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Jan 4, 2026

200,000 Visitors Flood Hong Kong on New Year’s Eve, Underscoring City’s Countdown Appeal

200,000 Visitors Flood Hong Kong on New Year’s Eve, Underscoring City’s Countdown Appeal
Hong Kong’s year-end party atmosphere proved irresistible to international travellers once again. Secretary for Culture, Sports and Tourism Rosanna Law revealed that almost 200,000 visitors crossed the city’s borders on 31 December alone, including 150,000 mainland Chinese residents and 48,000 overseas arrivals . The bumper inflow translated into a 12 percent year-on-year jump in total visitor numbers for the Christmas-to-New-Year period and came despite the cancellation of the traditional midnight fireworks show out of respect for November’s deadly Tai Po fire.

Instead, the Tourism Board mounted a large-scale light-and-music extravaganza along the Central harbourfront featuring international headliners such as Air Supply. Eight iconic skyscrapers doubled as a synchronised three-minute light show and countdown clock, giving visitors Instagram-friendly alternatives to pyrotechnics while keeping air-quality advocates happy.

For travellers—whether holidaymakers chasing the countdown buzz or corporate road-warriors arriving on assignment—obtaining the right travel documents early is half the battle. VisaHQ’s digital platform (https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/) lets individuals and mobility teams arrange Hong Kong entry visas for more than 200 nationalities, track status in real time and receive concierge guidance on supporting paperwork, ensuring nobody misses the harbourfront lights because of last-minute bureaucracy.

200,000 Visitors Flood Hong Kong on New Year’s Eve, Underscoring City’s Countdown Appeal


Law said the data prove Hong Kong remains “Asia’s premier countdown city”, but industry associations cautioned that crowd control and dispersal strategies must be stepped up. Retail and F&B operators again reported severe bottlenecks around Central ferry piers, while ride-hailing surge multipliers hit record levels.

Tour operators are urging government to promote secondary districts—Kowloon East’s new Kai Tak Stadium, West Kowloon Cultural District and the emerging Northern Metropolis—to ease pressure on the core CBD. For corporate mobility managers, the numbers confirm that December is once again a peak-travel window for inbound assignees and VIPs; firms are advised to secure hotel blocks and airport meet-and-greet services well in advance for 2026.

Looking ahead, the Tourism Bureau pledged “bigger, greener and more diversified” festival programming next Christmas, hinting at partnerships with cruise operators and MICE organisers to keep high-spending visitors in town for longer stays.
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