For 25 years, A State of Trance has been the closest thing dance music has to a global congregation — a radio show turned record label turned travelling festival that has filled rooms from Utrecht to Sydney to Mexico City. It has never, in all that time, staged a show in East Asia. That changes on 12 June 2026, when Armin van Buuren brings ASOT's 25th-anniversary edition to AsiaWorld-Expo — and Hong Kong gets the only date on the map. If trance is your religion, this is a pilgrimage. Here's exactly what's happening, what it costs, and how to do the long ride home from Lantau without getting stranded at 3am.
In This Guide
Why this show matters
A State of Trance isn't a club night with a famous DJ on the bill. It's a brand built from the ground up since the first radio episode in 2001, the weekly show that turned Armin van Buuren from a Dutch studio obsessive into a five-time DJ Mag world number one, and the live series that now draws tens of thousands to its flagship Utrecht event every year. When ASOT rolls into a city, it brings its own ecosystem of sound, staging and faithful.
So the headline here isn't just "famous DJ plays Hong Kong" — plenty of those pass through. It's that one of the biggest indoor-and-outdoor dance brands on the planet has chosen this city for its first time in East Asia, and built the visit around its 25th anniversary. The organisers are framing it as ASOT's only East Asia stop, which makes 12 June less a tour date than a one-off. For a local scene that has spent years importing techno and house headliners, a full-scale trance institution touching down is a genuinely new flavour of big night out.
Date, times & tickets
This is a single night, not a weekender, and it runs late. The official AsiaWorld-Expo listing gives an event window of 6pm to 3am on Friday 12 June — nine hours of trance built to peak somewhere deep into the small hours. Set times and the running order usually surface closer to the date, so don't lock in your arrival around a rumoured Armin slot just yet.
| Date | Event | Window | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fri 12 Jun 2026 | A State of Trance Hong Kong (25th anniversary) | 6:00pm–3:00am | AsiaWorld-Expo, Hall 3 |
The Event — Key Facts
Note: the HK$1,580 tier is a VIP Stage Pass; HK$680 was the lowest-priced standing tier and may have sold through. All prices exclude the KKTIX platform handling fee. Always confirm current availability on the official channel before buying.
A quick, honest word on availability. Tickets went on general sale on 27 January 2026 through KKTIX, the official platform for this event, after a members' presale the day before. We're not going to print a "sold out" line we can't stand behind — stock shifts, and promoters sometimes release extra allocation closer to the night. The only reliable check is KKTIX itself, linked through the official AsiaWorld-Expo event page. If it shows nothing, read the safety note further down before you go near a resale. For the wider picture of what else is spinning this year, our guide to Hong Kong's best music festivals in 2026 is the place to start.
Who's playing the lineup?
The night is built around Armin van Buuren, the Dutch DJ and producer who has hosted the A State of Trance radio show since 2001 and topped DJ Mag's Top 100 poll a record five times. His sets are the reason ASOT exists as a live event at all — long, narrative, emotionally maximal, and engineered to land a room of thousands on the same beat at the same second.
Around him is a bill drawn from the trance and progressive world that ASOT has championed for two and a half decades. The supporting lineup features MaRLo, Ruben de Ronde, Laura van Dam, Billy Gillies and Lawton — a mix of established ASOT regulars and newer names riding the genre's current resurgence. As with any festival, exact set lengths and stage order are confirmed nearer the date, so treat the lineup as the cast rather than a fixed timetable. If you're chasing more of the city's imported talent, our round-up of international DJ acts coming to Hong Kong tracks who else is inbound.
The venue: AsiaWorld-Expo, Hall 3
AsiaWorld-Expo (亞洲國際博覽館) sits right beside Hong Kong International Airport on Lantau, which makes it the city's go-to room for big touring shows that need space and a late licence — exactly the brief for a nine-hour standing event. ASOT takes over Hall 3, one of the venue's large flat-floor halls, configured here as a single all-standing arena rather than the seated-and-standing mix you get at an arena concert.
AsiaWorld-Expo
The standing-zone admission system is worth understanding before you arrive. AsiaWorld-Expo runs a queue-number scheme for standing tickets: the holding area opens roughly two hours before the published start, and ticket-holders are admitted to the hall about an hour before, in the order of the queuing number printed on the ticket. Turn up after admission has begun and you simply join the back — so an early arrival genuinely buys you a better spot on the floor.
How do you get there — and home at 3am?
Getting there is the easy part. AsiaWorld-Expo has its own station on the high-speed Airport Express line, with the platforms inside the venue itself. From the city it's about 28 minutes from Hong Kong Station (HK$85), 25 minutes from Kowloon (HK$78) and 18 minutes from Tsing Yi (HK$53) for adults. If you tap in and out with the same Octopus and stay at AsiaWorld-Expo for over an hour, the connecting MTR leg into the Airport Express is effectively covered under the venue's fare scheme — keep the card consistent.
Getting home is where people get caught out. The regular Airport Express runs only until roughly 00:48 — comfortably before a 3am finish. For late-running events, AsiaWorld-Expo typically lays on special departure transport, usually extra Tung Chung Line trains and shuttle buses timed to the crowd, but the exact arrangements differ event to event and are published per show. Do not assume you can just stroll onto a train at 3am.
Late-Night Game Plan
- Check the official transport page. AsiaWorld-Expo posts an Event Day Transportation schedule for each show — confirm the late-night trains and buses for 12 June before you commit to a plan.
- Budget for a taxi. A Lantau-to-town taxi at 3am is not cheap; split it, or have the fare ready. Lantau (blue) and urban (red) taxis serve the venue.
- Or ride it out. If the music keeps you to closing, the first regular Airport Express back into town runs from the early morning — some people simply stay until the trains restart.
- Tap in with Octopus and keep the same card for the fare-saver scheme.
- Note the airport-area roadworks. Bus routes around the venue have been adjusting with Terminal 2 works, so don't rely on an old timetable.
Know before you go: 18+ rules & bag policy
The single most important thing to flag — because it's stricter than almost any concert in town — is the age rule. AsiaWorld-Expo lists this event as 18 or above, with a height limit of 140cm or above. This is an over-18s night, so bring valid photo ID and don't plan to bring younger family along, unlike the city's stadium pop shows.
Beyond that, it's a standard big-venue security setup, and a tight one given the late hours. Bags are searched on the way in, and the venue would rather you didn't bring one at all — there are express lanes for people travelling light, plus baggage storage and lockers on the ground floor.
Entry Rules at a Glance
- Age & height: strictly 18+ and 140cm+. Carry ID.
- Bag size: nothing larger than 38 x 30 x 20 cm; travel light and use the express lanes, or check bags into storage.
- Cameras: professional cameras, video and voice recorders and selfie sticks are not allowed; unauthorised filming inside the hall is prohibited.
- No outside food or drink, no glass bottles, no aerosols, no inflatables or balloons, no long umbrellas.
- Strobe & smoke: the show uses heavy strobe lighting and haze — tell venue medical or security staff if you feel unwell.
- Re-entry: possible only with your re-entry token, security wristband and original ticket together.
Avoid the Scams
If KKTIX is sold out and you start chasing a resale, slow down. Hong Kong has a real problem with ticket scams and inflated touting, and a one-off, only-in-East-Asia show is exactly the kind of event fraudsters target. AsiaWorld-Expo voids tickets that are resold or transferred for profit, so a tout's ticket can be worthless at the door. Stick to any official resale channel the promoter announces, treat private sellers on Instagram, Carousell or WhatsApp with deep suspicion, never pay by irreversible transfer to someone you can't verify, and be wary of prices far above the HK$680–1,580 face value. A screenshot of a ticket is not a ticket. When in doubt, walk away.
And if you do miss out, the city's dancefloors keep turning. Hong Kong's club calendar is deep enough to soften any blow — our guides to the best club nights and DJ residencies and the best concerts in Hong Kong 2026 will keep your diary full, and the biggest events in Hong Kong this summer round-up has the whole season in one place.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's On in Hong Kong This Summer
From stadium headliners to all-night festivals, YumChaNow tracks every show worth your night out — start with our concerts, festivals and nightlife guides.