Central Texas's Thai and Chinese restaurant scenes have matured significantly, moving beyond the generic Chinese-American buffet and Americanized Thai format toward genuine cooking with authentic ingredients and technique. Here are the best options across the region.
Best Thai Restaurants
🍜 Thai Kitchen — Cedar Park (Top Pick)
Thai Kitchen Cedar Park earns 4.7 stars across 1,234 reviews for genuinely authentic Thai cooking — pad thai with the proper flavor balance, rich coconut curries built from scratch, and the BYOB policy that makes a Thai dinner feel genuinely special without the restaurant wine markup.
🍜 Royal Thai — Georgetown
Royal Thai Georgetown earns 4.6 stars across 1,102 reviews for authentic pad thai, rich curries, and the BYOB policy that has made it Georgetown's consistent favorite for Thai food nights. The spice levels are genuine — communicate your preference clearly.
Best Chinese Restaurants
🍜 Szechuan Restaurant — Georgetown
Georgetown's best Chinese restaurant earns strong ratings for Szechuan-style cooking that goes well beyond the general tso's chicken standard — properly spiced dishes, the ma la (numbing-spicy) flavors that define Szechuan cuisine, and the authentic preparations that have developed a devoted following in Georgetown's food community.
🍜 Asian Mint — Cedar Park
Asian Mint Cedar Park earns 4.6 stars across 1,234 reviews for the creative pan-Asian fusion menu that spans Thai, Chinese, and Japanese influences with genuine culinary skill. The upscale-casual atmosphere makes it the Cedar Park choice for a nicer Asian dinner occasion.
🥢 Panda Express — Cedar Park (The Reliable Fast Option)
Panda Express Cedar Park serves the Chinese-American fast food need efficiently at 4.0 stars — orange chicken, fried rice, and the format that feeds the family quickly when the dinner decision needs to happen in under 30 minutes.
- Thai spice reality: "Medium" at a genuine Thai restaurant is legitimately spicy for most American diners. "Mild" or "no spice" is the request that delivers what most people mean by "not too spicy." Be specific.
- BYOB policy: Both Thai Kitchen and Royal Thai allow BYOB with no corkage fee. Bringing a dry German Riesling or a light red like Gamay works beautifully with Thai food's sweet-savory-spicy balance.
- Szechuan vs. standard Chinese: Szechuan cuisine uses the Szechuan peppercorn, which produces a distinctive numbing-tingly sensation (ma la) alongside heat. If you've never had authentic Szechuan food, try one ma la dish before ordering the whole meal — the sensation is distinctive and not universally loved on first encounter.