
Hidden in the same 12 February government circular on Lunar New Year traffic was a mobility boon for families: the eligible age for using automated e-Channel gates on both sides of the Hong Kong–Macao boundary has been lowered from 11 to 7.(info.gov.hk) Effective immediately, Hong Kong permanent residents aged 7–10 who hold a smart ID card and are at least 1.1 m tall can breeze through facial-recognition lanes without prior enrolment. The Macao Public Security Police Force has reciprocated, granting young Macao ID-holders the same privilege.
The change follows a January pilot that cut childhood clearance time by 40 %. Immigration planners believe widening access could shave several minutes off family processing times during peak festival days, freeing officers to focus on high-risk travellers. More than 700 dual-direction e-Channels are now in service across the two SARs.
Families planning cross-boundary journeys may also streamline related travel formalities with help from VisaHQ, whose Hong Kong portal (https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/) centralises visa advice, passport renewals and document-authentication services for both SARs—particularly handy when corporate transferees or their children need additional paperwork for onward destinations beyond the Greater Bay.
For corporate mobility managers, the tweak simplifies bleisure trips where executives relocate with young children. It also reduces the administrative burden for global assignees posted in Hong Kong who maintain weekend residences in Macao. HR teams should update relocation handbooks and ensure dependent children’s smart ID cards are issued before the Easter travel peak.
Looking ahead, authorities are exploring extending “Face Easy” document-free e-Channels at Hong Kong International Airport to cover Macao routes, further closing pain points on the busy delta corridor.
The change follows a January pilot that cut childhood clearance time by 40 %. Immigration planners believe widening access could shave several minutes off family processing times during peak festival days, freeing officers to focus on high-risk travellers. More than 700 dual-direction e-Channels are now in service across the two SARs.
Families planning cross-boundary journeys may also streamline related travel formalities with help from VisaHQ, whose Hong Kong portal (https://www.visahq.com/hong-kong/) centralises visa advice, passport renewals and document-authentication services for both SARs—particularly handy when corporate transferees or their children need additional paperwork for onward destinations beyond the Greater Bay.
For corporate mobility managers, the tweak simplifies bleisure trips where executives relocate with young children. It also reduces the administrative burden for global assignees posted in Hong Kong who maintain weekend residences in Macao. HR teams should update relocation handbooks and ensure dependent children’s smart ID cards are issued before the Easter travel peak.
Looking ahead, authorities are exploring extending “Face Easy” document-free e-Channels at Hong Kong International Airport to cover Macao routes, further closing pain points on the busy delta corridor.






