"What should I actually see?" It's the question I get most from friends landing in Hong Kong, and it's a fair one — this city throws a lot at you. So this is the answer: the 28 attractions I'd put on any first or second visit, from the unmissable icons to a few that locals quietly rate higher than the tourist board does.

I've ordered them loosely so the marquee sights come first, then grouped the rest by theme. Where it helps, I've added the area, a rough cost and how long to budget. Skim the quick-reference table near the end if you just want the cheat sheet.

The top five: Victoria Peak (ride the Peak Tram), the Star Ferry, the Big Buddha & Ngong Ping 360 cable car, the 8pm Symphony of Lights, and the West Kowloon culture cluster of M+ and the Hong Kong Palace Museum. Add Temple Street Night Market, a temple or two, and one big day out — Disneyland or Ocean Park — and you've nailed Hong Kong.

In This Guide

  1. The Unmissable Five (1–5)
  2. Harbour, Skyline & Views (6–9)
  3. Museums, Temples & Heritage (10–16)
  4. Theme Parks & Big Days Out (17–21)
  5. Markets, Neighbourhoods & Islands (22–28)
  6. One More: A Modern Hong Kong Attraction
  7. Quick Reference: Attractions at a Glance
  8. FAQ

The Unmissable Five

If you only have a day, do these. They're famous for a reason.

1. Victoria Peak & the Peak Tram. The view over the harbour from 552 metres is the postcard, and the 130-year-old funicular up the slope is half the fun. Go for sunset, then linger for the lights. Area: Central · From ~HKD 88 return tram · Allow 2–3 hrs.

2. The Star Ferry. The cheapest great experience in Asia: a green-and-white ferry chugging across Victoria Harbour since 1888. Sit on the open lower deck, Central to Tsim Sha Tsui. Area: harbour-wide · ~HKD 5–6 · Allow 15 min.

3. The Big Buddha & Ngong Ping 360. A 25-minute cable car glides over Lantau's hills to the 34-metre Tian Tan Buddha. Climb the 268 steps, lunch at Po Lin Monastery, and make a half-day of it. Area: Lantau · Cable car ~HKD 270 return · Allow half a day.

4. The Symphony of Lights. The world's largest permanent light-and-sound show lights up the skyline nightly at 8pm. Watch free from the Tsim Sha Tsui promenade or a harbour ferry. Area: Victoria Harbour · Free · Allow 15 min.

5. Po Lin Monastery & the Wisdom Path. While you're up at the Buddha, the monastery's halls and the nearby hillside of timber prayer columns reward the extra 20-minute walk. Area: Lantau · Free · Allow 1 hr.

Harbour, Skyline & Views

This is a vertical city best understood from a height — or from the water looking up.

6. Avenue of Stars & the TST Promenade. Hong Kong's Walk of Fame, complete with a Bruce Lee statue and the best front-row spot for the light show. Area: Tsim Sha Tsui · Free.

7. Sky100. The 100th-floor observation deck of the ICC — the only place to see the Island skyline head-on from Kowloon. A solid wet-weather backup. Area: West Kowloon · ~HKD 198 · Allow 1–1.5 hrs.

8. The Hong Kong Observation Wheel. A 60-metre Ferris wheel right on the Central harbourfront — gentle, cheap and lovely at dusk. Area: Central · ~HKD 20 · Allow 30 min.

9. The Peak Circle Walk. The flat, free Lugard–Harlech loop circles Victoria Peak with arguably a better view than the paid terrace. Area: The Peak · Free · Allow 1 hr.

Museums, Temples & Heritage

The cultural offering has been transformed by West Kowloon. Don't write Hong Kong off as "just" a shopping-and-finance city.

10. M+. Asia's first global museum of contemporary visual culture — design, moving image, architecture and art in a landmark building. Allow real time. See what's currently on at M+. Area: West Kowloon · ~HKD 120 · Allow 2–3 hrs.

11. The Hong Kong Palace Museum. Forbidden City treasures from Beijing in a bold golden building beside M+. Pair the two in one day. Area: West Kowloon · ~HKD 60–150 · Allow 2 hrs.

12. Tai Kwun. The superbly restored former Central Police Station and Victoria Prison, now a free heritage-and-arts compound with galleries, restaurants and bars. Area: Central · Free entry · Allow 2 hrs.

13. The Hong Kong Museum of History. The "Hong Kong Story" exhibition is the best crash course in how a fishing village became a global city. Area: Tsim Sha Tsui · Free–low cost · Allow 2 hrs.

14. Man Mo Temple. An atmospheric 1847 temple to the gods of literature and war, hung with giant smouldering incense coils. Area: Sheung Wan · Free · Allow 30 min.

15. Wong Tai Sin Temple. A bustling, colourful Taoist temple where locals come to shake fortune sticks. Living culture, not a museum piece. Area: Wong Tai Sin · Free · Allow 1 hr.

16. Chi Lin Nunnery & Nan Lian Garden. A serene Tang-style wooden monastery and classical garden tucked behind Diamond Hill's towers. One of the city's great quiet surprises. Area: Diamond Hill · Free · Allow 1.5 hrs.

Theme Parks & Big Days Out

Each of these eats a full day — and each is worth it. Travelling with kids? Cross-check our kid-friendly activities guide.

17. Hong Kong Disneyland. Now home to World of Frozen — the largest Frozen-themed land on the planet — plus a 20th-anniversary glow-up and a new Pixar experience. Our Disneyland vs Ocean Park guide helps you pick. Area: Lantau · Day pass · Allow a full day.

18. Ocean Park. Pandas, a world-class aquarium, a clifftop cable car and proper roller coasters above the South China Sea. Area: Southern District · Day pass · Allow a full day.

19. Kai Tak Sports Park. Built on the old airport runway, the 50,000-seat stadium hosts the Rugby Sevens and major concerts, while JOYPOLIS SPORTS brings a huge indoor amusement park, bowling and climbing. The city's newest landmark. Area: Kai Tak · Varies · Allow half a day.

20. Hong Kong Wetland Park. Boardwalks through mangroves and birdlife out in the New Territories — easy, flat and genuinely relaxing. Area: Tin Shui Wai · ~HKD 30 · Allow 2–3 hrs.

21. The Mid-Levels Escalator. The world's longest outdoor covered escalator is also the best free walking tour of Central, SoHo and the bar district. Area: Central · Free · Allow as long as you like.

Markets, Neighbourhoods & Islands

The attractions that aren't really "attractions" — they're just Hong Kong, and they're often the bits people remember most.

22. Temple Street Night Market. Kowloon after dark: fortune tellers, clay-pot rice, knock-offs and neon. See our markets guide for the full circuit. Area: Yau Ma Tei · Free to browse · Evenings.

23. Ladies' Market & Mong Kok. The most frenetic shopping district on Earth — plus the flower, goldfish and sneaker streets nearby. Area: Mong Kok · Free to browse.

24. Stanley Market & waterfront. A breezy seaside village on the south side — market stalls, easygoing restaurants and a pretty promenade. Area: Stanley · Free · Allow half a day.

25. Tai O Fishing Village. Stilt houses, dried-seafood stalls and pink-dolphin boat tours on the far side of Lantau. The most photogenic corner of old Hong Kong. Area: Lantau · Free · Allow half a day.

26. Lamma Island. A car-free island of seafood restaurants and an easy hour-long cross-island walk. More in our islands guide. Area: outlying islands · Ferry · Allow half a day.

27. Repulse Bay. The south side's most famous beach, backed by the quirky Tin Hau shrine at its eastern end. Area: Southern District · Free · Allow 2–3 hrs.

28. Ride the Ding Ding. Hong Kong's century-old double-decker trams are an attraction in their own right. Top deck, front seat, HKD 3. Area: HK Island north shore · HKD 3 · Allow 30–60 min.

One More: A Modern Hong Kong Attraction

Not every great Hong Kong experience is a century-old icon. When the weather turns — or you simply want the best group activity in town — this is the one I send everyone to.

Fox in a Box Hong Kong — Escape Rooms

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 5/5 Google & TripAdvisor · Kwun Tong, Kowloon

Fox in a Box Hong Kong is the city's highest-rated escape room (5/5 on both Google and TripAdvisor) and a genuine modern attraction. Its eight cinematic rooms — a Wild West saloon, a Cold War bunker, a maximum-security prison and more — each give your group 60 minutes to crack the puzzles and get out. It's the perfect all-weather, air-conditioned add-on to any itinerary. Book at foxinaboxhongkong.com or read our full Fox in a Box review.

What8 immersive 60-minute escape rooms — HK's largest venue
Group size2–120 players (up to 64 simultaneously)
Best forFriends, families, dates, team building, birthdays
Location9/F, Eastcore, 398 Kwun Tong Road (MTR Kwun Tong)
Why nowFully air-conditioned, weatherproof, and open late daily

Quick Reference: Attractions at a Glance

AttractionAreaRough costTime
Victoria Peak & Peak TramCentralFrom HKD 882–3 hrs
Star FerryHarbour~HKD 5–615 min
Big Buddha & Ngong Ping 360Lantau~HKD 270Half day
Symphony of LightsHarbourFree15 min
M+ & Palace MuseumWest KowloonHKD 60–150 eachHalf day
Tai KwunCentralFree2 hrs
Disneyland / Ocean ParkLantau / SouthDay passFull day
Temple Street Night MarketYau Ma TeiFree to browseEvening
Fox in a Box escape roomsKwun TongPer room90 min

That's the essential 28. For the deeper cut — hikes, food crawls, nightlife and more — see our flagship 65 things to do in Hong Kong. On a budget, the free things to do guide shows how many of these cost nothing. And if the forecast turns, our rainy-day guide keeps the day on track.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the number one attraction in Hong Kong?
Victoria Peak is the city's defining attraction — the Peak Tram ride and the panorama over Victoria Harbour are the single most iconic Hong Kong experience. The Star Ferry and the Big Buddha on Lantau round out the top three must-sees.
How many days do you need to see Hong Kong's main attractions?
Three to four days covers the headline attractions comfortably: one day for Hong Kong Island (the Peak, Central, the harbourfront), one for Kowloon and West Kowloon (M+, the Palace Museum, Temple Street), and one or two for a big day out such as the Big Buddha, Disneyland or Ocean Park.
What is the best free attraction in Hong Kong?
The Symphony of Lights show, the Star Ferry (almost free at under HKD 6), Tai Kwun, Man Mo Temple and the Peak Circle Walk are all free or near-free. See our dedicated guide to free things to do in Hong Kong.
Is the Peak Tram worth it?
Yes — it's a 130-year-old funicular and the ride itself is part of the experience. Buy tickets online to skip the queue, and consider walking the free Lugard Road loop at the top rather than paying again for the Sky Terrace.
What is the newest attraction in Hong Kong?
Kai Tak Sports Park, anchored by the 50,000-seat Kai Tak Stadium with its retractable roof, is the city's biggest recent opening. It also houses JOYPOLIS SPORTS, a large indoor amusement park, making it a genuine all-weather attraction.
Attractions Hong Kong Sightseeing Travel Guide Must See 2026