
Chef Tony Seafood Restaurant in Richmond, BC has held a consecutive position on Opinionated About Dining's Casual North America list since 2023, ranking as high as #101. Operating from Number 3 Road in the heart of Richmond's dense Cantonese dining corridor, it represents the kind of seafood-focused Cantonese kitchen that defines this city's reputation across the broader Canadian dining conversation.

Richmond's Seafood Corridor and Where Chef Tony Sits
Richmond, BC is not a city that eases you in gently. Number 3 Road runs through the heart of the city's commercial density, flanked by mall plazas and restaurant clusters where Cantonese seafood houses compete at a concentration found almost nowhere else in North America outside Hong Kong itself. The live-tank restaurant format — where diners select fish, crab, or shellfish from tanks and the kitchen handles the rest — is the dominant idiom here, and it sets a specific standard of freshness that landlocked dining cities simply cannot replicate. Chef Tony Seafood Restaurant, located at 4600 Number 3 Road, operates inside that tradition and has been recognised for it three consecutive years by one of the more rigorous casual-dining ranking systems in North America.
Opinionated About Dining, the data-driven ranking platform that aggregates critic and enthusiast scores to produce annual lists, placed Chef Tony at #101 in North America for casual dining in 2023, #112 in 2024, and #110 in 2025. Three consecutive appearances on that list, across years where the methodology remained consistent, is a more reliable signal than a single spike. It places the restaurant in a peer set that includes some of the most technically serious casual kitchens across the continent , a meaningful position for a Cantonese seafood house in a suburban Richmond plaza setting.
The Cantonese Approach to Raw and Live Seafood
The editorial angle that matters most at Chef Tony is not the dining room or the service format , it is the handling of raw and live product. Cantonese seafood cooking is, at its technical core, a discipline of restraint. The kitchen's job is to demonstrate the quality of the ingredient, not to mask it. This places enormous pressure on sourcing and on the moment of preparation: a steamed whole fish or a plate of raw shellfish has nowhere to hide. The wok, the steamer, and the broiler are each precise tools, but the real craft begins at the selection and holding of live product.
In raw preparation specifically , whether that means presenting live spot prawns sliced and chilled in the Cantonese sashimi style, or serving shellfish with nothing more than a dipping condiment , the kitchen commits to a transparency that few Western seafood formats attempt at the same level. The Cantonese approach to raw bar craft differs structurally from European crudo or Latin American ceviche: acidity and aromatics are used sparingly, and the freshness of the protein itself is expected to carry the dish. That is a harder standard to meet, and it is the standard by which Richmond's serious seafood kitchens are measured internally by their regular clientele.
The broader comparison is useful. Italian coastal seafood houses, such as Gambero Rosso in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica or Alici on the Amalfi Coast, work from a similar philosophy of minimal intervention with high-quality marine product, but the Cantonese live-tank model takes that transparency one step further: the animal is alive until minutes before service. The gap between that standard and what most North American cities can offer explains why Richmond's serious seafood corridor attracts diners from Vancouver proper, and why its leading kitchens earn recognition on national lists.
The Richmond Dining Context
Understanding Chef Tony requires understanding what Richmond has become as a dining destination. The city's restaurant density in the Cantonese and broader Chinese dining categories is not incidental , it reflects decades of immigration from Hong Kong and Guangdong Province, a critical mass of ingredient suppliers, and a local clientele that maintains high expectations. This is not a city where Cantonese food is offered as an approximation for non-Chinese diners. The primary audience is knowledgeable, and the competition is genuine.
Within that context, Chef Tony operates alongside a range of significant kitchens. Jade Seafood Restaurant anchors the Cantonese banquet tradition at a different price point and format. HK BBQ Master represents the roast-meat specialisation that complements rather than competes with live seafood. Thai cooking has its own presence through venues like Baan Lao, and Western formats including Lemaire Restaurant and L'Opossum round out a city with more range than its suburban reputation suggests. The full Richmond restaurant guide maps this breadth, and it contextualises why a Cantonese seafood specialist earning consecutive OAD rankings is doing so in a genuinely competitive field rather than a thin one.
Beyond Richmond, the Canadian casual dining conversation now includes venues across multiple cities and traditions. Alo in Toronto, Tanière³ in Québec City, AnnaLena in Vancouver, Jérôme Ferrer's Europea in Montreal, Narval in Rimouski, and Restaurant Pearl Morissette in Lincoln occupy very different categories and price tiers. That Chef Tony holds a position in this national ranking environment as a Cantonese seafood house , not a tasting-menu format, not a wine-driven destination , says something about how seriously the OAD methodology treats technical execution across formats.
Planning Your Visit
Chef Tony Seafood Restaurant opens for lunch service from 10:30 am Monday through Friday, and from 10:00 am on weekends, with lunch running until 3:00 pm daily. Dinner service begins at 5:00 pm and runs until 10:00 pm every day of the week. The split-session format is standard for Richmond's serious Cantonese seafood houses, and both sessions attract regulars , dim sum and seafood at lunch, larger table orders and live-tank selections at dinner. Google reviewers have rated the restaurant 3.9 across 1,742 reviews, a volume that reflects consistent traffic over time. The address at 4600 Number 3 Road, Suite 101, places it in a plaza setting that is typical for Richmond's dining infrastructure: functional, high-turnover, and focused entirely on the food rather than on architectural atmosphere.
For those building a broader Richmond itinerary, the Richmond hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the city's wider offer.
Frequently Asked Questions
Cost and Credentials
A quick peer reference to anchor this venue in its category.
| Venue | Price | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chef Tony Seafood Restaurant | Opinionated About Dining Casual in North America Ranked #110 (2025); Opinionated… | This venue | |
| Jade Seafood Restaurant | Chinese | ||
| HK BBQ Master | Chinese BBQ | ||
| Lemaire Restaurant | American | ||
| Minamishima | Japanese Sushi | ||
| Baan Lao |
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