
Hong Kong’s Immigration Department has lowered the minimum age for visitors to use its automated e-Channel gates from 11 to seven, effective 22 December 2025. The change applies to three high-volume traveller groups: holders of electronic People’s Republic of China (PRC) passports, visitors carrying an Electronic Exit-Entry Permit (e-EEP) and passengers using the Smart Departure facial-recognition programme.
For families or corporate travel planners navigating the documentation requirements for Hong Kong, VisaHQ’s online platform can streamline the process well before travellers reach the e-Channel gates. From PRC e-passports to e-EEPs, its step-by-step application tools and live support at https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/ help ensure that every traveller—parents and children alike—holds the correct biometric credentials needed to breeze through automated immigration.
The policy aims to shrink arrival queues during the Christmas rush, when family travel peaks. An e-Channel transaction typically takes 20–30 seconds – less than half the time at a staffed counter – so extending eligibility to younger children could free up thousands of man-hours for immigration officers.
For mobility managers relocating executives with school-age dependants, the new rule eliminates a common bottleneck: families can now remain together through automated lanes rather than splitting between e-Channel and manual desks. No pre-enrolment is required, but children must meet the 1.1-metre height requirement and travel on biometric documents.
The age reduction is part of Hong Kong’s broader push toward contact-less borders ahead of the 2026 World Cities Summit. Earlier in the year the city rolled out “Face Easy” arrival lanes for residents and began ICAO trials of digital travel credentials. Industry analysts expect additional visitor categories – such as Macao Home Return Permit holders – to be added in 2026 once system tests conclude.
For families or corporate travel planners navigating the documentation requirements for Hong Kong, VisaHQ’s online platform can streamline the process well before travellers reach the e-Channel gates. From PRC e-passports to e-EEPs, its step-by-step application tools and live support at https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/ help ensure that every traveller—parents and children alike—holds the correct biometric credentials needed to breeze through automated immigration.
The policy aims to shrink arrival queues during the Christmas rush, when family travel peaks. An e-Channel transaction typically takes 20–30 seconds – less than half the time at a staffed counter – so extending eligibility to younger children could free up thousands of man-hours for immigration officers.
For mobility managers relocating executives with school-age dependants, the new rule eliminates a common bottleneck: families can now remain together through automated lanes rather than splitting between e-Channel and manual desks. No pre-enrolment is required, but children must meet the 1.1-metre height requirement and travel on biometric documents.
The age reduction is part of Hong Kong’s broader push toward contact-less borders ahead of the 2026 World Cities Summit. Earlier in the year the city rolled out “Face Easy” arrival lanes for residents and began ICAO trials of digital travel credentials. Industry analysts expect additional visitor categories – such as Macao Home Return Permit holders – to be added in 2026 once system tests conclude.







