I was there the night Quinary opened on Hollywood Road. I watched a bartender fold Earl Grey tea smoke into a martini glass with the focus of a surgeon and the showmanship of a Vegas headliner. Hong Kong was already a serious drinking city. But that night felt like something shifted — like the bar world here had decided it was done being compared to London or New York and was going to set the terms itself.
That was years ago. Hong Kong's cocktail scene has only deepened since. Today you have world-ranked bars, agave specialists with mezcal menus that would embarrass Oaxaca, sustainable cocktail programs recycling local ingredients, jazz-backed hotel counters, and basement speakeasies behind unmarked doors. This city drinks well and it drinks seriously.
Antonio Lai built Quinary with a specific mission: multisensory mixology. Not gimmicks — genuine exploration of how sound, scent, texture, and visual presentation interact with flavour. The Earl Grey Caviar Martini — tea-infused gin, clarified lemon, served with an aromatic Earl Grey tea foam — is the bar's most iconic creation and still worth ordering a decade after it was first served. The cement walls, tungsten bulbs, and wire-mesh gates give the space a clean industrial edge. Quinary has been in the World's 50 Best Bars for four consecutive years. It earned every placement.
Jay Khan opened Coa in 2017 after falling in love with mezcal in Oaxacan palenques, and built the most serious agave bar in Asia. The name is the machete-like tool used to harvest agave. The back bar — lined with mezcal and tequila bottles from small producers across Mexico — is an education and an obsession. Khan's mission is not just to sell spirits but to build genuine understanding of what makes agave production extraordinary. The cocktails are rigorously constructed; the neat pours, for the adventurous, are even better. Coa has been in Asia's 50 Best Bars consistently.
Agung Prabowo — one of the most decorated bartenders in Asia — built Penicillin around a closed-loop, zero-waste philosophy. Ingredients are sourced locally: seaweed foraged off Hong Kong's shores, fruits from New Territories farms, spent grain from local breweries repurposed into syrups and infusions. The result isn't a lecture on sustainability — it's extraordinary cocktails that taste of Hong Kong's specific terroir. The space is warm and wood-heavy; the menu changes with the seasons and the local harvest. This is the most original bar in Hong Kong.
Named for Ernest Hemingway and built around his literary world — Cuba, Spain, Africa — The Old Man is one of those bars that commits to its theme without becoming a theme park. The cocktails are inspired by Hemingway's life, travels, and obsessions, built with meticulous technique by a team that takes their craft as seriously as their literary references. Dark, intimate, with a soundtrack that knows what it's doing. The mojito, served as Hemingway liked it (no sugar), is a conversation starter.
Enter through a hidden door in the back of what appears to be a 1950s British umbrella shop. Inside, Foxglove is a beautifully designed bar split across multiple levels — plush booths, mid-century furniture, impeccable vintage posters — serving classic cocktails with serious technique and a wine list that would embarrass many restaurants. It's theatre, but the drinks justify the drama. One of Hong Kong's most stylistically coherent bar experiences.
Origin sits in Lan Kwai Fong — traditionally the rowdier, less sophisticated end of Central's bar scene — and refuses to compromise on quality despite the surroundings. The bar focuses on single-origin spirits and terroir-driven cocktails: where ingredients come from, what makes them distinct, why it matters. The menu is organised by spirit origin rather than cocktail type. Serious bartending in a neighbourhood that doesn't always deserve it.
Mostly Harmless sits at the perfect intersection of natural wine bar and serious cocktail counter. The space is small — deliberately so — with a wine list built around small producers and a cocktail menu that changes weekly based on what the team finds interesting. No formulas, no showmanship for its own sake. Just smart people making very good drinks in a room that feels like someone's cool living room.
The Envoy took the classic cocktail bar format — well-stocked back bar, skilled bartenders, no gimmicks — and executed it with a level of consistency that the more concept-driven bars often lose. The old-fashioneds are superb. The bartending team knows their classics and their variations. It's the kind of bar where you can sit at the counter, tell them what you feel like, and trust the result absolutely.
The Hong Kong outpost of New York's legendary Employees Only — psychics in the entrance, bootlegger-era aesthetic, and bartending that combines high-volume service with genuine craft. The late-night energy here is unlike anywhere else in Hong Kong: fast, loud, dense with people, and still somehow producing beautifully made drinks. The chicken soup at 1am is, against all odds, genuinely restorative.
Darkside is the finest hotel bar in Asia and one of the finest in the world. The name describes the philosophy: spirits-led, serious, a little gothic in its design sensibility. The back bar is an extraordinary collection — rare whiskies, aged rums, vintage cognacs — assembled with the curatorial ambition of a museum. The space itself is spectacular: low light, leather booths, the noise kept at a level that permits actual conversation, and live jazz three nights a week that avoids the trap of being merely ambient. The cocktail list is short, focused, and impeccably executed.
The MO Bar is the definitive Hong Kong hotel bar experience — impeccable service, a room that has hosted everyone from world leaders to rock musicians since the 1960s, and a cocktail program that takes tradition seriously without freezing in it. The Mandarin Sling — the bar's house cocktail — is one of the city's great drinks. Sit at the long bar counter and let the evening develop at whatever pace it needs to.
The Peninsula has been pouring drinks for the great and the good since 1928, and The Bar remains one of the most beautiful rooms in which to have a drink in Asia. Gilded ceilings, live string quartet in the afternoon (lobby), expert cocktail service, and the Peninsula Hotel's own gin — distilled exclusively for the property. This is where you go when you want to feel the full weight of Hong Kong's colonial-era luxury hotel history.
| Bar | Neighbourhood | Style | Price/Cocktail |
|---|---|---|---|
| Quinary | Hollywood Rd, Central | Multisensory cocktails, World's 50 Best | HKD 145–180 |
| Coa | LKF, Central | Agave specialist, mezcal/tequila | HKD 130–175 |
| Penicillin | Sheung Wan | Sustainable, farm-to-bar | HKD 140–180 |
| The Old Man | SoHo, Central | Hemingway-themed, literary | HKD 120–160 |
| Foxglove | Central (Ice House St) | Hidden entrance, classic cocktails | HKD 140–200 |
| Origin | LKF, Central | Single-origin, terroir-driven | HKD 130–165 |
| The Envoy | SoHo, Central | Classic cocktail bar | HKD 120–160 |
| Mostly Harmless | Sheung Wan | Natural wine + cocktails | HKD 100–145 |
| Employees Only HK | Wan Chai | Late night, high volume craft | HKD 120–155 |
| Darkside (Rosewood) | TST, Kowloon | Spirits-led, hotel bar, live jazz | HKD 165–240 |
| MO Bar (Mandarin Oriental) | Central | Classic hotel bar, harbour views | HKD 160–220 |
| The Bar (Peninsula) | TST, Kowloon | Grand hotel, Peninsula Gin | HKD 180–260 |
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