Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong ranks #9 on our 2026 list of the best business hotels in the world. The case below explains why, the lobby, the breakfast, the suite category that gets paid up for, and the alternatives we measured it against.
“On Victoria Harbour, 399 rooms, three Michelin-starred Lung King Heen (the world's first three-star Chinese restaurant), and another three-star at Caprice.”
"Opened October 2005 atop the IFC podium in Central, the Four Seasons set the new standard for Asian business luxury and has held it for two decades. 399 rooms, eight Michelin stars across three restaurants, the most decorated single hotel for fine dining in the world, and an outdoor infinity pool 16 floors above the harbour."
Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong opened in October 2005 above the IFC podium at 8 Finance Street in Central, directly connected, by an enclosed walkway, to the IFC Mall, Hong Kong Station, and the Airport Express. The 45-storey tower, designed by HOK, sits at the city's single most concentrated piece of business infrastructure: ten of Hong Kong's largest investment banks have offices in the connected IFC towers, the Star Ferry is two minutes' walk, and HKIA is 24 minutes by Airport Express. The hotel's positioning was deliberate from day one, the most precisely located five-star in Hong Kong's central business district.
There are 399 rooms across categories that begin with the Deluxe (50 m²) and run up to the Presidential Suite at 540 square metres on the top floor. The Harbour View categories, most-booked for business, face Victoria Harbour through floor-to-ceiling windows. The Four Seasons Suite, at 130 square metres, has a separate study and a wraparound balcony. The signature Presidential Suite has its own private dining room for sixteen, a boardroom, and a wraparound terrace with a view from Stonecutters Island to the Peninsula. Every room is finished in the precise Four Seasons palette, neutral linens, dark walnut, marble bath, calibrated, in 2026, to be the safest five-star booking on the island.
London, New York, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Paris, Singapore, Zurich, Milan: the cities where business hotel competition is intense and the standard is set by hotels that have been hosting the same accounts for fifty years. The lobby has to compete not just with other hotels but with the most demanding traveller economy in the world, guests who could be anywhere have a thousand other places to go. The properties that earn top-of-list inclusion in financial-centre cities do something the city itself cannot: deliver the meeting, the bar, the breakfast, and the WiFi at a single address.
Four Seasons is the operating system most luxury hotels are quietly compared against. For business travel Four Seasons is the right answer when the trip is critical and the variables need to be removed. The brand defines the corporate-luxury floor: WiFi that holds the meeting, club lounge that operates like a private members' bar, butler service that gets the dinner reservation that nobody else could get, and the kind of breakfast room that is reliably populated by exactly the people you wanted to bump into.
The dining is the property's outsized achievement. Caprice, the French fine-dining room, holds three Michelin stars under chef Guillaume Galliot, its eighth consecutive year at that level. Lung King Heen, the Cantonese room led by chef Chan Yan-tak, made history in 2009 as the first Chinese restaurant in the world to earn three Michelin stars and today holds two, uninterrupted since the Hong Kong guide launched. NOI by Paulo Airaudo, a contemporary Italian omakase, holds two more. Seven Michelin stars across three restaurants under one roof place Four Seasons Hong Kong among the most decorated hotels for fine dining anywhere. The Lounge, the lobby afternoon-tea room, runs a considered daily set.
The 25-metre outdoor infinity pool, 16 floors above Victoria Harbour, is, in 2026, still the most photographed hotel pool in Asia. The Four Seasons Spa runs eleven treatment rooms across two floors. The hotel's Concierge team, nine resident concierges, the largest single concierge team in Hong Kong, handles same-day mainland China visa applications, private yacht charters out of Aberdeen, and the rare chartered helicopter from the rooftop of IFC Two for departure to HKIA. For the most precise Hong Kong business stay, a milestone celebration anchored to the city's best fine-dining, or a generational family stay, this is the considered alternative to the Peninsula across the water.
For a 2026 deal trip at this level, the most direct comparisons are Claridge's in London (#8 on this list), Mandarin Oriental Bangkok in Bangkok (#10 on this list), Mandarin Oriental Ritz, Madrid in Madrid (#7 on this list). Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong earns the higher rank for one or two specific reasons covered in the verdict above, usually a combination of address, lobby gravity, and the dining room that holds when the meeting goes long. The ranking is not a verdict on quality alone; depending on your trip, another entry may fit better.
Address: 8 Finance St, Central, Hong Kong. Business categories, the executive king, the club-floor suite, the corner room with the second desk, book three to six months ahead in shoulder season; closer to twelve months in peak event weeks. The full review at the hotel page has current rates, the room categories worth paying up for, the executive lounge access details, and the dining programmes worth booking pre-arrival. Use the business occasion page for the broader context, or the Hong Kong city guide for what else is in walking distance.
Sibling entries on the Top 50 Business list with full editorial cases:
#8 · Claridge's · London#10 · Mandarin Oriental Bangkok · Bangkok#7 · Mandarin Oriental Ritz, Madrid · Madrid#11 · Mandarin Oriental Washington DC · Washington DcEditorial · #2 on the Top 20 Business Hotels 2026 list
Four Seasons Hong Kong ranks #2 for business because it carries one of the deepest in-house Michelin programs in Asia. Caprice (French, three stars), Lung King Heen (Cantonese, two stars after holding three from 2009) and NOI by Paulo Airaudo (Italian, two stars) give the hotel seven Michelin stars under one roof, a client-entertainment infrastructure no other Asian business hotel can match.
For business travelers, that dining program is itself part of the executive agenda. The IFC Tower connection gives direct underground access to Central's financial district; harbor-facing rooms on floors 6-44 look across to Tsim Sha Tsui. The Presidential Suite at 1,500 sq m is the flagship. Forbes Five-Star recognition has been continuous since 2010.
Sign up for deal alerts: fifth night free offers, resort credits, and the upgrade windows we would book ourselves.