Almost every Hong Kong staycation follows the same script: a glass tower, a high floor, a harbour view. WM Hotel Sai Kung rewrites it. Officially WM Hotel Hong Kong, Vignette Collection, this low-rise resort is strung along the shoreline in Sai Kung (西貢), the New Territories' seafood-and-sailing town, where the swap is deliberate — you trade the skyline for a coastline, a hotel lobby for a private garden, and a rooftop bar for a kayak.
In This Guide
What is WM Hotel Sai Kung?
WM Hotel Sai Kung is a five-star seaside resort that flies the flag for IHG's Vignette Collection, the group's family of characterful, one-of-a-kind hotels. The "WM" is not a brand acronym — it is simply the address, Wai Man Road, where the resort sits on the edge of Sai Kung town facing the water.
That location is the whole point. Sai Kung is the gateway to Hong Kong's greenest, bluest corner — a working fishing harbour fringed by country parks, outlying islands and some of the cleanest beaches in the territory. A stay here feels far removed from Central, yet it is still firmly inside the SAR, which is what makes it such an easy reset. It pairs naturally with our guide to Hong Kong's best islands and a shortlist of secret beaches within reach of the hotel's own jetty.
Crucially, this is a resort rather than a city hotel, and it behaves like one. There are private gardens, a wedding chapel and a grand ballroom, all wrapped around the water — a different proposition from the harbour towers in our round-up of the best staycation hotels in Hong Kong.
Rooms, the infinity pool and facilities
WM Hotel has 260 guestrooms, styled in a coastal palette of green, blue and orange. The headline number is what matters most for a beach break: the hotel says more than 70 per cent of rooms come with a private balcony overlooking the sea, and a handful of room types go further with a private garden or a private rooftop.
The crown is the rooftop infinity swimming pool, which appears to spill straight into the bay beyond — the kind of pool that does the heavy lifting on a hot Hong Kong weekend. If a poolside day is the whole reason you are booking, it is worth knowing that some city hotels sell pool access on its own, as our guide to hotel pool day passes explains; WM, by contrast, is built around staying the night.
Beyond the pool, there is a Health Centre with a gymnasium, sauna and steam room, plus a shopping arcade, on-site car park and free Wi-Fi throughout. It is a full-service resort, and the facilities are pitched at guests who plan to settle in rather than dash out.
What summer staycation packages does WM Hotel offer?
This is where WM separates itself from the pack. Where most staycations top out at a breakfast buffet and a late checkout, WM's summer programme is built around the water, with a roster of packages confirmed on its official site at the time of writing. Inclusions and prices shift through the season, so always check the current terms when you book.
WM Hotel's summer staycation packages
- Sun Seeker at WM Watersports Staycation: a sunrise or sunset stand-up paddle or kayak tour led by experienced tutors, with a buffet breakfast — the signature summer stay, relaunched this year.
- WM Wake Surf / Wakeboard Staycation: a one-night stay plus a two-hour wake surf or wakeboard session for two to four people with an instructor and equipment from a third-party operator.
- Sai Kung Island Beach Getaway: a 15-minute speedboat transfer to Tai She Wan or Whiskey Beach — what the hotel calls the "mini Maldives of Hong Kong" — for a day on near-empty sand.
- Water Taxi Pak Sha Chau Getaway: hop aboard a water taxi out to the island of Pak Sha Chau (白沙洲) for the day before returning to your room.
- 3 Days 2 Nights Family Water Fun: a multi-day family stay with a supervised three-in-one children's watersports session (kayak, stand-up paddle and group paddle), plus a dragon-boat experience and an ocean clean-up.
- Pawddle at WM: a dog-friendly kayaking tour for two people and one dog, breakfast included — one of the more unusual pet packages in the city.
- Glamping & Garden BBQ stays: rooftop tents under the stars with sea views, or a flameless eco-grill barbecue on a private terrace.
The watersports are run with partner operators, so sessions depend on weather and tides and need booking ahead — but the upshot is rare for Hong Kong: a hotel where you can paddle out at sunrise, beach-hop by speedboat at midday and still be back for the buffet. For a wider view of getting on the water around the city, see our guide to the best watersports in Hong Kong.
WM Hotel Hong Kong, Vignette Collection — The Essentials
Note: rates, packages and shuttle times change with the season — confirm the current details on the official WM Hotel website before you travel.
Dining: Cafè@WM and Sai Kung seafood
The hub of the hotel's dining is Cafè@WM, an all-day buffet restaurant that leans into the season — a Summer Seafood Feast dinner buffet runs through the warmer months, piled with oysters, snow crab legs, prawns and sashimi. As a rough guide to spend, the café's weekday semi-buffet lunch is priced around HK$288 to HK$438 per person, and an afternoon-tea set is on offer too; menus and prices rotate, so check before you go.
The smarter move, though, is to eat the area. Sai Kung's seafront is lined with tanks of live catch, and WM runs a staycation package built around the Michelin-recommended Sing Kee Seafood restaurant nearby, as the hotel describes it. It is the kind of meal — steamed garoupa, salt-and-pepper prawns, clams in black bean — that you simply cannot get from a hotel tower in Tsim Sha Tsui.
Where is WM Hotel and how do you get there?
Here is the one genuine catch, and it is worth planning around: Sai Kung has no MTR station of its own. The resort sits at 28 Wai Man Road on the Sai Kung waterfront, and getting there takes a short hop beyond the railhead.
The easiest option is the hotel's complimentary shuttle bus, which at the time of writing runs to and from Hang Hau (坑口) MTR station on the Tseung Kwan O Line — roughly a 30-minute ride, with the pick-up point on Ming Shing Street. On public transport, take the MTR to Choi Hung (彩虹) and catch green minibus 1A from Exit C2 into Sai Kung, or use minibus 101M from Hang Hau; a taxi from Hang Hau is about 20 minutes. Driving, there is on-site parking at the resort.
Because you are already out east, it is easy to fold WM into a wider New Territories trip — our guide to the best day trips from Hong Kong maps out where else to go once you have a base by the sea.
Is WM Hotel worth it? Tips before you book
For a poolside, paddle-out summer weekend, WM is one of the most distinctive staycations in Hong Kong — there is simply nowhere else in the city that combines a resort, an infinity pool and a watersports menu like this. The trade-off is the journey and the out-of-town setting, so it rewards a little planning.
Before you book
- Book a sea-view room. The balcony is most of the magic here; entry-level rooms without one miss the point.
- Reserve watersports early. Sessions run with partner operators and depend on weather and tides — lock them in when you book the room, not on arrival.
- Plan the transfer. Check the shuttle timetable from Hang Hau in advance, or budget for a taxi; there is no station on the doorstep.
- Travelling with a dog? WM is unusually pet-friendly, but Woofcation and Pawddle stays have weight limits and need a designated room — confirm before arriving.
- Eat in Sai Kung. Build in at least one seafood dinner on the waterfront; it is the reason half of Hong Kong drives out here.
- Mind the season. The watersports programme is a summer affair, and rates climb on peak weekends — midweek is calmer and cheaper.
On the Water, Safely
Hong Kong summers bring sudden squalls and typhoons. The hotel's kayak, paddle, wakeboard and speedboat activities are weather-dependent and may be cancelled or rescheduled at short notice — check the Hong Kong Observatory forecast and any rainstorm or typhoon warnings before you set out, follow the operators' instructions, and never head out on the water in deteriorating conditions. Open-water swimming off the boats and beaches is unsupervised, so take normal sea-safety precautions.
Net-net: if you want a classic luxury tower with a Michelin restaurant downstairs, the city has plenty, and our best luxury hotels guide covers them. But if your idea of a summer reset is salt water, a sea breeze and an infinity pool a world away from the office, WM Hotel is close to one of a kind.
Frequently Asked Questions
Plan Your Sai Kung Staycation
Pick a sea-view room, book your paddle session and pack the sunscreen — then let YumChaNow keep you ahead of the next great Hong Kong escape.