Best Dim Sum in NYC: Chinatown, Flushing, and Beyond

Dim sum is not a single dish — it is a style of eating. Small plates, continuous ordering, and a table full of people sharing. Here is where to do it right in New York.

Nom Wah Tea Parlor
01

Nom Wah Tea Parlor

13 Doyers St, Chinatown
OrderShrimp rice noodle rolls, egg tarts, turnip cake, pork buns$4–8 per dish

Nom Wah opened in 1920 and is the oldest dim sum restaurant in New York. The menu is served from a paper checklist — you mark what you want and a server collects it. The egg tarts are non-negotiable. The shrimp rice noodle rolls are silky and delicate. This is the most accessible dim sum experience in the city for first-timers.

TipGo on a weekend morning between 10am and noon for the full experience. Arrive early — the wait can be 30–45 minutes by 11am.
Joe's Shanghai
02

Joe's Shanghai

9 Pell St, Chinatown
OrderPork soup dumplings (xiao long bao), 8 per order~$12 per order

Joe's Shanghai brought soup dumplings to New York and they remain the standard. The broth inside is made from pork gelatin that melts during steaming. Each dumpling contains a full mouthful of rich, porky broth. The technique for eating them is specific: place on a spoon, bite a small hole, drink the soup, then eat the dumpling.

TipDo not bite straight through — the soup is boiling hot and will burn your mouth. The technique takes one dumpling to learn and is worth learning.
Jing Fong
03

Jing Fong

20 Elizabeth St, Chinatown
OrderHar gow (shrimp dumplings), siu mai, char siu bao, egg tarts$5–10 per dish

Jing Fong is one of the largest dim sum restaurants in Manhattan. The carts still roll through the dining room on weekends — the traditional service style where you flag down servers and choose from what they are carrying. The har gow here is excellent: thin, translucent wrappers around plump shrimp.

TipWeekend cart service is the experience to have. Arrive at 10:30am for the best selection before the most popular dishes sell out.
Golden Unicorn
04

Golden Unicorn

18 E Broadway, Chinatown
OrderTurnip cake, sticky rice in lotus leaf, custard buns$5–9 per dish

Golden Unicorn is a multi-floor dim sum hall that has been operating since 1990. The sticky rice in lotus leaf — glutinous rice packed with pork, mushrooms, and Chinese sausage, steamed in a lotus leaf — is one of the best versions in the city. The custard buns, baked golden-brown, are worth ordering at the end as dessert.

TipTake the elevator to the second floor for the main dining room. The ground floor is for takeout.

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