Few dinners feel as much like an occasion as a proper steak. Hong Kong knows it, which is why the city's best steakhouses range from hushed five-star hotel grills carving Japanese A5 Wagyu to no-frills local diners sliding a sizzling sirloin onto a cow-shaped hot plate.
The scene has only got deeper in 2026, with new arrivals like Sai Ying Pun's Argentinian grill Don Pedro and the expanding Flat Iron Steak joining a heavyweight old guard. Here are ten we rate, from a HK$146 plate to a HK$2,400 tomahawk. Every address and price was cross-checked against the venues' own listings and Hong Kong food press in July 2026.
In This Guide
Hong Kong's steak scene, mapped
Two neighbourhoods do most of the heavy lifting. Central (中環) is where you will find the chef-driven grills and glossy members'-club-style rooms, while Tsim Sha Tsui (尖沙咀) stacks its steakhouses inside harbour-view five-star hotels along Salisbury Road.
But the range is wider than that. There is genuinely cheap steak in Prince Edward (太子), French steak frites in Soho, and Argentinian parrillas dotted across the island. For where these sit in the bigger picture, see our 50 best restaurants in Hong Kong.
Hotel heavyweights: The Steak House, Carna & HENRY
If you want the full white-tablecloth ritual, start in the hotels. Tsim Sha Tsui's The Steak House at the Regent Hong Kong is the grande dame — its charcoal-grill lineage goes back to the InterContinental in the 1980s, and Foodie named it Best Steakhouse at its 2024 Forks awards. The globe-spanning cuts and a legendary salad bar are the draw.
Next door at Rosewood, HENRY is the theatrical American option, with its own butcher shop and a whisky-flambé finish carried to the table. The Australian M7 Wagyu tomahawk, carved tableside, is the sharing showpiece.
For something with a conscience, Carna by Dario Cecchini perches on the 39th floor of the Mondrian. It is the Hong Kong outpost of the celebrated Tuscan "world's best butcher", built on a nose-to-tail philosophy that puts 18 cuts of beef to work.
Fire & smoke: Fireside & Beefbar
Central's Fireside is where the serious grill nerds go. Chef Jaime Ortolá cooks over binchotan and wood, and in 2026 the restaurant ranked number 18 on the World's 101 Best Steak Restaurants list — the year after Foodie crowned it Best Steakhouse. Order a Spanish Rubia Gallega and the charred-tallow potatoes.
A few streets away, Beefbar brings the Monte Carlo-born luxury brand to a handsome Central room. Alongside the grilled cuts, its street-food section — think Kobe beef tacos with caviar — has quietly become one of the city's cult orders.
Argentine & French: Buenos Aires Polo Club & La Vache!
For grass-fed South American beef, Black Sheep's Buenos Aires Polo Club nails the faded-glamour country-club fantasy on Wyndham Street. The leaner Argentinian cuts and an oozing pan of provoleta cheese to start are the way in.
Its stablemate La Vache! keeps things gloriously simple: one set formula of trimmed entrecôte, house sauce and unlimited crisp fries, Parisian-bistro style. It is the easiest good-value steak decision in town.
The newest name: OMAROO Grill
The freshest big opening is OMAROO Grill by the Wooloomooloo Group, sitting 26 floors up in H Queen's. It is a sleek Australian steakhouse of wet-aged cuts, and its two-course set dinner is a smart way to eat well here without ordering a whole tomahawk.
How much should a steak dinner cost in Hong Kong?
Less than you might fear. The city's best-value steak comes from Flat Iron Steak, whose namesake Australian Black Angus flat iron is HK$168 at lunch and HK$238 at dinner, with triple-cooked beef-dripping fries on the side. Its half-price T-bone Tuesdays and Tomahawk Thursdays are the deals to plan a week around.
For pure local nostalgia, nothing beats Golden Phoenix Restaurant, a home-grown chain going since 1969 and Foodie's 2026 Best Steakhouse. The Prince Edward branch is the one to hit: a sizzling cow-shaped hot plate of sirloin under gravy or black-pepper sauce, plus soup, a bread roll and a drink.
Somewhere in between sit the hotel grills at HK$600–1,200 a head, so the trick is to match the occasion to the room. Craving Wagyu instead of a bargain? See our best Japanese restaurants; after the guide's top tables overall, our Michelin-starred restaurants and best Cantonese restaurants round-ups cover the rest of the fine-dining map.
Best steakhouses in Hong Kong at a glance
Ten steakhouses, checked July 2026
| Steakhouse | Style | Area | Price (pp) |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Steak House | Five-star hotel grill | Tsim Sha Tsui | ~HK$900–1,600 |
| Carna by Dario Cecchini | Italian nose-to-tail | Tsim Sha Tsui | ~HK$800–1,500 |
| HENRY | American hotel grill | Tsim Sha Tsui | ~HK$800–1,400 |
| Fireside | Wood-fired grill | Central | ~HK$600–1,000 |
| Beefbar | International luxury | Central | ~HK$700–1,200 |
| Buenos Aires Polo Club | Argentinian parrilla | Central | ~HK$500–800 |
| OMAROO Grill | Modern Australian | Central | Set from HK$498 |
| La Vache! | French steak frites | Soho | HK$428 set |
| Flat Iron Steak | Affordable specialist | Multiple | ~HK$170–350 |
| Golden Phoenix | Retro local Western | Prince Edward | ~HK$150–250 |
Prices and hours change, so confirm before you go. Two useful cross-checks are Foodie's steakhouse round-up and The Steak House's own site.