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🥟 Taipei Eater's Guide · Updated 2026

Beyond Din Tai Fung —
8 Xiaolongbao Shops in Taipei That Hold Their Own 2026

Lift it gently, the skin so thin it trembles on the spoon, nibble a hole and a rush of hot, sweet broth pours out — this is the soup dumpling that carried Taipei's name around the world. We unpack what it is, how Din Tai Fung grew from a cooking-oil shop, how to eat one without scalding yourself, and 8 Taipei shops you can actually walk into.

The Story

The soup-filled dumplingthat carried Taipei's name around the world

Xiaolongbao (小籠包) translates literally as "little steamer-basket bun" — but the magic is what hides inside: a thin, beautifully pleated skin wrapping minced pork together with a chilled cube of rich, jellied stock. Set the basket over steam and that jelly melts into a pool of scalding broth, so a single bite delivers meat, dough and a spoonful of soup all at once. The dumpling itself was born around Nanxiang and Shanghai on the Chinese mainland — but the world came to know it through Taipei, the city that turned a humble dim-sum item into a craft worthy of a Michelin nod.

To tell the story of Taipei xiaolongbao, you have to start with Din Tai Fung (鼎泰豐) — and its origin is anything but ordinary. In 1958, husband and wife Yang Bing-yi and Lai Penmei opened not a restaurant but a cooking-oil shop. By the early 1970s the traditional oil trade collapsed as mass-produced salad oil took over. A friend who ran a Shanghai restaurant suggested they switch to delicate Shanghainese dim sum — and in 1972 Din Tai Fung began selling xiaolongbao from a small red-brick storefront on Xinyi Road, near Yongkang Street. The shop sign was the calligraphy of a prominent figure of the era. Today that original store is takeaway-only, while the dine-in restaurant has moved into a four-storey, 330-seat building across the road.

A bamboo steamer of xiaolongbao soup dumplings on Yongkang Street, Taipei, the pleated skins resting on a leaf
A steamer of xiaolongbao in the Yongkang Street area of Taipei — pleated skins waiting for the steam

The 18-fold standard is what turned Din Tai Fung into a legend. Yang Chi-hua, the next-generation son, mastered the pleating and helped devise the formula that became the brand's signature — every xiaolongbao carrying exactly 18 pleats, its weight controlled to the gram, the skin rolled so thin it is almost translucent yet never tears. That obsessive consistency carried the shop from a single storefront to a global brand with branches across Asia, the Americas and Europe, complete with Michelin Guide recognition.

But here is the secret every Taipei local knows — great xiaolongbao is not only at Din Tai Fung. The city is dotted with old-school restaurants and tiny storefront shops turning out soup baskets that rival it, or that some eaters love even more, at half the price and a fraction of the queue. This guide takes you into both worlds.

🥟
Soup in one bite
A jelly of stock melts into hot broth as it steams — meat, skin and soup in a single mouthful
📐
The 18-fold standard
The formula Din Tai Fung perfected — the legend of the paper-thin pleated skin
📍
8 Taipei shops
From global chain to backstreet storefront — each with neighbourhood, MRT and price
Several Michelin names
Din Tai Fung and several rivals carry recognition in the Michelin Guide
Before You Eat

How to eat a xiaolongbao —5 steps that save your tongue

The broth inside is always scalding. Eating a soup dumpling has its own little ritual — follow these five steps for both the flavour and the safety.

A xiaolongbao soup dumpling resting on a Chinese soup spoon, ready to be nibbled open
Always rest the dumpling on a soup spoon first — the spoon is your safety net against spilled broth

The Chinese soup spoon is your best friend here. The classic beginner's mistake is grabbing a whole xiaolongbao straight into your mouth — and the broth, hot enough to bubble, instantly burns the roof of your mouth. Rest it on the spoon, let it cool, then work through the rhythm. You'll get to taste that broth — deep and sweet from pork bones and skin slow-cooked into gelatine — which is the single best part of the whole dumpling.

1

Lift it by the knot, not the middle

Use your chopsticks to pick the dumpling up by the pleated knot at the top, gently. Never grab it around the middle — the thin skin tears and the soup runs straight out, leaving you with a deflated wrapper and regret.

2

Set it down on a soup spoon

Move the dumpling onto your Chinese soup spoon. The spoon catches every drop if the skin happens to split, and gives the dumpling a place to rest and cool for 10–20 seconds — don't rush.

3

Nibble a small hole in the side

Use your front teeth to nibble a tiny release hole in the side of the skin. A puff of steam will escape — that's your signal the soup inside is still scalding. Let it ease off before the next step.

4

Sip the broth from the spoon

Gently sip the hot broth that pools onto the spoon or runs from the hole. This is the heart of the xiaolongbao — sweet, deep stock from pork gelatine that liquefied in the steamer. Savour it fully before eating the rest.

5

Dip in ginger + black vinegar

Drizzle Zhenjiang black vinegar into the spoon, lay slivered ginger on the dumpling, and eat the whole thing in one bite. The vinegar's tang and the ginger's bite cut the richness of the pork — the classic ratio is generous ginger and just enough vinegar to coat.

8 Shops to Try

The soup baskets Taipei isproudest of — from global chain to storefront

We've picked 8 shops that local eaters and food guides come back to again and again — each with what it's known for, the neighbourhood, nearest MRT, rough price and queue notes.

🥟🏆 The world-famous legend1
Din Tai Fung
鼎泰豐 · Since 1972

The shop that carried xiaolongbao around the world — it began as a cooking-oil store on Xinyi Road and grew into a Michelin-recognised brand. The hallmark is precision: 18 identical pleats on every dumpling, a skin rolled paper-thin, a glass kitchen on view. The menu reaches well beyond soup dumplings — crab baskets, fried rice, stir-fried greens, desserts. The safest first xiaolongbao if you've never had one — at the cost of a longer queue and a higher price than the rest of this list.

Known for: exact 18-fold pleats, systematic service, glass kitchen
📍Where: origin on Xinyi Road · MRT Dongmen · many branches citywide
💵Price: about NT$250–270 for a 10-piece pork basket
Queue: same-day ticket system, long at lunch & dinner — go early or mid-afternoon
🏮💰 The budget rival2
Hangzhou Xiaolongbao
杭州小籠湯包 · Hangzhou

The shop Taipei locals name as "the Din Tai Fung alternative" — a soup basket with a slightly thicker, chewier skin and a bolder, richer broth inside, at a clearly gentler price. The main branch sits near the Chiang Kai-shek Memorial (CKS), an easy walk for any visitor. There's a queue, but it turns over faster than Din Tai Fung's, and some branches even offer creative baskets like a dark-chocolate filling to try.

Known for: chewy skin, rich broth, great value — the real DTF rival
📍Where: near CKS Memorial · MRT Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall
💵Price: about NT$150–220 per basket
Queue: busy at peak meals but moves quickly
🥢🏘️ Yongkang Street favourite3
Kao Chi
高記 · Gao Ji

A long-running Shanghainese restaurant on Yongkang Street, just around the corner from Din Tai Fung — many eaters rate the two neck and neck. The soup baskets here have a thicker, chewier skin, and the unmissable dish is the sheng jian bao (生煎包), a pan-fried bun with a crisp base and soup hiding inside too. It's a full multi-storey restaurant with a long menu, a more relaxed feel and prices below Din Tai Fung.

Known for: chewy soup baskets + legendary crisp-bottomed sheng jian bao
📍Where: Yongkang Street · MRT Dongmen, Exit 5
💵Price: pork basket about NT$180 · crab-and-egg about NT$280
Queue: large multi-floor venue, usually a shorter wait than DTF
⭐ Michelin · creative fillings4
Dian Shui Lou
點水樓 · Dian Shui Lou

A Huaiyang–Shanghainese restaurant with a Michelin Bib Gourmand that treats the xiaolongbao as an art form. It's known for creative soup baskets — crab, shrimp and truffle fillings, plus skins tinted with natural vegetable juices for a rainbow steamer. The dining room is elegant, decked in classic Chinese décor — a good choice for a special meal, or for anyone curious how far the soup dumpling can be pushed.

Known for: crab/shrimp/truffle baskets, rainbow skins, upscale setting
📍Where: Songshan branch, Nanjing E. Road · MRT Taipei Arena
💵Price: premium — roughly NT$200–320 per basket
Queue: phone reservation advised, especially dinner & weekends
🍵💵 Rich broth, easy price5
Su Hang Restaurant
蘇杭點心店 · Su Hang

A Suzhou–Hangzhou dim-sum shop beloved by budget eaters. The standout is the broth inside — darker and heavier than most, deep and full in every bite. A basket holds 8 dumplings at a very gentle price, good enough that many people order a second. The room is plain and genuinely local, and the menu also runs to soup wontons and fried snacks — proof that great xiaolongbao needn't be expensive.

Known for: dark, heavy, deeply flavoured broth · one of the best values
📍Where: Zhongzheng district · walkable from MRT Dongmen / CKS
💵Price: about NT$120–150 for a basket of 8
Queue: local shop, short queues · many such places are cash-only
🌙🏠 Homemade style6
Ming Yue Tang Bao
明月湯包 · Ming Yue

A backstreet shop in the Da'an district that wins locals over with its unfussy, homemade character — and serious skill behind it. The room looks plain, but the thin-skinned, juice-filled baskets are beautifully balanced and cost far less than Din Tai Fung. A basket holds 8, and many eaters rate it among the best xiaolongbao in Taipei at a price anyone can afford — ideal if you want to eat the way locals really do.

Known for: thin, juicy baskets, homemade style, great value
📍Where: Tonghua Street, Da'an · 5-minute walk from MRT Liuzhangli
💵Price: about NT$120 for a basket of 8
Queue: small shop, queues at peak meals — allow time at lunch
🐔🥢 Near Yongkang, fast queue7
Jin Ji Yuan
好公道金雞園 · Hao Gong Dao Jin Ji Yuan

Another Yongkang Street shop locals call "as good as Din Tai Fung" — but with a far shorter queue and a much lighter bill. The juicy soup baskets pour broth in every bite, the service is quick, and the long menu spans dim sum, rice and stir-fries. The perfect move when you reach Yongkang and find the Din Tai Fung line too long — turn the corner to here and you won't be disappointed.

Known for: juicy baskets, fast service, easy price, shorter queue
📍Where: Yongkang Street · MRT Dongmen
💵Price: about NT$130–200 per basket
Queue: short — a great backup plan in the Yongkang area
🥬🌿 Famous loofah filling8
Sheng Yuan Xiaolongbao
盛園絲瓜小籠湯包 · Sheng Yuan

A storefront shop with its own signature — a loofah xiaolongbao (絲瓜), where slivers of fresh loofah gourd are folded into the pork, giving the broth a sweeter, fresher, lighter character than an all-pork basket. It's a flavour hard to find anywhere else. The classic pork basket is well done too, prices are gentle, and the weekday queue is usually short and fast — a great pick for an eater who wants a xiaolongbao that's a little different.

Known for: loofah xiaolongbao — a fresh, sweet, hard-to-find version
📍Where: Zhongzheng district · walkable from MRT Dongmen
💵Price: about NT$120–180 per basket
Queue: usually short on weekdays, served fast
Inside the Legend

Din Tai Fung's original Xinyi Road shop —what to know before you go

A bamboo steamer of xiaolongbao at Din Tai Fung, the pleated 18-fold soup dumplings lined up inside
A steamer of xiaolongbao at Din Tai Fung — the 18-fold pleat that became a global standard

The original shop on Xinyi Road, near the mouth of Yongkang Street, is where it all began in 1972. Today that red-brick storefront is takeaway only, while the dine-in restaurant has moved into a four-storey, 330-seat building across the road. If you want a photo with the birthplace, head to the takeaway side — but to actually sit down and eat, cross to the other side of the street.

Surviving the queue: Din Tai Fung runs a same-day ticket-queue system at the door. At lunch (11.30–13.30) and dinner (18.00–20.00) the wait can stretch 30–60 minutes — arrive 10–15 minutes before opening, or aim for the mid-afternoon lull from 2–5pm. Mall branches around the city are usually quieter than the flagship. While you wait, don't miss the glass kitchen, where you can watch the chefs fold those 18 pleats live — one of the best free shows in Taipei.

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Eater's Tips

6 tipsto get the most from xiaolongbao in Taipei

🕙
Dodge the peak-queue hours
Famous shops queue hard from 11.30–13.30 and 18.00–20.00 — go before opening or in the 2–5pm lull
🥄
Always use the soup spoon
Rest every xiaolongbao on a spoon before eating — it catches spills and saves your tongue from the scalding broth
🫚
Lots of ginger, just enough vinegar
The classic ratio is generous slivered ginger with enough black vinegar to coat — it cuts the richness of the pork
💵
Carry cash for local shops
Storefront shops like Su Hang, Ming Yue and Sheng Yuan are often cash-only — keep small bills on hand
Eat the moment it's served
Xiaolongbao is best piping hot — wait too long and the skin sticks to the basket and the soup soaks away. Don't over-photograph
🗺️
Make the most of Yongkang
Din Tai Fung, Kao Chi and Jin Ji Yuan all sit in the same Yongkang area — you can graze several shops in one trip
🟠 Klook

🥟 Xiao Long Bao Cooking Class
Make Your Own Dumplings

Learn the pleating technique that gives xiao long bao their characteristic shape, make your own soup dumplings from scratch and eat them hot from the steamer. A hands-on 2–3 hour cooking class with a professional Taiwanese chef, bookable on Klook — a great gift and a lasting memory.

🛒 Check Price on Klook →
Wherebest is a Klook affiliate partner — we may earn commission at no extra cost to you
Frequently Asked

What to know beforeyou head out for xiaolongbao

How much does xiaolongbao cost in Taipei?
A standard basket of 8–10 dumplings runs about NT$120–250. Simple local shops like Ming Yue or Su Hang start around NT$120–150 per basket, while Din Tai Fung is roughly NT$250–270 for a 10-piece pork basket, with crab or truffle baskets costing more. A full meal for two with side dishes and drinks usually lands around NT$500–900. Many local shops are cash-only, so carry small bills.
How do you eat xiaolongbao properly without burning your mouth?
Pick the dumpling up gently by the pleated knot at the top — never by the middle, or the thin skin tears and the soup spills. Rest it on a soup spoon, wait 10–20 seconds for it to cool, then nibble a small hole in the side with your front teeth. Sip the hot broth from the spoon first, then add black vinegar and slivered ginger and eat the rest in one bite. The soup inside is always scalding — never pop a whole dumpling straight into your mouth.
Do you need a reservation for Din Tai Fung?
Din Tai Fung does not take advance table bookings — it uses a same-day ticket-queue system at the door (some branches let you join the queue via app or web for that day only). At lunch and dinner the wait is often 30–60 minutes or more. Arrive 10–15 minutes before opening, or go in the mid-afternoon lull from 2–5pm. Mall branches are usually quieter than the flagship. If you don't want to wait at all, pick one of the rival shops on this list — most have far shorter queues.
How is Din Tai Fung xiaolongbao different from local shops?
Din Tai Fung is all about precision — every dumpling has exactly 18 pleats, the weight is controlled to the gram, the skin is paper-thin, the service is systematic and a glass kitchen lets you watch. It's the safest first xiaolongbao if you've never had one. Local shops like Kao Chi or Su Hang tend to have a slightly thicker, chewier skin, a richer broth inside, a more casual room and prices well below Din Tai Fung — many eaters rate them just as good or even tastier.
Are there fillings other than pork — what if I don't eat pork?
The classic filling is pure minced pork, but many shops offer crab (蟹粉), shrimp, truffle or vegetable fillings. Dian Shui Lou in particular is known for its creative fillings. If you don't eat pork, ask the staff to confirm, because even some shrimp baskets are mixed with pork — or choose other dim sum on the menu such as shrimp wontons, siu mai, or a dedicated vegetable xiaolongbao.
Ready to travel

Stay around Yongkang & Dongmen
and walk to xiaolongbao every meal

Open the full Taipei travel guide to plan every meal, or start booking a stay in a neighbourhood within walking distance of Din Tai Fung, the legendary shops and the night markets.

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