Best Dim Sum Restaurants in Lower East Side (10002)
5 hand-picked restaurants, critic-reviewed and ranked
Last Updated: January 2026
Our Top Pick
Dim Sum Palace
Late-night dim sum with a full banquet-style menu in the heart of Chinatown.
Notable Picks
8.3
Dim Sum Palace is a modern Cantonese dining room on Division Street where steaming baskets of classic dumplings, rice rolls, and fried snacks run late into the night. Locals use it for both weekend dim sum feasts and post-midnight cravings when carts and bamboo steamers are still in motion.
Must-Try Dishes:
Shrimp har gow, Pork siu mai, Pan-fried turnip cake
What makes it special: Late-night dim sum with a full banquet-style menu in the heart of Chinatown.
8.2
Vibes:
Group Dining Gatherings
Family Friendly Favorites
Comfort Food Classics
Quick Bites Champions
Golden Unicorn is a multi-floor Cantonese banquet hall that helped popularize cart-pushed dim sum service in this corner of Chinatown. Families, large groups, and visiting diners pack in for classic baskets, roast meats, and the feeling of an old-school dim sum institution.
Must-Try Dishes:
Shrimp har gow, Steamed pork ribs with black bean, Rice noodle rolls with shrimp
What makes it special: A long-running banquet hall known for bustling cart-style dim sum and big round tables.
8.2
Congee Village is a sprawling Cantonese restaurant on Allen Street where big bowls of congee, family-style plates, and a focused lineup of dim sum dishes share one very distinctive dining room. It’s a go-to when you want a full sit-down meal where dumplings and rice rolls are part of a larger feast.
Must-Try Dishes:
Seafood Congee, Salt and Pepper Pork Chops, House Special Fried Rice
What makes it special: Kitschy banquet-style Cantonese with sprawling congee and stir-fry menu.
Worthy Picks
#4
Mr. Dim Sum
7.8
Vibes:
Cheap Eats Budget Brilliance
Quick Bites Champions
Solo Dining Sanctuaries
Comfort Food Classics
Mr. Dim Sum is a compact Grand Street spot focused on made-to-order dim sum plates rather than roaming carts. It’s used by nearby residents as a casual place to sit down for baskets of dumplings, buns, and noodles without committing to a massive banquet hall meal.
Must-Try Dishes:
Soup dumplings (xiao long bao), Shrimp and pork siu mai, Scallion pancake
What makes it special: A smaller, sit-down dim sum shop where baskets are cooked to order instead of rolled past you on carts.
7.6
Good Century Cafe is a narrow bakery-cafe on Grand Street where trays of buns, pastries, and a handful of dim sum-style items line the counter. It’s more grab-and-go than banquet hall, but locals rely on it for quick steamed buns, rice rolls, and sweet baked treats at very friendly prices.
Must-Try Dishes:
Steamed pork bun, Pan-fried turnip cake, Pineapple bun
What makes it special: A bakery-cafe hybrid where dim sum-style buns and snacks are sold alongside classic Chinese pastries.