7 Best Restaurants in Cotai Strip, Macau

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We've compiled the best of the best in Cotai Strip - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Chef Tam’s Seasons

$$$$ | Cotai Fodor's Choice

Cantonese chef Tam Kwok Fung creates transcendent hyperseasonal cuisine based on the 24 solar terms of the traditional Chinese calendar. His signature tasting menu changes every two weeks, in line with subtle seasonal shifts. No matter the solar term, the menu will always feature a soup and a seasonal fish dish, both of which Tam—one of the most respected figures in Cantonese cooking—layers with intricate flavors. You can also order à la carte—the dim sum is highly recommended—or opt for a fixed tasting menu, which features favorites like seasonal fish with chicken jus in fig leaf, deep-fried lobster dumplings, and noodles tossed with abalone, barbecued pork belly, and fish roe.

North

$$ | Cotai Fodor's Choice

Watch in awe as chefs slice, dice, and pull noodles at staggering speed from within the show kitchen in the center of the room. Spectacle aside, the combination of Sichuan cuisine and dishes from China’s northeast are the true stars of the show at this handsome, red and black restaurant. Try the cumin-laced lamb served with bao buns, Chongqing-style deep-fried boneless chicken with dried chili, Shanxi-style braised beef noodles, and rich and spicy mapo tofu.

The Venetian Macao, Level 1, Shop 1015, Macau, Macau
8118–8822
Known For
  • Action happening in the open kitchen
  • Northeast dishes like Shanxi braised beef noodles
  • Sichuan influences and spicy mapo tofu

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Belcanção

$$$$ | Cotai

Located next to the Four Seasons’ Bali-inspired poolside, Belcanção offers an impressive buffet spread featuring Portuguese, Indian, Chinese, Italian, and a smaller selection of Japanese dishes. The dessert and salad bars are amply stocked, and the service is impeccable. Try the honey-glazed pork, have a slice of thin-crust pizza or a sashimi platter, and wash it all down with fresh fruit juice or a glass of wine. Follow up with an egg tart for good measure.

Recommended Fodor's Video

Din Tai Fung

$$ | Cotai

The Taiwanese chain is famous for one thing above all: soup dumplings. Paper-thin wrappers encase fillings like truffle and pork, snow crab and scallop, and chicken. Pair a steamer of soup dumplings with barbecued pork buns, thin noodles in sesame sauce, and bok choy fried in a hot wok with scallion oil. There’s another branch in Studio City, too. In a part of town where it can be hard to find quality food for affordable prices, Din Tai Fung is a sure bet.

The Countdown City of Dreams, Level 2 Estrada do Istmo, Macau, Macau
8868–7348
Known For
  • Taiwanese soup dumplings
  • Wide selection of noodle dishes
  • Affordability in an expensive part of town

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Goa Nights

$$ | Cotai

This popular bar-restaurant moved from Taipa to Broadway in 2024, trading a narrow, multifloor building where food and drinks were served via dumb waiter for a more spacious ground-floor setting. Now more restaurant than bar, Goa Nights still specializes in the creative Goan and Indian flavors that long made it an expat favorite. Order pulled pork vindaloo bao and Goan curry to share, and wash it down with one of 15 cocktails inspired by Vasco da Gama’s voyages across the Portuguese world.

Av. Marginal Flor de Lotus, Macau, Macau
2856–7819
Known For
  • Full-flavored Goan curries and pan-Indian dishes
  • Cocktails inspired by Portugal's Age of Discovery
  • Juicy kebabs featuring secret spice blends

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Hawker Hawker

$$$$ | Cotai

The W Hotel’s market-inspired buffet hits all the right notes with an incredible spread that features Western classics, including Portuguese dishes, alongside Chinese, Thai, and Indian cuisine. There’s a walk-in seafood room filled with lobster, oysters, snow crab, and more, plus a loaded dessert station where you can try Macau diner classics, including the black ox (Coca-Cola with a scoop of chocolate ice cream). On top of that, the price is right, especially for the semi-buffet lunch (one main plus coffee/tea, salad, and desserts for MOP$128). You can dine for four hours. And the restaurant overlooks the faux Eiffel Tower outside the Parisian.

Studio City, Macau, Macau
8865–1366
Known For
  • Extensive selection
  • Walk-in seafood room and excellent dessert bar
  • View of the faux Eiffel Tower outside the Parisian

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The Mews

$$$$ | Cotai

A British-style horse stable might not scream high-end Thai, but it works at The Mews. Designed by Ashley Sutton (known for Bangkok bars Iron Fairies and Maggie Choo’s), this venue is full of surprises; enter through the “stable” (the bar), then a secret door reveals a dining room with Thai lanterns and wood carvings. Expect refined takes on Thai classics—red curry with grilled wagyu, stir-fried Sri Lankan crab with glass noodles, mango sticky rice—paired with Thai-inspired cocktails from the aforementioned bar.

Estrada do Istmo, Macau, Macau
8118–8822
Known For
  • Whimsical design
  • Classic Thai dishes like green curry made with a modern twist
  • World-class cocktail bar serving Thai-inspired drinks

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