The Expert Guide for Visiting Chinatown NYC

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. Nevertheless, it can also be confusing and chaotic to the first-time visitor, which is why we’ve written this handy guide to exploring Chinatown.

Note that New York City has several Chinatowns, including communities in Flushing, Queens and Sunset Park, Brooklyn. While we’ll explore those communities in other posts, this is a tour of New York’s oldest and best-known Chinatown in lower Manhattan.

A group of people walking around Chinatown in NYC.
Exploring Chinatown can be daunting for the first-time visitor, but it’ll be well worth it for the delights you’ll find.

Chinatown NYC’s history

In the 1870s, Chinese immigrants, fleeing persecution while toiling in the American West, began arriving in New York City. A small Chinese community took root on Mott Street. Thanks to outside bigotry and the cultural divide, the immigrant community was fairly separate from the rest of New York.

In the ensuing decades, tales of opium dens, prostitution, and murders between warring Tongs led to the notion of Chinatown being a dangerous, mysterious quarter. In the early 20th century, New Yorkers in search of the “exotic” began to visit the neighborhood (particularly its restaurants). Tourism had arrived in Chinatown.

In 1965, discriminatory U.S. immigration policies against Asian countries were amended. Chinese immigrants began flooding into New York City. The main Chinatown NYC expanded into Little Italy and the Lower East Side, becoming home to several Asian cultures, as well as to Puerto Ricans, Dominicans, and hipster New Yorkers.

Chinatown NYC busy streets
Chinatown has grown from one street into a massive neighborhood full of everything you can imagine. Photo credit: Amanda Dalbjörn

What to see in Chinatown NYC

To get to Chinatown, take the N, Q, or R subway to Canal Street (at Broadway), or the 6 to Canal Street (at Lafayette Street). Before exploring Chinatown, you may want to visit MOCA, the Museum of Chinese in America, at 215 Centre Street (located one and a half blocks north of the subway stop).

The museum features exhibits on the history of Chinese immigration to the U.S., artifacts from old Chinatown, a recreation of an old Chinatown general store, and rotating exhibits on aspects of current Chinese American culture.

Once you’ve gotten a sense of Chinatown NYC’s history, it’s time to explore the neighborhood on foot.

Man walking in Chinatown NYC
The best way to explore Chinatown is to walk around the neighborhood. Photo credit: Grace Estrada

Do some shopping on Canal Street

Begin by heading east on teeming Canal Street, where you can find narrow shops and stalls selling T-shirts, scarves, jewelry, and knock-off luxury handbags, perfumes, and watches.

If you’re looking for the high-end designer fakes like Coach, Chanel, Louis Vuitton, or Rolex, you may be lured into a tiny back room.

Shops selling clothes and luxury brands in Chinatown NYC
You can find anything and everything in these shops, ask away. Photo credit: Donny Jiang

Grab a map at Chinatown Information Kiosk

Continue east on Canal until it intersects with Baxter and Walker Streets. There you’ll find the bright red Explore Chinatown Information Kiosk, which distributes maps, brochures, information, and has a handy neighborhood map on its sidewall.

There are many small restaurants and food shops selling fresh fish and seafood (including live lobsters and crabs). Along the sidewalks are food carts offering fruits and vegetables. You can find many fruits, including dragon fruit, lychee, longan, ginger, bok choy, bean sprouts and bamboo shoots.

Woman selling fruits in Chinatown NYC
Try delicious fruits for the first time, or get some fresh seafood to take home. Photo credit: Clay Banks

Explore Mulberry Street’s wide array of nicknacks

Take a right on Mulberry Street, where you’ll pass several stores selling imported gifts of jade, pottery, tea ware, an array of Buddhas, and miscellaneous nicknacks. For a great and inexpensive snack, head to Tasty Dumpling (42 Mulberry).

A few doors down, look for Fook on Sing (44 Mulberry), part of Chinatown’s Funeral Row. The tiny store sells cardboard designer handbags, sports cars, flat screen TVs, mansions (complete with paper maids and security guards), plastic bottles of Cognac, even stacks of cash.

The items, symbolic gifts for the deceased, are burned in traditional Chinese funeral practices.

Chinatown NYC during night
Day and night, you can explore and visit Chinatown to get to know the culture of Chinese American citizens. Photo credit: Elric Pxl

Explore Columbus Park and surroundings

At Bayard Street, you’ll come to Columbus Park, named for the famous explorer—and a sign that, yes, this was once an Italian immigrant community (make sure to visit NYC’s italian neighborhoods too!).

Columbus Park was created in 1897, when the decrepit tenements of Mulberry Bend (described by Jacob Riis as a “vast human pigsty”) were razed. The park is the town square for the community. It hosts local ensembles performing Chinese opera and traditional music, sports on its southern field, and old-timers gathered for intense games of Chinese Chess and poker. In the pavilion, folks practice Tai Chi and meditate.  

Ahead at Worth Street once stood the hub of the infamous Five Points, the most dangerous slum in NYC history. Most know it as the seedy setting inspiring the film “Gangs of New York.”

Men playing Chinese chess in Columbus Park, Chinatown NYC
You can find locals playing Chinese Chess, doign Tai Chi, and more. Photo credit: Clay Banks

Mott Street, the foundation of Chinatown NYC

Turn left and ascend tiny Mosco Street (one of lower Manhattan’s few remaining hills) to Mott Street, where Chinatown was founded in the 1870s. This block was the site of the first Chinese general store, restaurant, Chinese-owned building, as well as home of the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Society.

On the corner (to your left) is the Church of the Transfiguration, one of the city’s oldest churches. Since 1801, it has served immigrant communities including the Irish, Italian, and currently the Chinese, with services conducted in English, Cantonese, and Mandarin.

Heading south, you’ll pass the new Chinatown Community Center (7-9 Mott St.). This was once the famed Port Arthur Restaurant. Founded in 1897, it was the first spot to draw New Yorkers and tourists with its exotic décor and cuisine. It served “Chinese” delicacies like chop suey, chow mein, and egg foo yung.

Port Arthur Restaurant, Chinatown, NYC
Port Arthur Restaurant in 1960. Photo credit: Annie Spratt

An intersection of cultures and gastronomies

At the corner, you’ll come to Bowery/Worth Street. The large intersection here is Chatham Square, once a grand marketplace and sordid entertainment center. On the pedestrian island stands the Kim Lau Arch, a memorial to Chinese Americans who fought for the U.S. in WWII.

Just behind the island is Dim Sum Go Go, known for excellent, inexpensive dim sum, and the Trans World Buddhist Association, an information center and place of worship.

The wide street heading east is East Broadway. It’s the main drag of the newest extension of Chinatown, populated by recent Fujianese immigrants. Wandering East Broadway and the three blocks to its south you’ll encounter a thriving, authentic Chinese immigrant enclave.

Plates of dim sum in NYC's Chinatown.
Chinatown is the place to eat the most delicious Dim Sum in NYC.

Doyers Street and the Chinese Theater

Back on Bowery, head one block north to Doyers Street, the crooked lane that turns at a 90-degree angle. Legend has it that Chinese merchants designed its curve to keep straight-flying ghosts from traversing.

  • The green brick building at 5-7 Doyers was the Chinese Theater (1893-1913), where Chinese opera and music were performed, while its upper floors were a flophouse packed with cheap sleeping cubicles.
  • Under this building is a fascinating remnant of old Chinatown: a tunnel leading to the Bowery. Left over from the 18th century Doyers Distillery, which once stood where the concrete post office is today, it’s said the Tongs would sometimes use this tunnel to evade the police.
  • In fact, there were so many violent battles and murders here, Doyers was called the “Bloody Angle.” Today, you can find small offices for (ironically) law and enforcement, in the tunnel, as well as acupuncture, Chinese medical science, dentistry, a tiny shop for Chinese herbs, and Tin Sun metaphysics, famed masters of Feng Shui.
  • At 13 Doyers Street, you’ll find Nom Wah Tea Parlor, the oldest extant tea parlor/dim sum palace in Chinatown. There are several barbershops lining the street (fancy a hair cut?) that are holdovers from the era when Chinatown was a “Bachelor Society.” Laws prohibited immigrants from bringing their wives and children from China.
Chinese Barbershop in New York
Barbershops have a strong cultural significance in Chinatown. Photo credit: Drew Sullivan

Pell Street, the quintessential Chinatown NYC postcard

Doyers Street ends at Pell Street, another of the original locales of historic Chinatown. With its profusion of Chinese-character signs, it’s no surprise that postcards of quintessential Chinatown often are taken on Pell.

Turning right, you may find a crowd waiting outside Joe’s Shanghai, popular for its soup dumplings.

The red brick building on the corner of Bowery is the Edward Mooney House (18 Bowery Building), the oldest house in New York. Built in 1785, the building has been a home, tavern, hotel, pool hall, social club, restaurant, and now a local bank.

A woman holding a soup dumpling with her chopsticks.
Reward yourself with some soup dumplings!

Chinatown Ice Cream Factory

Take a left on the Bowery. At Bayard Street, take a detour to 65 Bayard for the renowned Chinatown Ice Cream Factory, serving homemade ice cream in distinct flavors like green tea, almond cookie, lychee, black sesame, red bean, and taro.

When you reach Bowery and Canal, you’ll find a large intersection leading to the monumental entrance of the Manhattan Bridge.

Chinatown Ice Cream Factory Cone in NYC
You must try the different flavors of Chinatown Ice Cream Factory. Photo credit: LabyrinthX

Mahayana Buddhist Temple

Beside the entrance, to the northeast, sits the Mahayana Buddhist Temple, a peaceful oasis amidst otherwise chaotic streets. Inside, the walls are lined with paper strips bearing prayers and names of the deceased, along with offerings of flowers, fruit, incense and snacks.

You’ll see an enormous golden seated Buddha and, to the right, a huge temple bell, right at the head of the main sanctuary.

This is an active place of worship, so it’s important to behave with discretion and respect. Be sure to buy a scroll with your fortune, or head upstairs to the gift shop for some excellent bargains.

Mahayana Buddhist Temple
The biggest Buddha sculpture in NYC awaits inside this Buddhist temple. Photo credit: Guillén Pérez

End the tour trying out everything you can at Canal Street food carts

Return to Canal Street and head west for the 5 blocks back to the subway.

Hungry? There are plenty of great restaurants on Elizabeth and Mott Streets, and the Canal Street food carts serve steamed, grilled, and fried Chinese specialties.

Person cooking at a Chinese store
Chinatown is always open to receiving you with its flavors and colors. Photo credit: Clay Banks

Update Notice: This post was updated on December 13, 2024.

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About the author

Fiona's an Irish travel writer who has made New York City her home for the past 10 years. While she frequently returns to Dublin, she's captivated by the vibrant food, diverse people, and rich culture of NYC. Fiona's passion for travel extends beyond NYC and her homeland—she frequently explores new destinations, documenting her adventures and sharing her lively stories.

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