Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong FOUR SEASONS
FOUR SEASONS

Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong

Hong Kong · Hong Kong
Top 3%
Exceptional

THE BOTTOM LINE

Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong is the most complete luxury hotel in the city — strongest on service, dining, and logistics, with rooms and a pool that justify the premium. It's not the most visually exciting hotel in Hong Kong, but for travelers who measure luxury in how they're treated rather than how the lobby photographs, nothing else on the island competes.

CHARACTER & IDENTITY

Tower-perched above IFC mall and the Airport Express, Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong is the city's reigning service-led luxury hotel — a polished, harbour-facing flagship that mostly attracts affluent business travelers, milestone celebrators, and returning Four Seasons loyalists. It sits in direct competition with the Mandarin Oriental, Rosewood, and The Peninsula; against that field, Four Seasons wins on staff warmth and amenity depth more than on architectural drama.

WHO IT'S FOR

BEST FOR

Honeymooners, milestone-birthday and anniversary celebrants, families needing connecting rooms and kid-aware service, and senior business travelers who want IFC and the Airport Express at the door. Returning Four Seasons loyalists will find this among the brand's strongest properties globally.

SHOULD LOOK ELSEWHERE

You want avant-garde design, a buzzy social-scene hotel, or a Kowloon-side harbour view looking back at the Hong Kong skyline. Light sleepers sensitive to mattress firmness should request a preview, and anyone allergic to cigar smoke should know the pool terrace permits it.

WHAT GUESTS LOVE — AND WHAT THEY DON'T

STRENGTHS
+Staff that remember you Personalization runs deep — names, preferences, and past celebrations are recalled across stays and departments.
+The infinity pool Heated, harbour-facing, with underwater music — arguably the best urban hotel pool in Asia.
+Michelin density Few hotels worldwide offer this concentration of starred dining without leaving the lobby.
+Seamless airport logistics Meet-and-greet at the Airport Express, in-room check-in, and door-to-gate departure assistance.
+Location Indoor connections to the mall, MTR, and airport train make it weatherproof and family-friendly.
See all 5 strengths and 5 weaknesses
Members get the full breakdown from hundreds of reviews.
See all 5 strengths and 5 weaknesses
Members get the full breakdown from hundreds of reviews.
WEAKNESSES
Club Lounge afternoon tea Buffet-style and meager compared to the standard set elsewhere in the property.
Pricing on extras Poolside food, drinks, and à la carte items push past even luxury Hong Kong norms.
Pool terrace can permit smoking Cigar and cigarette smoke near the pool restaurant has spoiled visits for non-smokers.
Breakfast variety on long stays Argo's buffet, while high quality, doesn't rotate enough for stays beyond three nights.
Inconsistent doorman experience Isolated but pointed complaints of dismissive or unequal treatment at the taxi line.
See all 5 strengths and 5 weaknesses
Members get the full breakdown from hundreds of reviews.

CATEGORY-BY-CATEGORY ANALYSIS

Service 9.2

The single strongest reason to book here. Staff recognize repeat guests by name, anticipate needs (Velcro cord ties, replacement toothpaste before you ask), and the airport meet-and-greet team is unusually proactive — reviewers repeatedly cite staff retrieving lost bags, phones, and wallets. A handful of incidents — a dismissive doorman, a cold breakfast hostess — are the rare exceptions.

Food 9.8

Three Michelin stars in-house at Lung King Heen plus highly-rated Caprice, NOI, Sushi Saito, and the cocktail bar Argo. Room service food is genuinely restaurant-grade, and dim sum breakfast is a standout. The Club Lounge spread is generous but afternoon tea there underwhelms, and Argo's buffet breakfast can feel repetitive on multi-night stays.

Rooms 8.6

Renovated in 2022 and the work shows — modern, soundproofed, with Frederic Malle amenities, Dyson hair tools, Simmons mattresses, and a serious pillow menu. Harbour-view rooms are the only ones worth booking; city-view rooms miss the property's headline asset. Bathrooms are marble with deep tubs.

Location 9.9

Hong Kong's most practical luxury address. Direct covered access to IFC Mall, Hong Kong Station, and the Airport Express, with Star Ferry, Central, and the mid-levels escalator within a short walk. Unbeatable for business or first-time visitors.

Value 6.7

Expensive even by Hong Kong standards, but the rate buys real luxury hotel infrastructure — elite service, two harbour-view pools, a strong spa, and Michelin dining under one roof. Pool drinks and à la carte food are noticeably overpriced.

Ambiance 4.7

Calm, classic, refined rather than fashion-forward. The infinity pool with underwater music and Victoria Harbour views is the property's signature visual moment. Don't come expecting the architectural theater of Rosewood — this is understated wealth.

Per-category analysis
Long-form review of all six scores and how Hong Kong peers compare.
Service 9.2

The single strongest reason to book here. Staff recognize repeat guests by name, anticipate needs (Velcro cord ties, replacement toothpaste before you ask), and the airport meet-and-greet team is unusually proactive — reviewers repeatedly cite staff retrieving lost bags, phones, and wallets. A handful of incidents — a dismissive doorman, a cold breakfast hostess — are the rare exceptions.

Food 9.8

Three Michelin stars in-house at Lung King Heen plus highly-rated Caprice, NOI, Sushi Saito, and the cocktail bar Argo. Room service food is genuinely restaurant-grade, and dim sum breakfast is a standout. The Club Lounge spread is generous but afternoon tea there underwhelms, and Argo's buffet breakfast can feel repetitive on multi-night stays.

Rooms 8.6

Renovated in 2022 and the work shows — modern, soundproofed, with Frederic Malle amenities, Dyson hair tools, Simmons mattresses, and a serious pillow menu. Harbour-view rooms are the only ones worth booking; city-view rooms miss the property's headline asset. Bathrooms are marble with deep tubs.

Location 9.9

Hong Kong's most practical luxury address. Direct covered access to IFC Mall, Hong Kong Station, and the Airport Express, with Star Ferry, Central, and the mid-levels escalator within a short walk. Unbeatable for business or first-time visitors.

Value 6.7

Expensive even by Hong Kong standards, but the rate buys real luxury hotel infrastructure — elite service, two harbour-view pools, a strong spa, and Michelin dining under one roof. Pool drinks and à la carte food are noticeably overpriced.

Ambiance 4.7

Calm, classic, refined rather than fashion-forward. The infinity pool with underwater music and Victoria Harbour views is the property's signature visual moment. Don't come expecting the architectural theater of Rosewood — this is understated wealth.

When to book

✓ Cheapest
Jun 25 – Jul 1
$663
$ Shoulder
Feb 25 – Mar 3
$772
✗ Avoid
Dec 24 – Jan 2
$968
When to book
The cheapest, shoulder, and priciest weeks of the year.

365-day price curve

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Month × day-of-week heatmap
See which day of the week is cheapest in each month.
Members
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All 6 scores
Service
9.2
Food
9.8
Rooms
8.6
Location
9.9
Value
6.7
Ambiance
4.7
$639 – $1,223
per night · 365 nights tracked
MJJASONDJFMA
View full 365-day pricing

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Is Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong worth it?
Yes. It ranks Top 2% (Exceptional) globally at #23 of 1,075 luxury hotels in our index, and it's the most complete luxury hotel in Hong Kong — strongest on service, dining, and logistics. Rooms and the pool justify the premium. If you measure luxury by how you're treated rather than how the lobby photographs, nothing else on the island competes.
How much does Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong cost per night?
Nightly rates run from $639 to $1,223, with a median of $759. February is the cheapest month at an average of $692, while November peaks at $897. Booking in February saves roughly 23% versus peak season.
What is Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong best known for?
Location (9.9) and food and dining (9.8) are the standout categories. The hotel sits directly above IFC and the Airport Express, and its restaurants anchor Hong Kong's fine-dining scene. Service is the deeper draw: staff recall names, preferences, and past celebrations across stays and departments. It's the most complete luxury hotel in the city for travelers who prioritize how they're treated.
What are the drawbacks of staying at Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong?
Ambiance and design score just 4.5 — this is not a visually exciting or avant-garde hotel, and the lobby doesn't photograph like its competitors. The Club Lounge afternoon tea is buffet-style and meager compared to the standard set elsewhere in the property. The pool terrace permits cigar smoke, and light sleepers sensitive to mattress firmness should request a preview before committing.
Who is Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong best suited for?
Honeymooners, milestone-birthday and anniversary celebrants, families needing connecting rooms and kid-aware service, and senior business travelers who want IFC and the Airport Express at the door. Returning Four Seasons loyalists will find this among the brand's strongest properties globally. Skip it if you want avant-garde design, a buzzy social scene, or a Kowloon-side harbour view looking back at the Hong Kong skyline.
When is the best time to book Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong?
Book February, the cheapest month at an average of $692 per night. That's roughly 23% less than November, the peak month at $897. The shoulder between Lunar New Year and spring offers the clearest value while still delivering full service and dining.
How does Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong compare to other luxury hotels in Hong Kong?
Three Hong Kong competitors rank one tier higher in our index at Top 1% (Exceptional): Regent Hong Kong from $373, The St. Regis Hong Kong from $483, and Rosewood Hong Kong from $749. Four Seasons starts at $639 and ranks Top 2%. Regent and St. Regis undercut it significantly on price; Rosewood is the closest peer on rate and the strongest design-led alternative if ambiance matters.