Watching football in Hong Kong is a peculiar discipline. The good matches kick off when most of the city is asleep — 3am for a Champions League tie, an ungodly hour for a Saturday Premier League fixture — which means the people you find in a Hong Kong sports bar at that hour are, by definition, serious. There's a particular camaraderie to a room full of strangers nursing pints at 4am, all of them quietly devoted to clubs ten thousand kilometres away.
The city is well set up for it. Wan Chai alone has enough screens to broadcast an entire matchday, and Central and Soho fill in the gaps. Below is my verified pick of where to watch live football in Hong Kong in 2026 — every venue confirmed open, with addresses, the nearest MTR exit and the practical detail you actually need on a match night.
In This Guide
How to Pick the Right Football Bar
Not all sports bars are equal, and the right one depends on the match. A casual Saturday-afternoon league game wants a relaxed pub with a decent screen and a good burger. A 3am Champions League final wants a venue committed to staying open, with enough screens that you'll see the action wherever you end up standing.
Atmosphere is the other variable. Some nights you want a roaring, full-throated crowd; others you want a quiet corner and a pint while the game plays out. The list below spans both ends — from the bear-pit energy of Wan Chai Stadium on a big night to the easy, neighbourhood feel of The Spot Bar in Soho.
The Best Football Bars in Hong Kong 2026
The Globe 環球
If there's a spiritual home for football watching in Hong Kong, The Globe is it. Billed as the city's original gastropub, it has a long tradition of showing English football and rugby, and the spacious Graham Street venue is built for it — a sizeable flat-screen in the sofa area plus projectors and big TVs across the main dining room. The food is a genuine cut above standard pub fare, which matters when you're settling in for a long session. For the biggest matches it's worth booking the sofa area in advance; walk-ins are fine for ordinary league games.
Trafalgar 特拉法加
Trafalgar is a proper British-style pub built for sport, and it's one of the most reliable big-match venues in Wan Chai. Inside, eight screens mean you'll catch the action from any seat; out on the balcony beer garden there are two large projectors, which makes it a brilliant spot for a warm-evening kick-off. The pub grub is solid and the pints flow, and because it's up on an upper floor it has a slightly more contained, dedicated feel than the street-level bars. A dependable, no-nonsense football pub.
Wan Chai Stadium
The name is a statement of intent. Wan Chai Stadium is the most committed pure sports bar on this list, with seven screens — including two enormous 100-inch monitors — positioned so there's a clear sightline from anywhere in the room. Memorabilia lines the walls and a replica Formula One car hangs from the ceiling. Crucially for the football crowd, it stays open until 3am on weekdays and weekends alike, so it's the obvious choice for those small-hours European kick-offs. When a big match is on, this is where the noise is.
The White Stag
The White Stag is the relaxed option in the Wan Chai cluster — a casual, open-fronted pub on Lockhart Road with several screens showing football, motorsport and rugby. The open frontage gives it a breezy, spilling-onto-the-street feel that suits a low-key afternoon game with a pint and a plate of wings or a full English fry-up. It's not trying to be the loudest room in town, and that's exactly its appeal: turn up, find a stool, watch the match without ceremony. A solid neighbourhood choice.
The Spot Bar
Tucked onto Staunton Street in Soho next to La Pampa, The Spot Bar is the cosy, neighbourhood end of the football-watching spectrum. It shows football, rugby, American football and F1 on a big screen, with a dozen-plus beers including draught on tap and a decent cocktail and wine list. It's small, which is the point — on a good night it has the buzz of a local where the bartender knows the regulars. Open from late afternoon until the small hours, and from early afternoon at weekends, so it works for both day games and late kick-offs.
Bulldog's Bar & Grill
Right in the thick of Lan Kwai Fong, Bulldog's Bar & Grill is a British-Australian gastropub with a big bar and several large screens — handy when you want football folded into a wider night out in Central's nightlife district. It's known for generous, hearty portions, so it's a fine spot to line the stomach before or during a match. The LKF location means it gets lively, particularly around big sporting weekends, and it's a short stagger from the rest of the area's bars if the night runs long.
Quick Comparison Table
Football Bars at a Glance
| Bar | Area | Best For | Pint (HKD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Globe | Central / Soho | Quality food + football | 60–90 |
| Trafalgar | Wan Chai | Balcony projectors | 60–85 |
| Wan Chai Stadium | Wan Chai | Late kick-offs, big screens | 55–85 |
| The White Stag | Wan Chai | Casual afternoon games | 55–80 |
| The Spot Bar | Soho | Cosy, local feel | 55–80 |
| Bulldog's Bar & Grill | Lan Kwai Fong | Night-out football | 60–90 |
Match-Night Tips for Hong Kong
Check kick-off in HKT. European football lands in the Hong Kong small hours. Confirm the local kick-off time before you commit to a 3am alarm and a taxi to Wan Chai.
Book for the big ones. Finals, derbies and World Cup matches fill the popular bars fast. The Globe takes sofa-area bookings; for others, turn up 30–45 minutes early to claim a screen.
Follow the venue's socials. Bars use social media as the canonical source for which matches they're showing and any special late-night screenings. Treat it as the schedule, not gospel — message ahead if a fixture is obscure.
Make a night of it. The Wan Chai bars cluster tightly on and around Lockhart Road, so bar-hopping between Trafalgar, Wan Chai Stadium and The White Stag is effortless. If you fancy a different kind of late night afterwards, our guide to Hong Kong's best jazz bars and our roundup of five new bars in Hong Kong are good next stops.
And if you want to fill the rest of your sporting calendar, pair a football night with a midweek Happy Valley horse racing session — the city's best-value night out under HKD 300.
Frequently Asked Questions
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