For the price of a cinema ticket and a snack, you can stand in front of a 3,000-year-old pharaoh in West Kowloon this summer. The Ancient Egypt exhibition in Hong Kong — properly titled Ancient Egypt Unveiled: Treasures from Egyptian Museums — has filled Gallery 9 of the Hong Kong Palace Museum (香港故宮文化博物館) with 250 objects flown in from Egypt, and it is one of the largest gatherings of ancient Egyptian artefacts the city has ever hosted. With a hard closing date of 31 August 2026, the school holidays are the moment to go.
In This Guide
Why it's the summer's big-ticket show
Hong Kong does not get to host ancient Egypt very often. Most of the world's great Egyptian collections rarely travel, which is what makes this loan extraordinary: it is jointly organised by the Hong Kong Palace Museum and the Supreme Council of Antiquities of Egypt, the government body that guards the country's heritage.
The numbers tell the story. There are 250 objects here, drawn from seven major Egyptian institutions — among them the legendary Egyptian Museum in Cairo — plus fresh finds straight from the sands of Saqqara. Statues, stelae, gold ornaments, mummy coffins and animal mummies trace nearly 5,000 years of civilisation along the Nile, from the age of the pyramid-builders to the Graeco-Roman period.
It also slots neatly into West Kowloon's busiest-ever cultural summer. A short walk away, M+ is showing its acclaimed Lee Bul survey, and the wider calendar is packed; our round-up of the best art exhibitions in Hong Kong this summer shows just how much is on. If you are planning a culture-heavy few days, the Palace Museum and M+ make an obvious pairing.
What's on show at the Ancient Egypt exhibition in Hong Kong?
The exhibition is organised into four thematic sections, and the museum has designed them as a journey through the civilisation rather than a simple object parade. Here is how it unfolds, according to the Palace Museum.
1. The Land of Pharaohs
The opening section sets the scene: the rise of pharaonic rule and the gods, from unification around 3000 BCE through the Old, Middle and New Kingdoms. Expect monumental statuary and the visual language — crowns, thrones, hieroglyphs — that defined royal power for millennia.
2. The World of Tutankhamun
The boy king is the section many visitors make a beeline for. While Egypt keeps Tutankhamun's famous golden funerary mask at home, the show brings a colossal quartzite statue associated with his reign and objects that conjure the splendour of the 18th Dynasty. It is the closest most of us will get to that world without flying to Cairo.
3. The Secrets of Saqqara
This is the section that makes the exhibition genuinely current. Saqqara, the vast necropolis that served the ancient capital of Memphis, has produced a string of headline-grabbing discoveries in recent years. The museum presents recently unearthed objects, including beautifully painted anthropoid coffins, from one of the most active dig sites in modern archaeology.
4. Ancient Egypt and the World
The final chapter looks outward, tracing how Egypt traded, fought and mingled with the wider Mediterranean world through to the Graeco-Roman period. It is a reminder that this was never an isolated civilisation but a hub connected to cultures across the ancient world.
Five objects not to miss
With 250 pieces on display you could spend hours here, but a handful of objects are worth seeking out first. These are confirmed highlights from the museum's own object list.
The Must-See Five
- Colossal statue of Tutankhamun — an 18th-Dynasty quartzite figure (later usurped by the pharaohs Ay and Horemheb), and the show's headline act.
- Colossal statue of Akhenaten — the radical "heretic" pharaoh who upended Egyptian religion, rendered here in sandstone with traces of pigment.
- Broad collar and counterpoise — a dazzling gold-and-gemstone collar, probably from the 12th Dynasty (about 1985–1773 BCE), on loan from the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.
- Anthropoid coffin of Nhs-hwt-bity — a vividly painted wooden coffin from the Late Period, drawn straight from the Saqqara archaeological site.
- Bastet holding a sistrum — a bronze figure of the cat-goddess, a favourite with younger visitors and a window onto Egyptian animal worship.
For a sense of where the Palace Museum sits within the city's wider scene — from blue-chip galleries to other museums — our guide to the best art galleries in Hong Kong 2026 maps it all out.
Dates, tickets & opening hours
This is a special exhibition with a fixed run, so there is a genuine deadline — it closes on 31 August 2026. The full details are on the official Palace Museum exhibition page, but here are the verified essentials.
| Ticket type | Adult | Concession |
|---|---|---|
| Special Exhibition (Gallery 9 + Galleries 1–7), regular | HK$190 | HK$95 |
| Special Exhibition, flex ticket | HK$220 | HK$110 |
| Family Combo (1 adult + 1 child) | HK$240 | |
| Family Combo (2 adults + 1 child) | HK$380 | |
| Full Access (adds the Gallery 8 jewellery show) | HK$250 | HK$125 |
The Special Exhibition Ticket also admits you to the museum's permanent thematic galleries (1 to 7) on the same visit, so it is good value if you make a half-day of it. Children aged six and under enter free; concessions cover children aged 7 to 11, full-time students, seniors aged 60 and above, people with disabilities and a companion, and CSSA recipients. UnionPay cardholders get a 5% discount on the Egypt ticket through Cityline.
Hong Kong Palace Museum — Visitor Essentials
Note: the ground-floor ticket office closes one hour before the museum. Confirm hours and book a timed slot via the official Palace Museum tickets page before you travel.
How do you get to the Hong Kong Palace Museum?
The museum sits at the western tip of the West Kowloon Cultural District, and the train is comfortably the easiest way in. Take the MTR to Kowloon Station (Tung Chung Line or Airport Express) and leave via Exit C1 or D1, then follow the signs through the ELEMENTS mall and across the Artist Square Bridge — about 10 to 15 minutes on foot. Alternatively, Austin Station (Tuen Ma Line) Exit B4 or B5 brings you in via ELEMENTS in roughly 15 to 20 minutes.
Prefer not to walk? From Austin Station Exit D2 you can hop on the wheelchair-accessible Cultural Express (CX1) minibus, and there is paid parking on site at 8 Museum Drive. Once you arrive, the whole district rewards lingering: the Art Park, the harbourfront promenade and M+ are all within a short stroll, which is why so many visitors build a full day around it. Travelling with little ones? Our guide to the best kid-friendly activities in Hong Kong has more ideas nearby.
How to do it well
A blockbuster on a deadline draws crowds, especially over the summer holidays. A few practical notes to make the visit smoother.
Visiting Tips
- Book a timed slot online. Same-day tickets are sold at the door while stocks last, but weekends and holidays get busy — reserve ahead through Cityline.
- Go on a weekday morning. The museum opens at 10am and the first hour is the calmest; Friday and Saturday run late until 8pm if you prefer an evening visit.
- Budget 90 minutes. With 250 objects across four sections, this is not a quick lap — give the Saqqara coffins and the colossal statues real time.
- Pair it with the thematic galleries. Your ticket covers Galleries 1 to 7, home to the museum's Forbidden City treasures, so there is plenty more under one roof.
- Pack light. Bags larger than 55 × 35 × 20cm are not allowed inside, and there are lockers near the entrance.
- No flash, no selfie sticks. Photography for personal use is welcome, but flash, tripods, monopods and selfie sticks are not permitted in the galleries.
Before You Book
This is a ticketed special exhibition with a firm closing date of 31 August 2026, and the museum is closed on Tuesdays (except public holidays). Buy through the official Palace Museum site or its appointed partner, Cityline, rather than unofficial resellers, and double-check the date and opening hours for the day you plan to go. In a black rainstorm or Typhoon Signal No. 8, the museum closes — keep an eye on the forecast in our typhoon-prone summer.
Making a longer cultural itinerary of it? Our overview of the biggest events in Hong Kong this summer sets the show against the rest of the season's calendar, from festivals to gigs.
Frequently Asked Questions
See It Before 31 August
"Ancient Egypt Unveiled" closes for good at the end of summer. Plan your visit to the Hong Kong Palace Museum, then let YumChaNow keep you ahead of the next big show in town.