- Address
- Near the boarding gate B10, Hangzhou Xiaoshan International Airport, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China
Hangzhou’s Burger King info online points to T2/T3, not T4.
This listing is for a Burger King in T4 at Hangzhou Xiaoshan (HGH), but current guides like ChinaAirlineTravel only pin confirmed locations in T2 and T3. That means any T4 branch may be new, relocated, or not yet fully documented. If your boarding pass says T4 and you’re set on Burger King, budget extra time to look around the central food zone rather than banking on an exact map pin.
Because hours aren’t published for T4, use the T2/T3 pattern as a rough guide: those Burger King outlets generally sync with the first and last departures in their terminals, often opening around the early-morning bank and staying open into the late-evening wave. On a 06:30 flight from T4, don’t assume a 05:00 Whopper is guaranteed; have a backup like a packaged snack from a nearby convenience kiosk.
Price data for HGH’s Burger King entries in T2/T3 sits comfortably above city-center street food but below hotel restaurant levels, with set meals typically running in the mid-range for Chinese airports. Expect a combo to land in the “airport markup” bracket rather than fast-food cheap: think a noticeable bump over downtown Hangzhou pricing. Keep a 100 RMB note or a funded mobile wallet ready in case card terminals act up between terminals.
Terminal codes at HGH are T1, T2, T3, and T4, and third-party lists still group Burger King detail under T3/T2 only. If you don’t spot clear Burger King signage after a lap of T4’s main departures level, it’s possible you’re dealing with an outdated listing or a pre-opening. In that case, don’t burn 20 minutes hunting a ghost location; grab something else in T4 so you’re back at the gate 30 minutes before boarding starts.
Practical tip: ask at a T4 information desk specifically, “Is there a Burger King in T4 today, or only in T2/T3?” before you go wandering; staff can usually check the latest tenant sheet in under two minutes.