Milan’s Chinese food scene is bigger than dumplings on Paolo Sarpi. Here are the most reviewed Chinese restaurants in the city, ranked by Google Maps
Milan does not have a shortage of Chinese restaurants. It has an overabundance: old-school Chinatown classics, regional noodle bars, hotpot joints, modern dim sum, Sichuan kitchens that do not apologize for anything. The problem is not finding one. The problem is knowing which ones actually matter.
Google Maps solves a piece of that puzzle. Not the taste part but it can tell you which Chinese restaurants in Milan attract the most searches, the most visits, and the most reviews. That is what this list is: the 10 most popular Chinese restaurants in Milan by Google review count, with current ratings, addresses, and exactly what kind of food you are walking into.

1. Ravioleria Sarpi 饺子馆
Google rating: 4.5 | Reviews: 4,748
Address: Via Paolo Sarpi 27
Type: Chinese dumplings, street food
No surprise here. Ravioleria Sarpi is basically the unofficial dumpling embassy of Milan’s Chinatown. Located right on Via Paolo Sarpi, it has become one of the most recognizable Chinese food spots in the city.
Its popularity comes from a perfect mix: central location, affordable bites, visible street presence, and dumplings that feel made for both locals and visitors.

2. Ta-Hua 大华
Google rating: 4.4 | Reviews: 2,674
Address: Via Gustavo Fara 15
Type: Hong Kong-style dim sum, Cantonese cuisine
Open since 1979, Ta-Hua is one of Milan’s oldest Chinese restaurants still running at full capacity. The style is Cantonese and Hong Kong-influenced: dim sum, roasted meats, classic preparations, service that feels genuinely experienced.
Located near Stazione Centrale, it is a frequent choice for group dinners and family meals that need to satisfy a wide range of expectations. More than 2,600 reviews across four decades of operation. Not a trend. A track record. Read our full review here.

3. Mao Hunan 毛湖南
Google rating: 4.4 | Reviews: 2,517
Address: Via Nicola Antonio Porpora 5
Type: Hunan cuisine, spicy Chinese dishes
For those who like Chinese food with more fire, Mao Hunan is a major name in Milan. Located near the Loreto and Città Studi side of the city, it is known for bold, spicy flavors inspired by Hunan cuisine.
The braised pork, the spicy fried chicken, the mapo tofu: all consistently praised. Mao Hunan attracts diners looking for stronger seasoning, chili heat, and a more regional Chinese dining experience.

4. Maoji Street Food 毛记
Google rating: 4.4 | Reviews: 2,439
Address: Piazza Aspromonte 43
Type: Chinese street food, noodles, casual plates
Maoji is the casual sibling of the Mao group, spun off from the same kitchen DNA that runs Mao Hunan. Street food format, faster pace, younger crowd.
Noodles, dumplings, snackable plates that work for a quick lunch or a casual dinner. With almost 2,500 reviews, Maoji has clearly found its crowd.

5. Long Chang 隆昌
Google rating: 4.0 | Reviews: 2,219
Address: Via Paolo Sarpi 42
Type: Classic Chinese restaurant, Cantonese-style dishes
A long-running name in Chinatown Milan, Long Chang has built its popularity through location, history, and familiarity. Sitting directly on Via Paolo Sarpi, it is one of those restaurants many people know simply because it has been part of the area’s food landscape for years.
The rating is a little lower than others on the list, but with over 2,200 reviews, it clearly remains a heavily visited reference point for classic Chinese dining in Paolo Sarpi.

6. Jubin 聚宾
Google rating: 3.9 | Reviews: 2,048
Address: Via Paolo Sarpi 11
Type: Traditional Chinese restaurant, broad Asian menu
Jubin is an absolute cornerstone of Milan’s Chinatown: huge, busy, visible, and very much part of the Paolo Sarpi food scene. It is the kind of restaurant people notice immediately when walking through the area, mostly because it does not do tiny and shy.
The menu is encyclopedic, covering traditional Chinese dishes alongside some Thai and sushi options. That broad approach makes Jubin practical for mixed groups, even if the rating suggests it is more of a popular, convenient institution than a flawless fine-dining temple. But clearly, people keep going.

7. Le Nove Scodelle 九碗
Google rating: 4.3 | Reviews: 2,012
Address: Viale Monza 4
Type: Sichuan cuisine, noodles, spicy dishes
“Nine Bowls” is one of the most focused Chinese restaurants in Milan. The menu leans hard into Sichuan: numbing spice, chili oil, cold sesame noodles, dishes built on the concept that flavor should land with force.
With more than 2,000 reviews, this spot has gone well beyond niche status. It has a strong following especially among Milanese diners who discovered the magic of Sichuan peppercorn. One of the better arguments for eating outside Chinatown.

8. MU Dimsum
Google rating: 4.6 | Reviews: 1,810
Address: Via Aminto Caretto 3
Type: Dim sum, modern Chinese dining
MU Dimsum runs a more refined operation than anything else here — elegantly presented dim sum, Peking duck carved tableside, a wine list that actually makes sense with the food, and interiors that justify the Instagram post even before the food arrives.
At 4.6 with 1,800+ reviews, it has built serious credibility across both volume and quality. Not the cheapest option, but the kind of place that delivers elevated Chinese cuisine with a design-conscious touch.

9. Il Gusto della Nebbia 雾味
Google rating: 4.7 | Reviews: 1,670
Address: Via Nino Bonnet 11
Type: Chongqing-style noodles, spicy regional Chinese cuisine
With the highest rating on this list, Il Gusto della Nebbia is a strong name for anyone looking for bold, spicy regional Chinese food in Milan. Located near Porta Garibaldi, It is praised for Chongqing cuisine, from a region neighboring Sichuan.
This is one of the more exciting entries because it shows how Milan’s Chinese dining scene is moving beyond generic menus. Here, the appeal is more specific: spice, texture, depth, and regional personality. In other words, food with a spine.

10. Wang Jiao 旺角
Google rating: 4.4 | Reviews: 1,662
Address: Via Padova 3
Type: Regional Chinese cuisine, spicy dishes, home-style cooking
Wang Jiao has multiple locations across Milan, and the Via Padova branch is the most reviewed. The format is generous: large portions, broad menu, lively dining room, prices that make it easy to order one more dish.
It functions as the neighborhood anchor for Chinese food in the Via Padova corridor, which has its own distinct food identity outside the Chinatown orbit.
The Takeaway
Milan’s most popular Chinese restaurants span a wide range: Ravioleria Sarpi and Maoji Street Food, win through casual energy and street-food appeal. Others, like Ta-Hua, Long Chang, and Jubin, represent the classic Chinese restaurant experience connected to Milan’s long Chinese cuisine history. Then there are more refined or regional names like MU Dimsum, Le Nove Scodelle, and Il Gusto della Nebbia, which show how diverse Chinese food in Milan has become.
Google review count measures visibility, not perfection. Still, these 10 spots are clearly among the Chinese restaurants in Milan that people search, visit, rate, and talk about the most. If you are building a map of Chinese restaurants in Milan worth knowing, this is where to start.
Have you tried any of these spots yet? Let us know your opinion, and do not forget to bookmark chinatownmilano.it for more Asian food stories, restaurant guides, and hidden spots around the city and follow us on social media @chinatownmilano.it.

