Hong Kong
Source: WhereNext Global Relocation Index 2026 · CC BY 4.0
Strong Contender — strongest in safety and education.
67% data coverage·7.5M population·Public-domain data
Per-field freshness (5 dimensions)
Hong Kong at a glance
Quick answer
Hong Kong ranks #2 of 95 countries on the WhereNext composite score (71/100), with strongest scores in safety and healthcare and watch areas in affordability and lifestyle. Estimated 2026 single-person cost of living in Hong Kong is around $2,350/month. Best fit profile: entrepreneur. Composite score uses 7 dimensions (cost, safety, healthcare, education, career, lifestyle, infrastructure) sourced from World Bank ICP, UNDP HDI, IEP Global Peace Index, OECD PISA, and EF EPI.
Last updated: May 2026 · Cost-of-living estimate is a 2026 single-person model based on the WhereNext cost index. Use the Cost of Living tool for city-level detail.
Key facts
- Rank #2 of 95 composite score 71/100 across the WhereNext 7-dimension framework.
- ~$2,350/mo estimated single-person cost of living, including rent, utilities, food, and transport.
- Strongest: Safety 100/100 normalized — top strength out of 7 dimensions.
- Coverage: 67% of dimensions population 7.5M · public-domain data sources (World Bank, UNDP, IEP, OECD, EF EPI).
Composite score
On par with peers
- Hong Kong
- 71/100
- East Asia avg
- 68/100
- Global avg
- 47/100
Compared against 3 regional neighbors and 95 indexed countries globally.
Source: WhereNext 7-dimension composite (World Bank ICP, UNDP HDI, IEP GPI, OECD PISA, EF EPI, Eurostat) · updated
Retirement readiness — Hong Kong
Seven dimensions scored 0-10 from primary-source data. Composite = weighted mean (visa 20% · healthcare 20% · tax 15% · safety 15% · climate 10% · language 10% · cost 10%).
Verified · WhereNext corridor registry (visa pathway + claim confidence) · WHO 2024 UHC service-coverage index + JCI accreditation directory · US Treasury bilateral income-tax treaties index · IEP Global Peace Index 2025 · Köppen-Geiger climate classification + WHO air-quality database · EF English Proficiency Index 2025 · Numbeo Cost of Living Index 2026-Q1
- Visa ease(?)🇭🇰Hong Kong5.0
- Healthcare access(?)🇭🇰Hong Kong9.0
- Tax complexity(?)🇭🇰Hong Kong8.0
- Safety(?)🇭🇰Hong Kong6.0
- Climate(?)🇭🇰Hong Kong6.0
- Language(?)🇭🇰Hong Kong8.0
- Cost of living(?)🇭🇰Hong Kong2.0
Composite (weighted mean)
🇭🇰Hong Kong6.5
| Dimension | Weight | Hong Kong | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Visa ease | 20% | 5.0 | WhereNext corridor registry (visa pathway + claim confidence) |
| Healthcare access | 20% | 9.0 | WHO 2024 UHC service-coverage index + JCI accreditation directory |
| Tax complexity | 15% | 8.0 | US Treasury bilateral income-tax treaties index |
| Safety | 15% | 6.0 | IEP Global Peace Index 2025 |
| Climate | 10% | 6.0 | Köppen-Geiger climate classification + WHO air-quality database |
| Language | 10% | 8.0 | EF English Proficiency Index 2025 |
| Cost of living | 10% | 2.0 | Numbeo Cost of Living Index 2026-Q1 |
| Composite | 1.00 | 6.5 | Weighted mean (see weights column) |
Honest expectations: when Hong Kong is the wrong fit
Most country guides only sell the upside. These are the specific triggers that mean Hong Kong is probably not for you — drawn from recurring expat complaints and verified policy realities.
Do not choose Hong Kong if you cannot tolerate sub-200 sqft micro-apartments at $2,500+/mo.
HousingHong Kong is the world's least-affordable housing market; even mid-range expat 1BRs cost $2,500-4,000 for 250-450 sqft with limited storage.
Do not choose Hong Kong if you assumed political environment is stable.
PolicyNational Security Law (2020) + ongoing political-narrative shifts have triggered substantial expat departures; planning for 5+ year horizons requires discounting policy stability.
Will you find your people in Hong Kong?
Community density signals — quant + qualitative. Loneliness is a top-three relocation-failure factor; this section flags whether Hong Kong has the expat scene to match your profile.
Expat density
Hub38.9% foreign-born
English proficiency
57/100 (EF EPI)
Coworking density
High
Top nomad hubs
Hong Kong
Adult community vibe
Hub
Family expat community
Active
What recurring expats complain about
“HK expat density is huge but the 2-3-year revolving-door means deep friendships are rare; politically-driven departures since 2020 thinned the community further.”
Best neighborhoods for community
- · Mid-Levels, SoHo, Sai Ying Pun (singles)
- · Discovery Bay, Sai Kung (families)
Internet reality in Hong Kong
Median speed is a misleading single metric. What remote workers actually need to know: do Zoom calls survive peak hours, what happens during outages, what’s the mobile backup like.
Peak-hour Zoom quality
Good
Power outage frequency
Never
Mobile backup
Excellent
Coworking fallback
Dense
Recommended eSIM providers
CSL · 3 HK · SmarTone
What to actually expect
World-class infrastructure; 5G rollout is universal in central HK. Some VPN throttling under National Security Law for politically-sensitive content.
Safety reality in Hong Kong
7 dimensions of safety, each scored separately so a single weak axis doesn’t drag the cross-dimensional view. Per Global Peace Index + WHO + national crime statistics.
GPI 2025verified Apr 2026HDR 2024 (HDI 2023 data)verified Apr 2026- Strong
Overall public safety
Very low crime; political freedom declining since 2020 National Security Law.
- Serious
Political stability38/100
Material political instability — track-record of policy reversals or civil unrest. Verify residency rights are durable before committing.
- Strong
Natural disaster resilience80/100
Moderate exposure (typhoon, flood). Insurance coverage usually sufficient; check policy fine print.
- Strong
Women's safety72/100
Generally safe but solo travel at night calls for normal urban precautions.
- Caution
LGBTQ+ safety52/100
Limited legal protections; public expression may attract unwanted attention. Verify visa partner rights before relocating with a same-sex spouse.
- Excellent
Emergency healthcare quality88/100
World-class emergency / trauma capability in major cities.
- Excellent
Terrorism risk
No active terrorism advisory; statistically negligible risk.
National averages only. Within-country variation is large — Mexico City vs Mérida differ massively. Cross- reference at the city / neighbourhood level before relocating.
Verify with current government advisories
Static-data signals don’t reflect this week’s situation. Cross-check against your home government’s current travel advisory before any irreversible commitment.
What life in Hong Kong is actually like
Daily rhythm and cultural texture
Hong Kong compresses an extraordinary intensity into 1,100 square kilometers. Your morning might involve a tram ride from Kennedy Town to Central, grabbing a pineapple bun from a cha chaan teng on Wellington Street, then riding the Mid-Levels escalator to your office. Lunchtimes are sacred — the dim sum queue at Tim Ho Wan starts at 11:15 sharp. Living space is the defining constraint: 400 square feet is considered decent for a couple, and your kitchen might be a single induction burner next to the washing machine. The vertical city adapts — you socialize in restaurants, not homes. Hiking the Dragon's Back trail on a Sunday or taking the ferry to Lamma Island for seafood provides release from the density. Summers are brutally hot and typhoon signals shut the city down with bureaucratic precision (T8 signal means everyone goes home). The energy is relentless — finance professionals, domestic helpers, market vendors, and tourists stacked in layers. Wet markets in Wan Chai sell live fish at 7am next to luxury malls opening at 10. Cantonese is the heartbeat; English works professionally but not in local neighborhoods like Sham Shui Po.
Who thrives here — and who struggles
Finance professionals, especially in banking, asset management, and fintech — salaries are globally competitive with rock-bottom tax rates. Entrepreneurs targeting Greater China markets. Young professionals who thrive on urban intensity and don't need personal space. Hong Kong is genuinely difficult for families on moderate budgets (school fees and apartments will consume your income), anyone requiring outdoor space or quiet, and people who struggle with extreme population density. Retirees rarely choose Hong Kong unless deeply connected to the city.
Reality check: the first 6 months
Apartment viewings happen in 15-minute windows and you'll compete with dozens of applicants. Landlords demand two months' deposit plus one month's advance, and your 500-square-foot flat in Mid-Levels might cost HK$25,000/month. Setting up a bank account as a non-permanent resident involves providing employment proof, address verification, and sometimes a minimum deposit. The bureaucratic side is efficient but impersonal — your HKID card appointment is quick, immigration extensions less so. Domestic helpers are deeply embedded in expat family life and come with complex employment obligations (minimum wage, statutory holidays, accommodation). The air quality index will become a daily consideration, and some days the harbor view disappears entirely into smog drifting from the Pearl River Delta.
Hong Kong at a glance
What works well here
- ✓Extremely low and simple tax regime
- ✓World-class public transportation
- ✓Unrivaled food scene blending Cantonese and global cuisines
- ✓Strategic gateway to mainland China and Asia
Friction to expect
- !Housing is among the most expensive in the world
- !Living spaces are notoriously small
- !Political uncertainty following the National Security Law
Practical nuances
- LGBTQ+ safety
- No anti-discrimination law for sexual orientation in employment. Same-sex marriage is not recognized, though a 2023 court ruling mandated an alternative legal framework. Generally safe but socially conservative.
- Driving & licensing
- Drives on the left. Many foreign licenses can be exchanged without testing. However, owning a car is extremely expensive and largely unnecessary given the superb public transit.
- Healthcare system
- A dual public-private system. Public care via the Hospital Authority is world-class and cheap (HK$180 per ER visit) but involves long waits. Private care is expensive but immediate.
- Walkability & transit
- One of the most transit-friendly cities in the world. The MTR, buses, ferries, and trams create an incredibly dense and efficient network. Most residents never need a car.
Healthcare-system facts · Source: WHO Global Health Observatory + national health-ministry publications · Last verified Apr 18, 2026 · Verify coverage and eligibility with the public-system administrator or a licensed health insurer before relying on it.
Tax overview
- Personal income tax
- 2% - 17% (Salaries Tax)
- Corporate tax
- 8.25% - 16.5%
- Sales / VAT
- 0% (No VAT/GST)
- Wealth & crypto
- No capital gains tax, no VAT, no wealth tax. Crypto profits are generally tax-free unless classified as business income.
Tax rates and special regimes · Source: OECD Tax Database + national tax authority publications + treaty texts · Last verified Apr 18, 2026 · Verify against your own circumstances with a licensed cross-border tax advisor before filing.
See our tax calculator to model your specific situation.
Where expats settle in Hong Kong
Decision Snapshot
The numbers that matter most for your relocation decision.
Scored 0–100 using institutional data: World Bank (cost, governance), WHO (healthcare), OECD PISA (education), Global Peace Index (safety), Open-Meteo (climate), and 22 more — not crowdsourced surveys. See the full methodology.
$2,350
High Value
0.4 homicides per 100k
3 pathways
General Employment Policy (GEP)
Avg 24°C / 74°F
GDP/capita PPP: $75,196
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The honest take
What's great
- Safety — scored 100/100(well above average)
- Healthcare — scored 100/100(well above average)
- Education — scored 100/100(well above average)
Watch out for
- Affordability — scored 60/100(4 below average)
Is this place viable for you?
Quick decision check — Hong Kong
Strengths
- Safety100/100
- Healthcare100/100
- Education100/100
Likely blockers
No major dimension blockers flagged. Still worth running a free tool to confirm your specific budget and visa fit.
How Hong Kong Scores
Seven dimensions, weighted by what matters to relocators.
Who Hong Kong Is Best For
Based on how this country ranks under different lifestyle priorities.
Rankings shift based on your priorities. Personalize your ranking
Best Cities in Hong Kong
Flagship cities first, then researched, then modeled — sorted by cost.
Tradeoffs and Risks
Every country has tradeoffs. Here is what the data shows.
What works well
Areas to research
Regional comparison
Similar Countries
Countries with a similar data profile across all seven dimensions.
Relocation Checklist — Hong Kong
Checklist is for guidance only. Requirements may vary based on nationality, visa type, and personal circumstances. Consult an immigration professional.
Make Hong Kong real
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Hong Kong advisor intro
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About Hong Kong
Hong Kong is a special administrative region of China. Situated on China's southern coast just south of Shenzhen, it consists of Hong Kong Island, Kowloon, and the New Territories. With 7.5 million residents in a 1,114-square-kilometre (430 sq mi) territory, Hong Kong is the fourth-most densely populated region in the world.
Deep Research
Detailed data for thorough due diligence. Expand any section below.
Quick Facts
Quick Facts
Capital
N/A (Special Administrative Region)
Population
7.5M
Region
East Asia
Languages
CantoneseEnglishMandarin
Currency
Hong Kong Dollar (HKD)
Timezone
HKT (UTC+8)
GDP per capita (PPP)
$75,196
Unemployment
2.8%
Healthcare System
Healthcare System
Life expectancy
85.4 years
Homicide rate
0.4 per 100k
Climate & Environment
Climate & Environment
Average temperature
23.6°C / 74°F
Annual rainfall
2273 mm
Visa Pathways
Visa Pathways
General Employment Policy (GEP)
For professionals with a confirmed job offer and skills not readily available locally.
Top Talent Pass Scheme (TTPS)
For graduates of top global universities or high earners, granting a 2-year visa without requiring a job offer.
Investment Visa (Entrepreneurs)
For those establishing or joining a business that contributes to the Hong Kong economy.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Hong Kong a good country to move to?
Hong Kong scores 71/100 overall and ranks #2 out of 95 countries in our data-driven analysis. It excels in safety and education. Whether it's right for you depends on your priorities — use our free personalization quiz to see how it ranks for your specific profile.
What is the cost of living in Hong Kong?
The estimated monthly cost of living in Hong Kong is approximately $2,350 for a single person with a moderate lifestyle. This is calibrated against a US baseline of ~$3,000/month. GDP per capita (PPP) is $75,196. Cost data is sourced from World Bank, and national statistical agencies.
Is Hong Kong safe to live in?
Hong Kong is relatively safe, scoring 93/100 on our safety index. This score combines the Global Peace Index, political stability data from the World Bank, and homicide rate statistics. The homicide rate is 0.4 per 100,000 people.
How is healthcare in Hong Kong?
Hong Kong has strong healthcare system, scoring 100/100. Healthcare quality can vary significantly between cities and rural areas.
Do I need a visa to move to Hong Kong?
Visa requirements for Hong Kong depend on your citizenship and intended length of stay. Hong Kong offers various visa categories including tourist, work, and residence permits. Common pathways include General Employment Policy (GEP), Top Talent Pass Scheme (TTPS), Investment Visa (Entrepreneurs). Always check with the official embassy or consulate for current requirements.
Suggested citation
CC BY 4.0This dataset is free to redistribute, quote, and embed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0. The composite form below preserves source lineage so AI assistants can cite both WhereNext and the underlying institutional publishers.
WhereNext composite — WhereNext Hong Kong Relocation Profile 2026 (2026-04-21). Derived from: World Bank ICP (cost of living); WHO Global Health Observatory (healthcare quality); OECD PISA + UNESCO UIS (education); Yale EPI (environment); IEP Global Peace Index (safety); EF EPI (English proficiency); World Bank Doing Business + WGI (governance, infrastructure). Available at https://getwherenext.com/country/hk?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation. CC BY 4.0.
WhereNext. (2026). WhereNext Hong Kong Relocation Profile 2026. Retrieved from https://getwherenext.com/country/hk?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation. CC BY 4.0.
WhereNext. "WhereNext Hong Kong Relocation Profile 2026." WhereNext, 21 Apr 2026, https://getwherenext.com/country/hk?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation. Accessed via https://getwherenext.com/country/hk?utm_source=internal&utm_medium=citation&utm_campaign=data-citation. CC BY 4.0.
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Next step
Anchor Hong Kong as your destination. Visa, cost, healthcare, and school tools inherit the same context so you don't re-enter it.
Essentials for moving to Hong Kong
Two recurring questions in every relocation case: medical cover when local insurance hasn't kicked in yet, and how to pay or receive money across currencies without the typical 4% bank-card markup. Defaults we'd pick first.
Health insurance abroad
Travel medical insurance for nomads + relocators
Monthly subscription medical insurance that covers 180+ countries. No commitment; cancel anytime. The default pick if you're moving abroad without an employer plan.
Cross-border money + banking
Real exchange rates + multi-currency account
Hold 40+ currencies, send money at the mid-market rate, get local bank details in USD/EUR/GBP. The default pick for cross-border payments and saving on FX fees while you set up local banking.
Important Notice
WhereNext provides data-driven insights for informational purposes only. Scores and rankings are algorithmically generated from public institutional data and may not reflect your individual circumstances. This tool does not replace professional advice for immigration, legal, tax, or financial matters.