be possible within those hours. There are no verified details here for a separate lunch offering or dinner format, so confirm the current schedule and menu directly with the venue.
Does Wujie handle dietary restrictions?
If dietary restrictions matter, contact Wujie before going and explain the request clearly. There is no verified dietary or allergy information here, so check the venue's official channels for the latest details.
What should I order at Wujie?
There is no verified information here on signature dishes or menu format for Wujie. Use the venue's current menu and staff guidance when deciding what to order, check official channels for the latest details before you go.
What are alternatives to Wujie?
For a different option, compare Wujie with Hao Sheng, Hang Yuen Hin, Jesse (Xin Jishi), The Merchants 大酉, and LA BELLA VITA. Wujie makes the most sense when daily 10 AM–10 PM hours and a smart-casual plan are the main confirmed factors you want to work around.
Location
392 Tianping Rd, Xujiahui, Xuhui District, Shanghai, China, 200030
Compare Wujie
| Venue | Location | Cuisine | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wujie | Shanghai | , | , |
| Hao Sheng | Shanghai | Shanghainese | ¥¥ |
| Hang Yuen Hin | Shanghai | Cantonese | ¥¥ |
| Jesse (Xin Jishi) | Shanghai | Shanghainese | , |
| The Merchants 大酉 | Shanghai | , | , |
| LA BELLA VITA | Shanghai | , | , |
How Wujie Shanghai compares with similar nearby venues.
Also Consider
- Hao Sheng, Shanghainese, ¥¥
- Hang Yuen Hin, Cantonese, ¥¥
- Jesse (Xin Jishi), Shanghainese, Shanghainese
- The Merchants 大酉, Notable alternative
- LA BELLA VITA, Notable alternative
How Wujie compares in Shanghai
Wujie is the lower-friction choice in this set: book it when Xuhui location and an easier plan matter more than a clearly labeled cuisine category or published price tier. Hao Sheng is a stronger pick for diners who want Shanghainese cooking with a known ¥¥ signal, while Jesse (Xin Jishi) is the better cross-shop when the meal needs to feel more specifically Shanghainese.
Hang Yuen Hin is the cleaner choice for a Cantonese brief at ¥¥, especially for groups that want the cuisine decision settled before they book. Wujie works better when the deciding factor is neighborhood fit rather than category certainty.
For atmosphere-led alternatives, compare The Merchants 大酉 and LA BELLA VITA. They are better cross-shops when the room or occasion matters more than Xuhui convenience, though the available details do not support a precise value ranking against Wujie.
Explore Shanghai
Save or rate Wujie on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.

