A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (2024)

It’s a safe bet that you could take the 7 train to Flushing's Chinatown every single day of the week for a year straight and never eat the same meal twice. Sprawling out along Main Street and Roosevelt Avenue, the biggest Chinatown in Queens is also the biggest (and most diverse) Chinatown in all of New York City — and one of the largest by population in the world. Tens of thousands of Chinese and Chinese-Americans call Flushing home, and it can feel like there’s a restaurant for each resident. From the packed food courts to the opulent two-story dinner parlors, the range and scope of Flushing’s culinary scene is both impressive and imposing.

All those options make finding something to eat a breeze, but it can also create serious decision paralysis. Flushing can be overwhelming, particularly if you don’t speak Mandarin or if you’re unfamiliar with cuisines and dishes that don’t usually make their way onto the more Westernized menus you’ll find in Manhattan’s Chinatown. But if you’re willing to take the plunge, Flushing will reward you with some of the best food in the city at any hour of the day and for every meal imaginable. Here’s our guide to the best eats in Chinatown for every need.

If Your Usual Breakfast Isn't Cutting It

We get it: sometimes you’re not up for waiting on line at your neighborhood deli for yet another bacon egg and cheese sandwich, and sometimes that bowl of oatmeal looks awfully unappetizing. The solution to your breakfast woes lies in Flushing, where you can opt for either traditional to-go bites or settle in for a more decadent morning meal.

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (1)
A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (2)

If neither time nor your wallet is on your side, Flushing has a variety of counter joints, bakeries and coffee shops that cater to the commuter on the go, offering commonplace Chinese breakfast items like congee, noodle soup or pastries. At Eight Jane (37-12 Main Street), right next to Busy Mall, you can quickly snap up one of China’s most popular and recognizable breakfast foods: jian bing. Essentially a crepe with egg in the middle, the jian bing is cheap, hearty, comes together in a flash, and is perfect for eating on the run. It’s a tight squeeze at Eight Jane, with barely enough room for two or three people to stand inside at the counter, but if you can make your way in, you can watch as the cooks make your jian bing in front of you, spreading the batter on sizzling hot plates and then folding warm soft eggs into the mix.

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (3)

Fu Yuan (135-43 Roosevelt Avenue) takes up even less space than Eight Jane, operating as a kitchen with a walk-up window in a tiny space about the size of your average apartment bathroom. But they produce big flavors in sizable servings, producing steamed rice rolls, congee and soup for early-morning commuters. The steamed rice rolls are the specialty, and the largest portion will only run you $7.25. Or you can get a container of rice noodles with sauce and some delectable fish balls on top for a satisfying start to the day.

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (4)
A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (5)

Have a bit more time on your hands? Make the trek down Main Street toward the Queens Botanical Garden and get a table at Kong Sihk Tong (42-35 Main Street), a Hong Kong-style breakfast joint that also has a location on Bayard Street in Manhattan’s Chinatown. The Flushing outpost is spacious and bright, with subway tile and pastel colors alongside a neon depiction of the Hong Kong skyline and a huge mural of Chinese street life. Come for the ambience and milk tea, stay for the decadent golden lava French toast — two slices of white bread coated in condensed milk and fried with a salted egg yolk custard filling. It’s a Hong Kong delicacy, and one you’ll come back for again and again.

If You’re in Need of Lunch But Your Checking Account Is in Need of a Break

The midday meal is where Flushing truly shines thanks to its abundance of low-cost eateries. You truly can’t go wrong in picking a lunch spot, but if your budget is tight, here are a few places where you’ll get the most bang for your buck.

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (6)
A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (7)

White Bear (135-02 Roosevelt Avenue) is well-known in the New York food scene for its wontons, which come doused in chili oil. They’ve long been a favorite of Flushing visitors, and with good reason: stuffed with pork and vegetables, they’re doughy but not rubbery, and the combination of chili oil, charred chiles and pickled vegetables layered on top bring a beautiful combo of heat, acid and umami to the dish. Best of all, you’ll pay a mere $10 for a dozen.

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (8)

Closer to the 7 train and right inside the venerable Landmark Quest Mall is another Flushing stalwart: Joe’s Steam Rice Roll (136-21 Roosevelt Avenue). Step through the doors and you’ll be greeted on the left by a sizable kitchen with a small counter that churns out rice rolls by the dozen. Silky and soft, these rolls come stuffed with ingredients; take the Joe’s Signature, which has beef, beef sausage, pork, dried shrimp, eggs, and your choice of vegetables. At peak lunch hours, it might be a struggle to find a seat, but given that your hefty plate cost just $10, you won’t mind standing up as you wolf it down.

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (9)

Main Street and Roosevelt Avenue are the main thoroughfares in Chinatown, and great restaurants can easily be found along both. A little off the beaten path, though, you can find some fantastic older and overlooked places that specialize in quick and satisfying meals on the cheap. Case in point: Prince Noodle & Cafe (40-09 Prince Street), a corner spot that dishes out superb wonton soups. The shrimp wonton noodle soup in particular is a winner, with walnut-sized wontons crammed with pork and shrimp paired with simple yet excellent noodles and a nicely salted broth.

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (10)
A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (11)

Some of the best food in Flushing can be some of the hardest to find, and Han Song Ting (37-02 Main Street) definitely qualifies as both. You won’t find any signage for this small lunch counter on the street; instead, you have to enter a mall on Main Street — it’s the same building that houses the Windsor School — and walk past storefronts selling jewelry and furniture. At the back, you’ll find some round wooden tables with high-backed chairs, a small kitchen, and some of the best malatang (a spicy hotpot that originated as Sichuan street food) in the neighborhood. Order it with your choice of meat, and don’t skip out on the small plate of hot sauce you’re given; you don’t know it yet, but you and that sauce are about to become best friends. Liberally apply it to every bite and enjoy.

If You Want To Take a Culinary Tour of China Without Going To China

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (12)

Food courts dominate the Flushing food scene, and none is better than the one in the basem*nt of New World Mall (136-20 Roosevelt Avenue). Over two dozen stalls (and a cotton candy vending machine!) make up this space, offering cuisine from virtually every corner of mainland China as well as Taiwan, Korea and Japan and ranging from noodles to dumplings to dessert.

There’s no optimal way to approach this expansive collection of culinary delights; your best bet is to take a lap and see what stands out. If you’re in the mood for something hard to find, sidle up to Tarim Uyghur, one of the few places in all of New York serving the traditional food of China’s Xinjiang province. A massive bowl of laghman — long pulled noodles, beef, and peppers and onions cooked together — makes for a rich and filling meal. In a similar vein, Chong Qing Noodle (stall no. 19) serves piping hot bowls of their namesake dish, a Sichuan specialty that they execute to perfection.

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (13)
A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (14)

New World Mall’s enormous portions also make it a great place to go for a group outing. You can sit down with a hubcap-sized bowl of dry hotpot from Lao Ma Mala Tang, get a pile of dumplings from Pan Bao 66, or assemble a family-style meal from various different stalls. Your curiosity and stomach will both be amply rewarded.

If Dumplings Are in Your Dreams

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (15)
A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (16)

Perhaps the best known restaurant in Flushing is the mecca of soup dumplings: Nan Xiang Xiao Long Bao (39-16 Prince Street). Originating in Shanghai, it’s a dumpling lover’s dream, with a menu offering nine different kinds of soup dumplings, plus the usual assortment of noodles, dim sum, and cold appetizers. You can’t go wrong with their traditional soup dumplings filled with pork, but don’t miss the pork and crab meat soup dumplings, or try their Lucky Six sampler if you can’t decide.

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (17)

While Nan Xiang is all the rage in Flushing, plenty of other places do terrific dumplings, too. One of the best can be found in the New York Food Court (133-35 Roosevelt Avenue): Diverse Dim Sum, aka stall no. 12 (its name is written in Hanzi). A half-dozen dumplings cost $10 and come out to you in a large metal bowl with a small container of soy sauce; there are zero frills to be found here, but who cares about that when the dumplings, hand-made at the counter, are as juicy and flavorful as these?

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (18)
A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (19)

If Your Sweet Tooth Needs Satiating

Flushing doesn’t lack for bakeries where you can buy pastries, cakes and other sweets, but all of them have the same basic selection, and none of them particularly stand out. Instead of settling for one of their pre-packaged buns, make your way to Foodie Town Flushing Food Court (135-15 40th Road), a narrow indoor mall where you’ll find the Queens outpost of the Chinatown Ice Cream Factory, as well as Mochiido. The former is a Manhattan Chinatown institution, but the latter can be found only in Flushing. Their mochi donuts are airy and soft and come in a variety of flavors, including lychee, black sesame, milk tea, and the best of the bunch, passionfruit. It’s almost impossible to walk away without buying a dozen.

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (20)

If you prefer to drink your dessert, you won’t have trouble finding a tea or coffee shop that can meet your needs. Among the many contenders, consider this a vote for Happy Lemon, located in New York Food Court. This semi-national chain is big in California, but Flushing is its only brick-and-mortar in New York. Known for their salted cheese teas, they also have milk tea, slushies, smoothies, and specialty fruit teas, plus bubble waffles if you do decide you want to chew instead of sip on something.

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (21)Subway

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (22)

Port Washington

Flushing's Chinatown can be reached via the LIRR or the 7 train at the Flushing-Main St station

Plan Trip

Got a favorite spot or dish in Flushing's Chinatown? Be sure to tag @MTAaway in your photos on Instagram.

Check out all of our NYC Chinatown Guides:

  • Chinatown - Manhattan

  • Chinatown - Sunset Park

  • Chinatown - Flushing

A Guide to Dining Out in NYC's Biggest Chinatown: Flushing, Queens (2024)

FAQs

Is Flushing, Chinatown worth visiting? ›

If your a fan of hand ripped noodles or soup dumplings you have to visit downtown Flushing. You can easily spend a whole day shopping and eating amazing food at the New World mall or any of the hundred other Asian restaurants.

How to spend a day in Flushing? ›

Top Attractions in Flushing
  1. Citi Field. 1,470. Arenas & Stadiums. ...
  2. Flushing Meadows Corona Park. 404. Parks. ...
  3. USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center. 448. Arenas & Stadiums. ...
  4. US Open. 341. ...
  5. Queens Zoo. 263. ...
  6. New York Hall of Science. 323. ...
  7. Hindu Temple Society of North America. Historic Sites. ...
  8. Downtown Flushing. Neighborhoods.

Is Flushing Chinatown bigger than Manhattan Chinatown? ›

Sprawling out along Main Street and Roosevelt Avenue, the biggest Chinatown in Queens is also the biggest (and most diverse) Chinatown in all of New York City — and one of the largest by population in the world.

What is the difference between Flushing and Chinatown? ›

Overall, Chinatown Manhattan looks a lot like the older, working class neighborhoods of Chinese cities. Flushing, in contrast, offers a much more fast-paced way of living. You'll see a lot of young people in the streets sporting the latest Chinese street fashion and dining and shopping at chic and modern places.

What is the best street to walk down in Chinatown NYC? ›

Walk north on Bowery and turn left onto Doyers Street

Doyers is the most "Chinatowny" street in…well, the world. You may recognize the street from films and TV programs. Today you'll find the local post office, one of Chinatown's first dim sum restaurants, teahouses and barber shops aplenty.

Which Chinatown is better in NYC? ›

Manhattan Chinatown: NYC's First Chinatown. The most popular Chinatown in the city was the first established Chinatown in the city. Chinese immigrants began settling in the neighborhood in the 1850s, creating a small community that blossomed over the decades into a thriving Chinatown.

Why is Flushing famous? ›

Flushing Chinatown, or Mandarin Town is the world's largest and one of the fastest-growing Chinatowns, known as the "Chinese Times Square" or the "Chinese Manhattan". In Mandarin, Flushing is known as "Falasheng" (Chinese: 法拉盛; pinyin: Fǎlāshèng).

Is Flushing NY walkable? ›

Most errands can be accomplished on foot in Flushing New York. Flushing is the 101st most walkable neighborhood in New York with a Walk Score of 89.

What does Flushing mean in New York? ›

The neighborhood of Flushing in Queens, New York City, got its name from the Dutch word "Vlissingen", which means "flowing water". The area was originally inhabited by the Matineco*ck Native American tribe before being settled by the Dutch in the mid-17th century.

Is Chinatown NYC cash only? ›

Pro tip: Many if not most Chinatown businesses are cash only, so be sure to bring some paper money to avoid having to track down ATMs.

What is the most famous street in Chinatown? ›

Canal Street is the main thoroughfare of NY's Chinatown. Plenty of shopping and Asian markets. Definitely a great walk through a neighborhood with a rich history.

How big is the Flushing Chinatown? ›

The Flushing Chinatown houses over 30,000 individuals born in China alone, the largest Chinatown by this metric outside Asia and one of the largest and fastest-growing Chinatowns in the world.

Is Flushing worth visiting? ›

Whether you're looking to check out the interesting historical landmarks, taste some incredible Chinese food, or have your mind blown by an entirely unique museum exhibit, you'll find countless reasons to love the area.

Is Chinatown in NYC worth visiting? ›

Home to the city's largest Asian community, Chinatown is the best spot in New York to find not just incredible Chinese restaurants but also Thai, Vietnamese, and Malaysian fare. Though savoring memorable meals is certainly a must-do, there's more to see and explore in Chinatown beyond eating.

Is Flushing NY a nice area? ›

Flushing is a nice neighborhood with a lot of culture and diversity. People are very friendly and you can often find community within the residents.

Is Chinatown worth visiting? ›

Chinatown, NYC is its own destination. A great place for bargain shopping, food, history, and the chance to soak in Chinese immigrant culture. It's a fantastic NYC neighborhood.

Is Flushing Meadows worth a visit? ›

One of the city's most iconic parks, and the site of two twentieth century World's Fairs, Flushing Meadows Corona Park continues to draw and delight visitors.

Is Chinatown worth visiting in Chicago? ›

Chicago's own Chinatown features beautiful Chinese-style buildings, as well as exotic dining and shopping experiences that have made the neighborhood a popular destination for visitors and locals alike. Established in the 19th century, Chicago's Chinatown is one of the largest in the country.

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