The best restaurants in this city for 2026 are led by TíngYuàn. Runners-up by editorial rank: The Jade Cask, Moat Bar & Grill, The Bistro at 82nd, Spice Garden.
Every restaurant on the Mandalay map, ranked by our editorial team. Filter above by occasion.
$ under $40 · $$ $40–$80 · $$$ $80–$150 · $$$$ $150+ per person


New tables. Reservations opened up. The one table the city's dining reviewers are talking about this week.
Mandalay's best independent bistro. A chef-driven modern-bistro operation that runs on its own terms.
The first-date pick in Mandalay is The Bistro at 82nd — Modern Bistro, $$. The Bistro at 82nd is the Mandalay first-date restaurant for couples whose preferred register is a small, chef-driven independent rather than a hotel dining room. The room is intimate at 30 covers, the lighting is low enough to hold an attention-absorbing conversation, and the menu is chef-driven enough to be interesting but not intimidating — the right balance for an early evening with someone wh
For closing a deal or hosting serious clients, TíngYuàn is the default. TíngYuàn is the Mandalay business dinner for a serious counterparty. The dining room is a modern Cantonese interior — dark wood, lacquered screens, a private room for eight — and the service is the most disciplined in the city. The roast suckling pig is the order that signals the occasion; the wine list carries enough weight for a meaningful toast. For a foreign counterparty visiting Mandalay and
Our editorial ranking. 5 restaurants, three scores (Food, Ambience, Value), one occasion assignment.
The Mingalar Mandalay's Cantonese signature. The hotel-dining register Mandalay hadn't had before. — Modern Chinese, $$$. Best for Close a Deal.
Myanmar's first serious whisky bar. 200 bottles, a small-plates kitchen, and the best late-evening room in Mandalay. — Whisky Bar and Small Plates, $$. Best for Close a Deal.
The Hilton's all-purpose grill. Mandalay's most reliable business-dinner room for a group. — International Grill, $$$. Best for Team Dinner.
Mandalay's best independent bistro. A chef-driven modern-bistro operation that runs on its own terms. — Modern Bistro, $$. Best for First Date.
Mandalay's best Indian restaurant. A serious tandoor operation that has run for two decades. — North Indian, $$. Best for Team Dinner.
Mandalay's dining identity rests on two foundations: the Shan-Burmese culinary traditions of upper Myanmar, and the recent wave of international hotel brands — Hilton, Mercure, the new Mandalar boutiques — that have brought a measured fine-dining layer to a city previously dominated by teahouses and family-run curry shops. The result is a fine-dining map still small by regional standards, but with distinct character: the hotel restaurants focus on pan-Asian technique and the preserved colonial-era spaces around Mingalar Mandalay and 82nd Street increasingly hold restaurants worth a serious evening.
The geography is straightforward. The city centres on the Royal Palace moat, with the best restaurants clustered either inside hotel towers along 26th and 78th streets or within the 73rd-to-82nd Street boutique district that runs south from the moat. The Mingalar Mandalay development at the eastern edge of the city and the Hilton on 26th hold most of the chef-driven kitchens. Dress is smart-casual almost everywhere; Mandalay's dining scene is less formal than Yangon's, and tie-and-jacket restaurants do not exist. Alcohol is available at all hotel restaurants; local beer dominates but the wine lists at the Hilton and Mercure have grown to the point that a serious bottle can be found if the occasion requires it.
The Shan cuisine — noodles, smoked pork, fermented tea-leaf salad, tomato-based curries — is the distinct culinary identity here, and the better restaurants treat it as a serious tradition rather than a casual teahouse format. The best Shan kitchens are independent and small: family-run operations with six to twelve tables where the cook is also the owner and the menu is shaped by the morning market. The hotel dining rooms provide the Western-inflected register for business dinners and slower-paced meals; the Shan-Burmese independents carry the cultural argument.
Practicalities: reservations are essential at the Hilton and Mercure hotel restaurants during December-February tourism peak; at the independent Shan kitchens, walk-in is the norm but arriving before 7pm is advised. Tipping is appreciated — 5-10% at the hotel restaurants, less at the independents. Mandalay International Airport is 35 km south of the city; transit to the hotel district runs 45 minutes. The dry season from November to February is the cultural peak; the rainy season from June to September sees restaurants operate at reduced hours but the wet-season produce — river fish, tomatoes, fresh herbs — is at its best.
For further reading, our Close a Deal occasion guide, First Date guide, and Team Dinner guide position Mandalay's tables alongside peers across Southeast Asia. The Methodology page explains how we score.
Cities with overlapping dining DNA.