Restaurant in Shanghai, China
Xindalu
250Pearl PointsOAD-ranked tempura, easy to book.

About Xindalu
Xindalu is a consistently OAD-ranked tempura restaurant in Shanghai's Hongkou District, appearing on Opinionated About Dining's Top Restaurants in Asia list three years running. It is a reliable choice for a serious tempura experience in the city, with easy booking and a 4.3 Google rating. Confirm the exact address and pricing before you go — key logistics are not publicly listed.
Should You Book Xindalu?
Yes, with a specific caveat: Xindalu is a credible choice for tempura in Shanghai, ranked #384 on Opinionated About Dining's Leading Restaurants in Asia in 2024 and climbing to #407 in 2025 — a consistent presence on that list that signals sustained kitchen quality rather than a one-year fluke. For a first-timer looking for a reliable, recognised tempura experience in the city, this is a safer bet than an untested alternative. That said, the absence of publicly listed prices, hours, and booking channels means you will need to confirm logistics directly before committing.
What to Expect
Tempura in a serious context is a precise discipline: batter weight, oil temperature, and the order of ingredients are as controlled as any tasting-menu kitchen. Xindalu's sustained OAD recognition across three consecutive years (Recommended in 2023, #384 in 2024, #407 in 2025) suggests the kitchen is doing that work consistently. For a first-timer, the format is typically counter-style or table service with courses arriving in sequence, moving from lighter ingredients toward richer ones. Expect the kitchen's output to be the focus rather than theatrical presentation.
On the drinks side, tempura restaurants in Asia tend to pair their food with sake or Japanese highballs, and a well-matched drink order here will follow that logic — clean, cold, and low on tannin interference. Without confirmed menu data, it would be overstepping to describe specific cocktail offerings, but for first-timers: ask what the bar has available in terms of cold sake or shochu-based options when you arrive. These will complement the fried courses better than wine in most cases. If a dedicated bar program exists at Xindalu, that is worth asking about when you book, some tempura counters in this category have put real effort into Japanese spirit selections alongside their food menu.
The address places Xindalu in Hongkou District, a less tourist-heavy part of Shanghai compared to the Bund-adjacent restaurant clusters. That is relevant for first-timers: budget extra time to get there and confirm the exact location before you go, since the district is large and the venue data does not include a precise street address or coordinates.
Booking and Timing
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, which means you should be able to secure a table without weeks of advance planning. Given the OAD recognition, it is still worth booking ahead rather than walking in, recognised venues in Shanghai can fill quickly on weekends. With no phone or website listed in our current data, your leading approach is to search directly for Xindalu Hongkou on a local booking platform such as Dianping, or ask your hotel concierge to call ahead.
If you are visiting Shanghai and want to compare the tempura format against other strong options in the region, Mudan Tempura in Taipei and Numata in Osaka are two OAD-recognised tempura counters worth knowing. Closer to home in Shanghai, Numata Sou is a directly comparable local option if Xindalu is unavailable.
How It Compares
Stacking Xindalu against Shanghai's broader restaurant scene, it occupies a mid-to-upper tier on recognition metrics without the price opacity being a barrier if you are already comfortable spending at an OAD-ranked venue. For other strong Shanghai options across different cuisines, 102 House and Fu He Hui represent the vegetarian and Cantonese ends of the spectrum respectively, while Taian Table is the benchmark for modern European innovation in the city. If you want Taizhou-style Chinese, Xin Rong Ji (West Nanjing Road) is worth comparing. See our full Shanghai restaurants guide for a broader view, and check our full Shanghai bars guide and full Shanghai hotels guide for trip planning. For regional context, Xin Rong Ji in Beijing, Xin Rong Ji in Chengdu, Ru Yuan in Hangzhou, Chef Tam's Seasons in Macau, Imperial Treasure Fine Chinese Cuisine in Guangzhou, and Dai Yuet Heen in Nanjing are all Pearl-tracked options across Greater China. For more Shanghai discovery, browse our Shanghai wineries guide and Shanghai experiences guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I eat at the bar at Xindalu?
Bar or counter seating details are not confirmed in available venue data for Xindalu. For a tempura-focused format, counter seats are typically the most engaging option where available, so it is worth asking when you book. check the venue's official channels to confirm seating configurations before your visit.
What should a first-timer know about Xindalu?
Xindalu has held OAD recognition in Asia consecutively from 2023 through 2025, placing it at #384 in 2024 and #407 in 2025, which signals consistent quality rather than a one-year spike. The cuisine is tempura, a format that rewards attention to the meal's structure and pacing rather than a la carte grazing. First-timers should approach it as a focused, technique-led experience, not a general Japanese spread. Booking difficulty is rated Easy, so no months-out scramble is required.
Does Xindalu handle dietary restrictions?
No specific dietary accommodation policy is documented for Xindalu. Given that tempura relies on a batter-and-fry technique, guests with gluten intolerance or shellfish allergies should flag requirements clearly at the time of booking. Call ahead rather than assuming flexibility on the night.
How far ahead should I book Xindalu?
Booking difficulty is rated Easy, meaning a few days to a week of lead time should generally be sufficient rather than weeks of advance planning. That said, OAD-ranked venues in Shanghai can fill on weekends, so booking three to five days out for Friday or Saturday is a reasonable baseline. Midweek visits are likely the most accessible.
What should I order at Xindalu?
Specific menu items and dish details are not confirmed in available venue data, so no individual dishes can be recommended here. At a tempura-focused restaurant with OAD Asia credentials, the tempura tasting or chef-selected course is typically the format that best reflects the kitchen's strengths. Ask staff at booking whether a set course or a la carte option is available.
Can Xindalu accommodate groups?
Private dining and group capacity details are not documented for Xindalu. For groups of four or more at a tempura venue, it is worth confirming whether the kitchen can pace service for the whole table simultaneously, as tempura served to order can create timing gaps with larger parties. check the venue's official channels to discuss group logistics before committing.
Location
Hongkou District, China, 200120
Shanghai, China
Compare Xindalu
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Xindalu | Tempura | Easy | |
| Fu He Hui | Vegetarian | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Ming Court | Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Polux | French | ¥¥ | Unknown |
| Royal China Club | Chinese, Cantonese | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Scarpetta | Italian | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Also Consider
- Fu He Hui, Vegetarian, ¥¥¥¥
- Ming Court, Cantonese, ¥¥¥
- Polux, French, ¥¥
- Royal China Club, Chinese, Cantonese, ¥¥¥
- Scarpetta, Italian, ¥¥¥
Xindalu occupies a different category from most of its Shanghai competition, it is the only tempura-specialist on this comparison list, which means the right question is not whether it beats Fu He Hui or Ming Court overall, but whether tempura is the format you actually want. If you are choosing between a serious Japanese-style fried counter and a Cantonese banquet room, those are different nights out entirely.
For value at the mid-tier, Polux (French, ¥¥) is the most accessible booking on this list, easier on price, easier to get into. Scarpetta (Italian, ¥¥¥) and Royal China Club (Cantonese, ¥¥¥) are both in a similar spend range to where Xindalu likely sits, based on its OAD standing. Fu He Hui (¥¥¥¥) is the most expensive option here and is best suited to diners specifically seeking a high-end vegetarian tasting menu, it is not a general alternative to Xindalu.
If your priority is OAD-ranked quality and you are open to cuisine type, Ming Court and Royal China Club are both credible Cantonese options at a comparable tier. For a first-timer who wants a clear recommendation: book Xindalu if tempura is the specific draw, book Royal China Club if you want Cantonese in a setting that handles groups well, and book Polux if budget is a constraint. Xindalu's advantage is its niche specificity, there are very few serious tempura counters at this recognition level in Shanghai.
Recognized By
Explore Shanghai
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