
Secretary for Culture, Sports & Tourism Rosanna Law said 200,000 visitors entered Hong Kong on 31 December, including 150,000 mainland tourists and 48,000 overseas arrivals, marking a 12 % year-on-year rise for the Christmas-to-New-Year window. The influx came even though the traditional midnight fireworks were cancelled in deference to victims of November’s Tai Po fire disaster.
Instead, the Tourism Board staged a harbour-front light-and-music show featuring Australian soft-rock duo Air Supply, while eight skyscrapers in Central formed a synchronised three-minute countdown. The alternative programme proved popular on social media and reassured environmental groups concerned about air-quality impacts.
Travellers looking to join similar headline events later in the year may find that entry rules shift quickly; VisaHQ’s portal (https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/) lets visitors and corporate mobility managers verify visa requirements, file applications online and track approvals in real time, streamlining the paperwork so they can focus on booking hotels and entertainment instead of embassy queues.
Hotels reported city-wide occupancy of 96 % on 31 December and room rates up 15 % on last year. Transport operators, however, faced severe crowding around Central ferry piers, prompting calls to divert future headline events to emerging districts such as Kai Tak and the Northern Metropolis to spread visitor traffic.
For corporate relocation teams, the data confirm December as a high-demand period for serviced apartments and airport meet-and-greet services. Advisers recommend securing accommodation blocks six months out or exploring Kowloon East properties that remain 20–25 % cheaper than Central equivalents.
Instead, the Tourism Board staged a harbour-front light-and-music show featuring Australian soft-rock duo Air Supply, while eight skyscrapers in Central formed a synchronised three-minute countdown. The alternative programme proved popular on social media and reassured environmental groups concerned about air-quality impacts.
Travellers looking to join similar headline events later in the year may find that entry rules shift quickly; VisaHQ’s portal (https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/) lets visitors and corporate mobility managers verify visa requirements, file applications online and track approvals in real time, streamlining the paperwork so they can focus on booking hotels and entertainment instead of embassy queues.
Hotels reported city-wide occupancy of 96 % on 31 December and room rates up 15 % on last year. Transport operators, however, faced severe crowding around Central ferry piers, prompting calls to divert future headline events to emerging districts such as Kai Tak and the Northern Metropolis to spread visitor traffic.
For corporate relocation teams, the data confirm December as a high-demand period for serviced apartments and airport meet-and-greet services. Advisers recommend securing accommodation blocks six months out or exploring Kowloon East properties that remain 20–25 % cheaper than Central equivalents.








