Introduction
Hong Kong is a Special Administrative Region (SAR) of China — not a province, not a municipality, but a distinct administrative entity that maintains its own immigration system, currency (Hong Kong dollar), legal framework (common law), and border controls under the "One Country, Two Systems" arrangement in effect since the 1997 handover from British colonial rule. For travellers, the practical consequence is that entering Hong Kong does NOT count as entering mainland China — separate visa rules apply, and crossing to the mainland requires passing through border checkpoints with distinct immigration formalities.
Discover Hong Kong SAR
Hong Kong operates its own immigration, customs, and border control. Most Western nationals enter visa-free (UK: 180 days; EU, US, Canada, Australia: 90 days). A mainland China visa does NOT include Hong Kong, and a Hong Kong stay does NOT count toward any mainland visa period. If you plan to visit both, you need separate authorisations. Crossing to the mainland is straightforward: the West Kowloon high-speed rail station has a joint checkpoint (both Hong Kong and mainland immigration in one terminal), the Lo Wu and Futian metro crossings connect directly to Shenzhen, and buses cross the HZMB to Zhuhai and Macau. Return trips follow the same process. Keep your passport and any mainland visa accessible — you will clear immigration both ways. Hong Kong uses the Hong Kong dollar (HKD), not the Chinese yuan (CNY/RMB). Credit cards, Octopus cards, and increasingly Alipay HK and WeChat Pay HK work across the territory. Mainland Chinese apps (Alipay mainland, WeChat Pay mainland) work in some tourist areas but are not the default.
Travel Types
Cross-Border Travel Hub
14 minutes to Shenzhen, 47 minutes to Guangzhou, overnight trains to Beijing, ferries to Macau and the Pearl River Delta — Hong Kong SAR is the gateway between China and the world.
Separate Immigration & Currency
Visa-free entry for most Western nationals (90-180 days), Hong Kong dollar, English as an official language, and common-law legal system — a distinctly accessible gateway to China.
Macau & Pearl River Delta
UNESCO-listed Portuguese colonial heritage, Macanese fusion cuisine, and the world's largest casino district — all reachable in under an hour by ferry or bridge bus.
Geopark, Islands & Green Space
UNESCO volcanic rock formations in Sai Kung, car-free islands by ferry, walled villages, and seventy-five percent green coverage — the SAR beyond the skyline.
Hong Kong SAR Travel Notes
- •Hong Kong has SEPARATE immigration from mainland China. Entry to Hong Kong does NOT count as entry to the mainland, and a mainland China visa does NOT cover Hong Kong. Check visa requirements for each jurisdiction separately.
- •Most Western passport holders enter Hong Kong visa-free: UK 180 days, EU/US/Canada/Australia 90 days. No advance application needed — just show your passport at immigration.
- •Currency is the Hong Kong dollar (HKD), not the Chinese yuan (RMB). The HKD is pegged to the USD at approximately 7.8:1. Credit cards are widely accepted. Get an Octopus card at the airport for all public transport and many shops.
- •The high-speed rail from West Kowloon to Shenzhen Futian (14 min) and Guangzhou South (47 min) is the fastest way to the mainland. Joint immigration at West Kowloon clears both Hong Kong and mainland formalities in one terminal.
- •Ferries to Macau depart from the Shun Tak Centre in Sheung Wan (Central) and China Ferry Terminal in Tsim Sha Tsui. Journey time roughly 55 minutes. Buses via the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge take approximately 40 minutes.
- •English and Cantonese are both official languages. Street signs, menus, and public transport announcements are bilingual. Hong Kong is the most English-accessible destination in greater China.
- •Typhoon season runs June-September. When Signal 8 or above is hoisted, public transport stops, businesses close, and ferries are cancelled. Check the Hong Kong Observatory for warnings.
Cities in Hong Kong SAR
1 city with detailed travel information