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The best Peking duck in Hong Kong The best Peking duck in Hong Kong

Updated Jan 27, 2026
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Duddell’s Duddell’s

Cantonese   |   $ $ $ $   |   Central
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At Duddell’s, the kitchen has opted for Irish Silver Hill ducks bred with a focus on sustainable and responsible farming. These birds are first air-dried before being roasted in a Chinese barbecue oven, resulting in crispy skin and tender, succulent meat. The tableside slicing adds a touch of theatre that never fails to impress, and diners can craft their Peking duck wraps with pancakes and a secret duck sauce. For an additional price, you can also choose a second duck course: a rich and flavourful minced duck stir-fry with lettuce wraps or a braised Peking duck pot with aubergine.

Lai Ching Heen Lai Ching Heen

Cantonese   |   $ $ $ $   |   Tsim Sha Tsui
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At Lai Ching Heen, the Peking duck experience is a feast unto itself, with three courses to enjoy. It begins with crispy skin, served alongside delicate pancakes and a parade of unique garnishes and condiments to enhance the flavour. The selection includes cucumber, red chilli, spring onion, green papaya, pineapple and pomelo, paired with traditional seafood sauce, osmanthus plum sauce, and a distinctly bold Korean gochujang-inspired sauce. The second course is minced duck in fresh lettuce wraps, followed by the third dish of crispy tofu sheets rolled with minced duck, shredded carrot, Chinese and enoki mushrooms, all accompanied by a sweet wasabi sauce.

Hutong Hutong

$ $ $ $   |   Tsim Sha Tsui
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Hutong offers some of the best views in the city to enjoy Peking duck, and their bird stands out as much as the skyline. Marinated with Sichuan-style seasoning and homemade chilli paste, the duck is air-dried for 36 hours and roasted for 40 minutes. The real showstopper, though, is the tableside flambé with Chinese rose wine and rum, adding extra crispiness and a lingering floral sweetness to the flavourful meat. This is paired with steaming pancakes, condiments and a dish of shredded pickled papaya that will keep you coming back for more.

Sha Tin 18 Sha Tin 18

Cantonese   |   $ $ $ $   |   Sha Tin
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At Sha Tin 18, Peking duck is a menu highlight. The experience unfolds in three distinct stages. First, the duck, which takes 70 minutes to roast, is carved tableside, presenting thin, crispy skin to dip in sugar. Next, the duck breast and leg meat are paired with steamed pancakes, fresh cucumber, leeks and traditional tianmian, a sweet bean sauce, with garlic paste. For those seeking a more comprehensive experience, two additional courses are available: duck meat wok-fried with bean sprouts wrapped in lettuce wraps and a comforting duck soup with beancurd and cabbage. 

Xin Rong Ji Xin Rong Ji

$ $ $ $   |   Wan Chai
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Celebrated for its Taizhou cuisine, Xin Rong Ji (Tatler Best 20 Restaurant 2025 in Hong Kong) excels in many areas, and one standout is its Peking duck. Sourced from a private farm in Taizhou, the duck is served straight from the oven and meticulously carved tableside, ensuring the extra-crisp skin is perfectly separated from the tender meat. Accompanied by traditional steamed pancakes and condiments such as hawthorn jelly, spring onion and cucumber. Each guest receives individual portions to savour at their own pace.

Man Wah Man Wah

$ $ $ $   |   Central
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The Peking duck at Man Wah is roasted to a golden crisp. The succulent meat, carved tableside, is juicy without being overly fatty and served with pancakes and condiments such as cucumber, spring onion and seafood sauce. Guests can enhance their experience with a second course, choosing from options like a wok-fried minced duck with bamboo shoots and lettuce, braised duck meat with eggplant and salted fish in chilli broad bean sauce, or stir-fried duck meat with straw mushrooms and yellow chives in oyster sauce.

Yat Tung Heen Yat Tung Heen

Cantonese   |   $ $ $ $   |   Tsim Sha Tsui
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Over at Yat Tung Heen, the Peking duck is a house speciality. It is crisped with intent, then made to earn its keep over two courses. The first act offers lacquered skin (and just enough meat to remind you it once had a bird attached), tucked into steamed pancakes with cucumber, spring onion and sweet bean sauce. Then comes the smart bit: you choose the encore: minced duck for lettuce wraps if you want crunch and contrast, fried rice if you’re here for comfort, or something a touch more old-school like bitter melon with black bean sauce or braised rice noodles with shredded duck.

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Cuisine Cuisine Cuisine Cuisine

Chinese   |   $ $ $ $   |   Tsim Sha Tsui
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Cuisine Cuisine’s Peking duck comes from a kitchen that has done this often enough to skip the song and dance. Alongside the expected pancakes, sweet bean sauce, scallions and cucumber are thoughtful extras such as pickled pink ginger, its tang cutting neatly through the duck’s richness. The duck arrives exactly as it should: skin thin and audibly crisp, the meat beneath still juicy. What remains is repurposed with care, the roasted meat bathed in a lightly sweet soy sauce and served as a proper second course.