Call your Travel Designer +1 617 778 2318
The Deluxe Room offers a modern Chinese design and stunning views of the city skyline. The marble bathroom includes a 15-inch LCD TV, and guests
The Premier Suite offers remarkably spacious living areas and stunning 180-degree panoramic city views. Guests have the option to upgrade to Club Level Access for
The Premier Club Suite is a stunning room with a king-sized bed, offering captivating views of the city or garden. Guests can enjoy the exclusive
The Executive Club Room offers a modern Chinese design and captivating skyline views. The marble bathroom boasts a 15-inch LCD television, while Club Level Access
The Executive Club Suite offers a separate living room and bedroom with contemporary Chinese decoration. Guests have access to the Club Level, with its welcoming
The Carlton Club Suite offers a lavish dining area with seating for six. Guests can indulge in an oversized bathtub with garden views. Connecting rooms
The Ritz Carlton Club Suite offers a spacious living room, bedroom, separate kitchen, and dining area. You'll enjoy scenic views overlooking the garden. This accommodation
The Ritz-Carlton Beijing, Financial Street is a business-focused luxury hotel in Beijing's Xicheng district, set near Season's Place, Xidan and the city's banking and government corridors. It suits travelers who need a polished west-side base with spacious rooms, Qi, Greenfish, Crystal Lounge, an indoor pool, a large health club and meeting space.
This is not The Ritz-Carlton, Beijing in China Central Place. It is the Financial Street hotel, closer to Xidan, government offices, banking headquarters and west-side business. That difference matters because Beijing is large, traffic is real and the right address can save a lot of time.
The hotel is at 1 Jin Cheng Fang Street East in Beijing Financial Street, within Xicheng District. It is near Season's Place shopping mall, Xidan, Taipingqiao Station and Fuxingmen Station.
For finance, government and west-side meetings, the location is highly practical. The Forbidden City, Beihai Park, Houhai, Tiananmen Square and other central sights are reachable, but guests should still plan by car or subway rather than assume easy walking.
Beijing Capital International Airport is usually the more familiar arrival point for international travelers, while Daxing can also be relevant. Transfer time depends on traffic and route, so guests should leave room in the schedule.
The address works best when your Beijing days are structured. If meetings or visits sit near Financial Street, Xidan or the west side, the hotel removes friction.
Rooms and suites use a contemporary style with warm wood tones, city views and a calm business-hotel mood. The building is polished rather than theatrical, with a glass-and-chrome exterior and a more classic Ritz-Carlton tone inside.
Room choice should follow the purpose of the trip. Business travelers may value a quiet work setup, easy elevator access and fast movement to meetings. Leisure guests may prefer more space and a room that feels restful after long sightseeing days.
Suites are useful for longer stays, families and guests who need a separate sitting area. Beijing can be tiring, and extra space can make the difference between a workable stay and a crowded one.
The hotel is also a good choice for travelers who want a west-side Beijing base without moving into a serviced apartment or a less personal business hotel.
Qi is the hotel's Cantonese restaurant, focused on Chinese cooking, seafood and private dining. It is the natural choice for hosted meals, family dinners and more formal dining inside the hotel.
Greenfish is the flexible all-day restaurant, with buffets and Chinese a la carte options. It suits breakfast, casual meals and guests who want simple dining without leaving the building.
Crystal Lounge adds the lobby bar and lounge layer, useful for tea, drinks, informal meetings and a slower pause between appointments. Some guides also mention Cepe as part of the hotel's dining history, but Qi, Greenfish and the lounge are the safer current anchors.
Guests should still use Beijing's wider dining scene. The city is rich in regional Chinese food, fine dining and local restaurants. The hotel dining works best as a reliable base, not the whole food plan.
The 1,500-square-meter health club is one of the hotel's core features, with fitness space, spa facilities and an indoor pool. For business travelers, it gives the stay a useful recovery layer.
The indoor pool matters in Beijing because weather, air quality and schedules can limit outdoor activity. A swim or gym session inside the hotel can keep a work trip from feeling too static.
The hotel also has more than 900 square meters of meeting space across several rooms. That makes it a practical choice for small conferences, board meetings, banking visits and hosted events.
Wellness and meetings are connected here. The hotel is built for guests who need to work well, sleep well and keep moving without losing time in the city.
The atmosphere is polished, quiet and business-ready. It is more corporate than playful, which is the right mood for many Financial Street stays.
Service should feel strongest around transport, meeting support, restaurant bookings, room comfort and concierge help. Beijing can be complex for first-time visitors, so address cards, timing advice and clear plans matter.
The hotel is also useful for leisure guests who prefer the west side or need access to Xidan, Beihai Park and central sights. It will not feel as visitor-facing as hotels near Wangfujing or the Forbidden City, but it can be more efficient.
Guests who want a social, design-led hotel may find it too restrained. Guests who want order, comfort and a business-focused setting are more likely to appreciate it.
The Ritz-Carlton, Beijing in China Central Place is better for Chaoyang, Guomao, SKP and east-side business. The Financial Street hotel is better for Xicheng, banking, Xidan and west-side government or corporate meetings.
The Peninsula Beijing is stronger for a Wangfujing shopping and sightseeing base, with a more central visitor feel. The Ritz-Carlton Beijing, Financial Street is more practical for business on the west side.
Waldorf Astoria Beijing has a more intimate luxury mood near Wangfujing and the central visitor corridor. The Ritz-Carlton feels more corporate and more meeting-oriented.
JW Marriott Hotel Beijing Central can be a strong Xicheng alternative for guests wanting a modern Marriott-family hotel closer to some central landmarks. The Ritz-Carlton offers a more classic luxury tone and stronger Financial Street identity.
Book The Ritz-Carlton Beijing, Financial Street if you want a Xicheng hotel near Season's Place, Xidan, Taipingqiao Station and Beijing's Financial Street, with spacious rooms and suites, Qi, Greenfish, Crystal Lounge, a 1,500-square-meter health club, indoor pool, spa facilities and more than 900 square meters of meeting space. It is especially good for finance travelers, government-adjacent meetings, west-side business, hosted dinners and guests who want a calm Beijing base.
Think twice if your trip is focused on Chaoyang, Sanlitun, Guomao, Wangfujing nightlife or a boutique historic mood. The Ritz-Carlton Beijing, Financial Street is precise, quiet and business-led. For the right west-side itinerary, that is exactly its value.
Sign up now and benefit from VIP Status, Room Upgrades, free daily breakfast, 100 USD Hotel credit with every booking. Best Available Rates & Free Membership!
The information provided is circumstantial - and is not indefinite in accuracy. Changes may have occurred.
Waldorf Astoria Beijing sits on Jinyu Hutong in Dongcheng, close to Wangfujing and many of the capital's key historic sights. The hotel has a polished...
Mandarin Oriental Wangfujing, Beijing is a small, view-led city hotel above WF Central, at 269 Wangfujing Street. Its appeal is not scale. With 73 roo...
The PuXuan Hotel and Spa is a design-led luxury hotel on Wangfujing Street in Beijing's Dongcheng District. The hotel sits close to the Forbidden City...