Shenzhen Hotels With Views

Shenzhen puts its best hotels at altitude — the towers of Futian and Nanshan begin above the 60th floor, not below. The properties here, from supertalls in the central business district to a new coastal tower above Shenzhen Bay, were chosen because the view from the room is the reason to be there.

The Views


Park Hyatt Shenzhen suite with Chinese-influenced wall art and floor-to-ceiling corner windows overlooking Shenzhen Bay toward the hills of Hong Kong

Park Hyatt Shenzhen

The Sky View Deluxe rooms frame 270 degrees of Shenzhen from the Ping An Finance Centre’s upper floors — and guests with time to spare can ascend to the 116th-floor Free Sky observation deck. The Attic bar, a floor above The Glasshouse restaurant, is the right place to end the evening.

Shangri-La Nanshan Shenzhen hotel bar at dusk, curved green counter with brass globe pendants and floor-to-ceiling windows over the city at sunset

Shangri-La Nanshan, Shenzhen

South-facing rooms above the 66th floor open onto Shenzhen Bay and the Hong Kong ridgeline — a sightline unavailable from any other hotel in the city. The 77th-floor Wellness Club, at over 300 meters, adds a gym with a 180-degree bay panorama worth factoring into the booking decision.

Mandarin Oriental Shenzhen corner guestroom with wraparound floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking Lianhuashan Park forest and the Shenzhen skyline

Mandarin Oriental, Shenzhen

A Michelin Key hotel since 2025, with a bar ranked among Asia’s 50 best — the case for staying still comes down to the rooms. The SHANG XIA-furnished Oriental Suite wraps its living areas in floor-to-ceiling glass: Lotus Hill to the north, Shenzhen Bay and Hong Kong to the south.

Four Seasons Hotel Shenzhen guestroom at night, floor-to-ceiling window framing the illuminated Futian skyline including the Ping An Finance Centre

Four Seasons Hotel Shenzhen

Premier rooms on the south side face Hong Kong across the border — a quiet geographical fact most guests don’t expect to find in Futian. Floor-to-ceiling windows throughout; corner suites give Lianhuashan Park its full width, with the city converging behind it.

The Ritz-Carlton Shenzhen suite living room with wide windows showing the Shenzhen daytime skyline and a mountain ridge in the distance

The Ritz-Carlton, Shenzhen

The panoramic bathtub is a standard fixture across most room categories here — positioned to face the skyline and the green line of Lianhua Mountain at once. Worth staying on Club Level for five daily food presentations; the Ritz-Carlton Suite adds a two-floor private entrance.

The St Regis Shenzhen upper-floor lounge with mirrored sculptural installation and panoramic windows with an aerial view of the Shenzhen cityscape

The St. Regis Shenzhen

The top 25 floors of the Kingkey 100 building give the St. Regis a sightline that extends south toward Hong Kong. Ask for a Skyline room to get Bang & Olufsen audio paired with the city from above the clouds; the Iridium Spa on the 75th floor extends the altitude further.

What Travelers Ask About Shenzhen

Mandarin Oriental, Shenzhen occupies floors 67 to 79 of the UpperHills tower, with its spa and pool floor sitting at approximately 388 meters above sea level — a figure memorialized in the restaurant name OPUS 388. The St. Regis Shenzhen holds floors 75 to 100 of the Kingkey 100 building, giving its upper suites some of the highest occupied positions of any hotel in Shenzhen.

Shangri-La Nanshan, Shenzhen rises from the 66th to the 78th floor of a supertall in the Shenzhen Bay Super Headquarters Base, with its 77th-floor Wellness Club confirmed at over 300 meters. Park Hyatt Shenzhen occupies floors 36 to 44 of the Ping An Finance Centre, the fifth-tallest building in the world — though the hotel’s strongest claim is the 116th-floor Free Sky observation deck, accessible to guests, which sits at 547 meters.

Shangri-La Nanshan, Shenzhen offers the clearest sightline. South-facing rooms above the 66th floor look directly across Shenzhen Bay to the hills of Hong Kong’s New Territories — a view angle available only from Nanshan’s coastal position, and one that no Futian-based hotel can replicate.

Mandarin Oriental, Shenzhen adds Hong Kong views from its south-facing rooms on floors 67 to 79, with Shenzhen Bay visible between the districts below. The St. Regis Shenzhen in Luohu, at the northernmost point closest to the border, frames Hong Kong from a different angle — the buildings of Kowloon are visible on clear days from the upper floors. Four Seasons Hotel Shenzhen in Futian orients its Premier rooms south toward Hong Kong as well, though the distance makes the sightline less distinct.

Park Hyatt Shenzhen has two distinct floors for evening views: The Glasshouse on the 47th floor for dinner, and The Attic on the 48th — a speakeasy-style bar with live music and floor-to-ceiling panoramas of the Shenzhen skyline. Both are open to non-guests.

Mandarin Oriental, Shenzhen operates the MO Bar on the 79th floor, ranked No. 21 on Asia’s 50 Best Bars List 2025 — a confirmed destination for the cocktail-and-skyline combination at altitude. The St. Regis Shenzhen has Elba Italian Restaurant on the 99th floor, where Shenzhen’s skyline replaces the usual Tyrrhenian Sea backdrop, alongside a sky bar at the 100th floor. The RC Bar at The Ritz-Carlton, Shenzhen is lower but offers a well-regarded city view at a more accessible price point.

Lianhuashan Park (Lotus Hill) sits in the center of Futian District, and three of the hotels on this page face it directly from above. Mandarin Oriental, Shenzhen orients its north-facing rooms toward the park’s forested crown — the contrast between the green canopy and the urban skyline beyond it is one of the more distinctive room views in the district.

Four Seasons Hotel Shenzhen also faces Lianhuashan Park from its Futian position, with corner suites delivering the widest angle across the green space. The Ritz-Carlton, Shenzhen looks toward Lianhua Mountain from its rooms, the ridge visible above the mid-city buildings — a quieter version of the same northward orientation. The park is large enough that it reads as a significant element rather than a detail.

Shenzhen’s Futian skyline is dense, and the buildings immediately surrounding each hotel are often tall enough to obstruct low floors. As a practical guide: The Ritz-Carlton, Shenzhen benefits from rooms on the upper half of its 28-floor building, where the cityscape clears the adjacent towers. Four Seasons Hotel Shenzhen and the Futian hotels generally open up above the 20th floor.

At Mandarin Oriental, Shenzhen and Shangri-La Nanshan, Shenzhen, the question is moot — the hotels begin above the 66th floor, and every room is already above the surrounding skyline. At Park Hyatt Shenzhen, floors 36 to 44 all deliver clear panoramas; the building’s position in the Ping An Finance Centre means there is nothing comparable in height nearby. At The St. Regis Shenzhen in Luohu, the hotel occupies the top 25 floors of the Kingkey 100 building, so the lowest hotel floor is already above most of the district.

Park Hyatt Shenzhen has the clearest answer in the Presidential Suite: 300 square meters, double-height windows, and a 180-degree panorama of the city at floor 44 of the Ping An Finance Centre. The Sky View Deluxe rooms deliver a comparable sightline at a lower price point.

At Mandarin Oriental, Shenzhen, the SHANG XIA-furnished Oriental Suite wraps its living and dining areas in wraparound floor-to-ceiling glass on floors 67 to 79 — Lotus Hill to the north and Shenzhen Bay and Hong Kong to the south simultaneously. The St. Regis Shenzhen in the Kingkey 100 building has the Royal Suite at the top of the tower, where the distance between Shenzhen and the visible horizon of Hong Kong defines the view. At Shangri-La Nanshan, Shenzhen, the corner suites compress four compass view directions — bay, wetland, city, and golf course — into a single room.

Within the hotels on this page, The Ritz-Carlton, Shenzhen and Four Seasons Hotel Shenzhen both offer confirmed city and park views at room rates that are typically lower than those at Mandarin Oriental, Shenzhen or Park Hyatt Shenzhen. The view quality is genuine — floor-to-ceiling windows in Futian, Lianhuashan Park in frame, and a Shenzhen skyline that reads clearly from mid-level floors.

Non-guests can access the view independently by visiting rooftop venues as day or evening guests. The Attic bar at Park Hyatt Shenzhen and the MO Bar at Mandarin Oriental, Shenzhen are open to walk-ins. The Free Sky observation deck at the Ping An Finance Centre offers the highest publicly accessible viewpoint in the city at 547 meters, available by ticket without a hotel booking.

Shenzhen grew faster and taller than any comparable city, and its skyline is the result of a single generation of construction rather than a century of accumulation. The density of supertalls in Futian and Nanshan means that a hotel room at the 70th floor looks across peers — not down at them. The city also occupies a narrow coastal strip, which means views from the south-facing hotels on this page eventually reach open water and, beyond it, Hong Kong.

The combination is unusual: Shangri-La Nanshan, Shenzhen and Mandarin Oriental, Shenzhen offer rooms where an urban skyline gives way to a bay, which gives way to a foreign skyline across the strait. That layering — city, water, mountains, border — is not replicated in Beijing, Shanghai, or Guangzhou. The St. Regis Shenzhen in Luohu adds a historical contrast: the same hotel window that frames Hong Kong’s towers also looks down on one of Shenzhen’s oldest commercial districts, where the city’s origin as a fishing village remains legible in the street pattern below.