There is a particular kind of morning in San Francisco that belongs entirely to the Outer Richmond. The fog is still pressed low against the rooftops of Clement Street, the air smells faintly of salt and fresh bread, and somewhere between a Vietnamese bakery and a Russian grocery store, a line has already formed outside a narrow little shop that does not take reservations, does not have a website worth speaking of, and does not need either. That shop is Good Luck Dim Sum, and if you have not yet made the pilgrimage, you are missing one of the most satisfying meals this city has to offer.
Clement Street is often called San Francisco’s second Chinatown, and it wears that title with pride. The Richmond District neighborhood it anchors is dense, lived-in, and wonderfully unpretentious — exactly the kind of place where the best food hides in plain sight. Good Luck Dim Sum sits at 736 Clement Street, tucked between storefronts in a way that makes it easy to walk past if you are not paying attention. Pay attention.
The setup is beautifully simple. This is a takeout-style dim sum counter, not a sprawling banquet hall with rolling carts. You walk up, you point at what you want from the display of freshly made items, and you walk away with a white paper bag full of some of the most honest, carefully made dumplings and buns in the city. Prices are genuinely affordable — we are talking a few dollars for a generous portion — which means you can try four or five things without any guilt whatsoever.
The har gow, those delicate steamed shrimp dumplings with their translucent pleated wrappers, are a benchmark dish. At Good Luck, they pass the test with flying colors: the wrapper has just the right amount of give, the shrimp filling is clean and sweet, and nothing tastes like it has been sitting under a heat lamp since dawn. The pork siu mai are equally reliable — plump, well-seasoned, and generously filled. If the turnip cake is available, get it. Pan-fried until golden on the outside and tender within, it is the kind of thing that ruins you for lesser versions elsewhere.
What makes the experience feel genuinely special is the rhythm of the place. Regulars know their order before they reach the counter. The staff move with the efficiency of people who have been doing this for decades, because they have. There is no performance here, no brunch theater — just skilled hands making good food at a fair price for a neighborhood that expects nothing less.
The best strategy is to arrive on a weekend morning, somewhere between nine and eleven, before the most popular items sell out. Bring cash, bring a friend, and plan to eat on a nearby bench or take your haul back to wherever you are staying. The Richmond’s streets are pleasant for a slow walk, and Golden Gate Park is just a few blocks south if you want to stretch your legs between bites.
San Francisco has no shortage of celebrated dining destinations with long waitlists and elaborate tasting menus. Those have their place. But there is something deeply satisfying about a meal that requires nothing more than showing up, pointing at what looks good, and eating something excellent in the open air. Good Luck Dim Sum delivers exactly that, every single morning, rain or shine. Come hungry and leave extremely happy.