Hong Kong knows its bakeries. We queue for pineapple buns, we argue about egg tarts, and we have welcomed wave after wave of French patisseries and Japanese bakeries. What we have rarely had is a properly Swedish one. That changes with Helen's Konditori, which has just taken a permanent space in Central after years as a cult home bakery.

This is a small shop with a big tradition behind it. A konditori is the Swedish version of a patisserie-café — the place you go for a coffee and a cinnamon bun, ideally more than once a day. After building a loyal following baking from home, Helen's now has a counter you can actually walk up to. Here is what has landed, and how to do it right.

The short answer: Helen's Konditori, a much-loved Swedish home bakery, has opened its first bricks-and-mortar shop at 6 Tit Hong Lane, on the Sheung Wan edge of Central. Expect Swedish fika staples — cinnamon buns from around HKD 40, cardamom semla, princess cake and meatballs — a five-minute walk from Sheung Wan MTR.

In This Guide

  1. When Did Helen's Konditori Open?
  2. What Is a Konditori — and What Is Fika?
  3. What to Order: the Swedish Bakes
  4. How Much Does It Cost?
  5. Where Is It, and How Do You Get There?
  6. Is It Worth a Visit?
  7. FAQ

When Did Helen's Konditori Open?

Helen's Konditori made the jump from home kitchen to high street in June 2026, opening its first permanent shop in Central. It is one of the more charming entries in a busy month for the city's food scene, and the kind of small, single-minded opening that tends to outlast the hype.

The back story is half the appeal. Helen's started as an online and home bakery, building a steady following on social media for its Swedish baking before committing to a bricks-and-mortar space. That means it arrives with an audience already waiting — and with the focus of a baker who has been refining a short list of classics rather than chasing a sprawling menu.

One honest caveat up front: as a new and very small operation, Helen's had not posted fixed opening hours at the time of writing. For a café this matters, so check the bakery's Instagram, @helenskonditori, for the day's times before you make a special trip.

Helen's Konditori at a Glance

DetailInformation
VenueHelen's Konditori — Swedish bakery & café (konditori)
AddressG/F, 6 Tit Hong Lane (鐵行里), Central / Sheung Wan
OpenedJune 2026 (first bricks-and-mortar shop)
HoursNot formally published at launch — check @helenskonditori for current times
SpecialitySwedish fika — cinnamon buns, semla, princess cake; open sandwiches & meatballs
MTRSheung Wan Station, Exit A2, ~5 min
Price guide~HKD 40–160; cinnamon bun ~HKD 40, semla ~HKD 50, meatballs ~HKD 128

Menu and prices per Foodie's June 2026 openings list and the bakery's own Instagram; confirm current hours and prices in store before a special trip.

What Is a Konditori — and What Is Fika?

Two Swedish words unlock the whole appeal here. A konditori is a confectioner's café: a bakery-cum-coffee-shop built around cakes, buns and pastries, with a few tables to sit and linger. Think of it as the Scandinavian cousin of the French patisserie, but cosier and less formal.

The thing a konditori exists to serve is fika. Fika is the Swedish ritual of pausing for a coffee and something sweet — most often a cinnamon bun — and it is taken seriously enough to happen once or twice a day, with friends or colleagues. It is less a snack than a social full-stop in the middle of the day.

"Fika is Sweden's daily pause for coffee and something sweet — and a quiet corner of Central just became the place to have it."

That idea travels well to Hong Kong, a city that already understands the value of a good cha chaan teng break or a long afternoon in a café. Helen's simply brings a different accent to it: cardamom instead of custard, lingonberry instead of condensed milk. If you like the idea of an unhurried coffee stop, our guide to Hong Kong's best cafés for working and relaxing maps more of them across town.

What to Order: the Swedish Bakes

Helen's keeps the menu tight, which is exactly how a konditori should work. According to Foodie, the line-up runs from handmade sweet treats to a handful of comforting savoury plates. Start with the classics below.

The cinnamon bun (kanelbulle)

This is the heart of Swedish baking and the natural first order. The Swedish kanelbulle is distinct from its American cousin: it is enriched with cardamom, knotted rather than coiled, and finished with pearl sugar rather than a heavy glaze. It is the bun that fika was built around, and Helen's prices it as an everyday treat at around HKD 40.

The semla

The semla (around HKD 50) is the showy one: a cardamom-spiced bun split and filled with almond paste and a generous cloud of whipped cream. In Sweden it is traditionally a Lent treat, but it has long since escaped the calendar — and it is a very good way to understand why Swedes take their buns so seriously.

The princess cake (prinsesstårta)

If you want a proper slice of cake, the princess cake (about HKD 55) is the centrepiece: layers of sponge, jam, vanilla custard and cream under a smooth dome of pale-green marzipan. It is as much a piece of Swedish design as it is a dessert, and it photographs beautifully.

Something savoury

This is where Helen's goes beyond a pure bakery. There are sourdough open sandwiches (from HKD 78) for a light lunch, and a plate of Swedish meatballs (HKD 128) served with the traditional trimmings, including the all-important lingonberry jam. It nudges the shop into all-day territory rather than a morning-only stop.

Helen's Konditori

Tit Hong Lane · Central / Sheung Wan
AddressG/F, 6 Tit Hong Lane (鐵行里), Central / Sheung Wan
MTRSheung Wan Station, Exit A2, ~5 min walk
OpenedJune 2026 (first physical shop)
HoursNot formally published at launch — check @helenskonditori
Price guide~HKD 40–160; an affordable, everyday fika
OrderWalk-in at the counter

A tiny, single-minded Swedish konditori turning out cardamom cinnamon buns, semla and princess cake, plus open sandwiches and meatballs. Best for an unhurried coffee-and-a-bun stop on the quieter Sheung Wan side of Central.

Go early, and check the hours. Helen's Konditori is a small shop that grew out of a home bakery, and it had not posted fixed opening times at launch. Check its Instagram for the day's hours, and arrive earlier rather than later — Swedish bakeries are famous for selling through the cinnamon buns and semla well before closing.

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How Much Does It Cost?

Good news: a konditori is meant to be affordable, and Helen's is priced as an everyday treat rather than a splurge. The sweet items sit firmly in pocket-money territory, with the savoury plates a small step up — exactly the spread you would hope for from a neighbourhood bakery.

Per Foodie's listing, expect roughly HKD 40 for a cinnamon bun, HKD 50 for a semla and HKD 55 for a slice of princess cake. On the savoury side, sourdough open sandwiches start around HKD 78 and the Swedish meatballs run to about HKD 128. Call it HKD 40–160 depending on whether you are stopping for fika or settling in for lunch.

As ever with a brand-new opening, treat these as a guide and confirm the counter price in store. For where Helen's sits among the season's other arrivals, our round-up of new restaurants opening in Hong Kong this June has the full list, and you can browse more sweet stops in our guide to the city's best dessert cafés and bakeries.

Where Is It, and How Do You Get There?

Helen's Konditori sits at G/F, 6 Tit Hong Lane (鐵行里), a short, easy-to-miss lane off Bonham Strand on the Sheung Wan side of Central. It is squarely in the old trading-house district — the stretch of dried-seafood shops and tea merchants that gives this part of town its character — so the cosy Scandinavian counter comes as a pleasant surprise.

The nearest MTR is Sheung Wan Station. Take Exit A2 and it is roughly a five-minute walk west through the Wing Lok Street and Bonham Strand streets. Because it is tucked into a lane, it pays to follow your map pin the last few metres rather than rely on a shopfront you can spot from the main road.

The location also makes it an easy pairing. You are only a few streets from Lisbon's Manteigaria, which opened in Central this month, so a back-to-back tasting of a Swedish cinnamon bun and a Portuguese egg tart is very doable. To plan a wider crawl, the YumChaNow venue directory covers where to eat and play across town.

Is It Worth a Visit?

For a warm cardamom bun and a coffee in a part of town that does not have many spots like it, yes. The appeal is the focus: a baker doing a short list of Swedish classics properly, at prices that make a second bun easy to justify. That narrow ambition is usually the sign of a bakery worth returning to.

Set your expectations sensibly. This is a tiny, early-days shop with hours still settling, so go off-peak, check the Instagram before you set out, and have a backup in mind if the semla has sold out. Do that and Helen's is a genuinely lovely addition — a small, sincere taste of Sweden on the Sheung Wan border, and a fine excuse to build a proper fika into your week. For a leisurely weekend version, pair it with our pick of Hong Kong's best brunch spots.

Frequently Asked Questions

When did Helen's Konditori open in Hong Kong?
Helen's Konditori opened the doors of its first bricks-and-mortar shop in June 2026, at G/F, 6 Tit Hong Lane, on the Sheung Wan side of Central. It began life as a much-followed Swedish home bakery before taking the permanent Central space. Check its Instagram, @helenskonditori, for the current opening hours.
Where is Helen's Konditori and what is the nearest MTR?
Helen's Konditori is at G/F, 6 Tit Hong Lane (鐵行里), a small lane off Bonham Strand on the Sheung Wan edge of Central. The nearest MTR is Sheung Wan Station, Exit A2, about a five-minute walk through the Wing Lok Street trading streets.
What is fika, and what is a konditori?
Fika is the Swedish ritual of pausing for coffee and something sweet, usually a cinnamon bun, often more than once a day. A konditori is a Swedish patisserie-café that bakes the cakes and buns built for exactly that pause, which is what Helen's Konditori brings to Central.
What should I order at Helen's Konditori?
Start with the Swedish classics: a cardamom-scented cinnamon bun and a semla, the cream-and-almond-paste bun. For something savoury, there are sourdough open sandwiches and Swedish meatballs with lingonberry jam. The green-domed princess cake is the showpiece if you want a proper slice of cake.
How much does Helen's Konditori cost?
It is an everyday treat rather than a splurge. Per the listing in Foodie, cinnamon buns are about HKD 40, semla around HKD 50 and the princess cake roughly HKD 55, while open sandwiches start near HKD 78 and Swedish meatballs are about HKD 128. Confirm current prices in store.

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Helen's Konditori Swedish Bakery Fika Cinnamon Buns Semla Central New Openings Hong Kong 2026