Hong Kong takes its whisky seriously. This is a city with its own independent bottlers, Ginza-style Japanese whisky libraries and hidden Central dens where the back bar reads like an auction catalogue. If you are looking for the best whisky bars in Hong Kong in 2026 — for a quiet dram, a rare Scotch or a Japanese single malt you cannot find at home — these five are where I take fellow drinkers.

I have spread the list across the island and into Kowloon, and kept it to genuine specialists rather than cocktail bars that happen to stock a few bottles. Addresses, nearest MTR exits and what to order are all below.

The short answer: The best whisky bars in Hong Kong for 2026 are led by connoisseur favourite Club Qing in Lan Kwai Fong and Japanese specialist Mizunara: The Library in Wan Chai, backed by classic Angel's Share in Central, izakaya-style Ronin in Sheung Wan and Tokyo-inspired Butler in Tsim Sha Tsui. Standard drams start around HK$100; rare bottles climb fast.

In This Guide

  1. Club Qing — Lan Kwai Fong
  2. Angel's Share — Central
  3. Mizunara: The Library — Wan Chai
  4. Ronin — Sheung Wan
  5. Butler — Tsim Sha Tsui
  6. At a glance: compare the five
  7. FAQ

A quick word on how to drink here: many of these bars charge by the pour, and prices swing wildly between an everyday blend and a bottling from a shuttered distillery. Ask, sniff, sip slowly. Here is where to begin.

1. Club Qing — Lan Kwai Fong

Hidden up on the 10th floor above the Lan Kwai Fong chaos, Club Qing is the whisky nerd's whisky bar. Founder Aaron Chan is an independent bottler, so the shelves carry rare, old and own-label expressions you will not see elsewhere — including drams from closed distilleries such as Brora.

The room is snug and calm, with light izakaya snacks to keep you steady. Come here when you want to talk to someone who genuinely knows the liquid, and to taste something you may never get another shot at.

Club Qing

Lan Kwai Fong (蘭桂坊) · Independent bottler · Rare & old whisky

A calm 10th-floor hideaway run by an independent bottler, strong on rare, old and closed-distillery whiskies. Best for serious drinkers chasing something unusual.

SpecialityRare & old Scotch, own bottlings
Address10/F, Cosmos Building, 8–11 Lan Kwai Fong, Central
Nearest MTRCentral, Exit D1 (up to Lan Kwai Fong)
PriceDrams from ~HK$120; rare pours far higher
Good forConnoisseurs, quiet tastings

Small room — call ahead for groups; see Club Qing.

2. Angel's Share — Central

A long-running Central favourite, Angel's Share takes its name from the whisky that evaporates from the cask — and it lives up to it. Perched on Hollywood Road at the edge of Soho, it pairs a big back bar with a warm, clubby room and its own barrel ageing programme.

The list roams from approachable blends to serious single malts, and the staff are happy to steer beginners as readily as they indulge the obsessives. It is the easiest entry point on this list — central, welcoming and open late.

"Hong Kong is one of the few cities where you can drink a whisky from a distillery that closed decades before you were born — if you know which tenth-floor door to knock on."

Angel's Share Whisky Bar & Restaurant

Central (中環) · Classic whisky bar · Own cask ageing

A warm, long-established Central whisky bar with a broad malt list and its own cask ageing. Best as a welcoming, late-opening all-rounder for any level of drinker.

SpecialityScotch & world single malts, blends
Address2/F, Amber Lodge, 23 Hollywood Road, Central
Nearest MTRCentral, Exit D2 (via the Mid-Levels Escalator)
PriceDrams from ~HK$100
Good forBeginners, after-work, late nights

Confirm current hours before a late visit.

3. Mizunara: The Library — Wan Chai

If your heart belongs to Japan, make for Mizunara: The Library. Tucked into a Wan Chai commercial building, this Ginza-style bar stocks a staggering 700-plus bottles — Japanese, Scottish, American and Taiwanese whiskies, plus shochu and sake — arranged like a proper library.

It is calm, precise and a little bit reverent, exactly as a Japanese whisky bar should be. Trust the bartenders to guide you toward a rare Japanese dram, or settle in with a flight and compare regions side by side.

Mizunara: The Library

Wan Chai (灣仔) · Japanese whisky · 700+ bottles

A Ginza-style whisky library with more than 700 bottles across Japan, Scotland, the US and Taiwan. Best for Japanese whisky lovers and side-by-side flights.

SpecialityJapanese & world whisky, sake, shochu
Address4/F, 361–363 Lockhart Road, Wan Chai
Nearest MTRWan Chai, Exit B2 (towards Lockhart Road)
PriceDrams from ~HK$120; rare bottles higher
Good forJapanese whisky, tasting flights

Book ahead for a seat; see Mizunara: The Library.

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4. Ronin — Sheung Wan

Behind a nondescript anthracite sliding door on On Wo Lane, Ronin is a tiny Japanese dining bar that whisky lovers adore. The spirits wall is the draw: a growing collection of 100-plus Japanese whiskies, many bottled exclusively for the bar, alongside a deep sake list.

It is standing-room intimate and food-forward — order the Japanese-style small plates as you drink — but the whisky selection punches far above the room's size. Get there early; it seats very few and closes on Sundays.

Ronin

Sheung Wan (上環) · Japanese whisky & sake · Izakaya bar

A hidden, food-forward Japanese dining bar with 100-plus Japanese whiskies and a serious sake list. Best for a whisky-and-snacks night in a tiny, buzzy room.

SpecialityJapanese whisky, sake, izakaya plates
AddressG/F, 8 On Wo Lane, Sheung Wan
Nearest MTRSheung Wan, Exit A2 (about 5 min)
HoursMon–Sat 6pm–midnight; closed Sunday
Good forWhisky with food, small groups

Hard to find and small — arrive early. See Ronin.

5. Butler — Tsim Sha Tsui

Cross the harbour for Butler, a Tokyo-inspired bar hidden on the fifth floor of Mody House. It splits its focus between a Japanese cocktail bar and, upstairs, a dedicated whisky bar with more than 200 whiskies. The mood is hushed, the service exacting.

Tell the bartender your preference — peaty, sweet, a favourite region — and let them pour. It is the best whisky room in Kowloon, and a masterclass in Japanese hospitality without the flight to Tokyo.

Butler

Tsim Sha Tsui (尖沙咀) · Tokyo-style · 200+ whiskies

A Tokyo-inspired hidden bar with a Japanese cocktail room and a dedicated whisky bar of 200-plus bottles. Best for Kowloon-side drinkers and bespoke, guided pours.

SpecialityJapanese whisky & bespoke cocktails
Address5/F, Mody House, 30 Mody Road, Tsim Sha Tsui
Nearest MTRTsim Sha Tsui, Exit N2 (or East TST, Exit P1)
PriceDrams from ~HK$120; ask for rare bottles
Good forKowloon nights, guided tastings

Reservations recommended; it is easy to walk past the entrance.

At a glance: compare the five

Best whisky bars in Hong Kong 2026

BarAreaSpecialityDrams from
Club QingLan Kwai FongRare & old Scotch, own bottlings~HK$120
Angel's ShareCentralAll-round malts, own cask ageing~HK$100
Mizunara: The LibraryWan Chai700+ Japanese & world whiskies~HK$120
RoninSheung WanJapanese whisky & sake, izakaya~HK$120
ButlerTsim Sha Tsui200+ whiskies, Tokyo style~HK$120

Prices are approximate starting points per pour and rise sharply for rare bottles — always confirm before ordering.

Thirsty for more? Our guides to the city's best cocktail bars and hidden bars and speakeasies cover the wider drinking scene, while the Asia's 50 Best Bars in Hong Kong and our roundup of the best bars in Tsim Sha Tsui and Kowloon map out where to head next. For the big picture, start with our Hong Kong nightlife guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best whisky bar in Hong Kong?
For serious drinkers, Club Qing in Lan Kwai Fong is the connoisseur's pick, run by an independent bottler with rare and old whiskies including bottles from closed distilleries. For Japanese whisky, Mizunara: The Library in Wan Chai stocks more than 700 bottles, while Angel's Share in Central is the reliable all-rounder.
Where can I find Japanese whisky in Hong Kong?
Mizunara: The Library in Wan Chai, Butler in Tsim Sha Tsui and Ronin in Sheung Wan all specialise in Japanese whisky. Butler alone pours more than 200 whiskies with a Tokyo-bar feel, while Ronin's izakaya list runs to over 100 Japanese bottles, many hard to find elsewhere.
How much does a dram of whisky cost in a Hong Kong bar?
A standard pour of blended or entry-level single malt usually starts around HK$100–150. Aged single malts and rare or collectible bottles climb steeply from there — sometimes into the thousands for a rare cask — so always ask the price before ordering an unfamiliar bottle.
Do Hong Kong whisky bars take walk-ins?
Most do, but many of the best are small, hidden and fill up fast, especially at weekends. Club Qing, Ronin and Butler can be tricky to find and seat only a handful of guests, so booking ahead — or arriving early — is wise for groups.

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