Summer in Hong Kong is a city of small pleasures — an early swim, a longer breakfast, a cold drink as the skyline lights up. Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong, perched above Central on the harbourfront, has built its whole summer around exactly that. The Summer by the Harbour 2026 programme stitches together pools, harbour-view stays, playful summer desserts and a deep wellness streak.
What is Summer by the Harbour?
Summer by the Harbour is Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong's seasonal programme for June through August 2026 — a bundle of staycation perks, summer-only dishes and spa rituals, all anchored to the hotel's prime spot above Victoria Harbour in Central.
The framing is deliberately unhurried: this is a summer built from longer breakfasts, slow afternoons by the pool and an evening treatment before dinner. It also ties into 101 Days of Summer, a wider Four Seasons Asia Pacific celebration of the season's most nostalgic flavours. If you're weighing up where to spend a hot weekend, it sits alongside our pick of Hong Kong hotel pool day passes and the resort-style WM Hotel in Sai Kung.
How much is the package, and what's included?
One package, several built-in indulgences. For stays between 1 June and 31 August 2026, the Summer by the Harbour package starts at HKD 6,000 per room per night (plus the usual service charge and tax). It's pitched at travellers who want the extras handled rather than billed à la carte.
Summer by the Harbour — what's included
| Perk | Detail |
|---|---|
| Daily breakfast for two | Plus free breakfast for children aged 5 and under; special pricing for ages 6–12 |
| Evening cocktails | Two cocktails and a snack, once per stay, at ARGO or Pool Terrace |
| Spa savings | 15% off spa treatments of 60 minutes or longer, Monday to Friday |
| The setting | Harbour-view rooms above Central, with access to the hotel's pools |
Rates from HKD 6,000++ per night; prices and inclusions per Four Seasons and subject to change — confirm at the time of booking.
Pools, family suites and harbour views
The pools are the quiet headline. Four Seasons Hong Kong's outdoor and indoor pools are among the city's most loved, raised above Central with the harbour stretching out beyond — the kind of view that makes an ordinary afternoon swim feel like an event.
Families are well served, too. The hotel's Family Suite is built for multi-generational stays, and the summer package's free-breakfast policy for younger children takes some sting out of the bill. For a wider look at where to stay in the city, our guide to the reborn Mandarin Oriental, The Landmark covers another of Central's grande-dame addresses.
What's new to eat and drink this summer?
The summer menu leans nostalgic — and very Hong Kong. At The Lounge, Executive Pastry Chef Ringo Chan's "Hong Kong Chill" sundae (HK$208) is the standout: he toasts a pineapple bun, infuses it overnight in milk and cream, then churns it into a pineapple-bun ice cream, served with malt soy-milk ice cream and fried sha yung, with the bun's crackled crust perched on top. Two more sundaes — "Choco-Nuts and Honeycomb Toffee" and "Tropical Island" — round out the trio at HK$208 each.
Down at Pool Terrace, sommelier Danny Chan's build-your-own Summer Sangria (HK$388, red, white or rosé) is served by the carafe, with a splash of cognac and fresh fruit you tune to taste. And the hotel's heavy hitters are still on call: under one roof sit the three-Michelin-starred Caprice (French) and the two-Michelin-starred Lung King Heen (Cantonese) — both confirmed in the 2026 Michelin Guide — alongside ARGO, one of Asia's 50 Best Bars. For more of the city's tables, see our 50 best restaurants in Hong Kong.
Spa: wellness the local way
Summer is also when stillness becomes the luxury. The Spa's new Celestial Renewal Ritual (HK$3,600–3,800) is a 120-minute journey rooted in Traditional Chinese Medicine: it opens with a TCM herbal foot bath, moves into a full-body massage using a mugwort hammer and sandalwood oil to "restore the flow of Qi," and closes with a scalp massage.
There's a modern strand, too. Red Light Therapy (HK$880 for 20 minutes) joins as an add-on to any 60-minute-plus treatment, and on full-moon evenings the monthly Full Moon Floating Sound Bath, run with IKIGAI, leans into the season's slower rhythm. For more ways to switch off, browse our Hong Kong wellness guide.
Where it is and how to book
Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong is at 8 Finance Street, Central (中環), on the harbourfront above the IFC complex. The easiest arrival is MTR Hong Kong Station, which connects straight into IFC mall and up to the hotel — no street walking required. The Airport Express also terminates here, so it's an easy first or last night before a flight.
The Summer by the Harbour package and the summer dining and spa menus run through 31 August 2026. Book directly with the hotel; for the dated dishes and treatments, it's worth reserving ahead, especially at weekends. If you're building a full summer itinerary, our guide to summer fun in Hong Kong rounds up what else is on.
Four Seasons Hong Kong — Summer Essentials
Details confirmed via the Four Seasons press release and Four Seasons Hotel Hong Kong; Michelin stars per the 2026 MICHELIN Guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where to stay this summer
From harbour-view pools to resort escapes, plan your hot-weather break with our guide to Hong Kong hotel pools.