One of the quieter privileges of living in Hong Kong is the geography. The city sits at the intersection of air routes that connect most of Asia's great destinations within a few hours of flight — shorter, in several cases, than flying across a single European country. This is something you notice most clearly on the first Friday evening when you take a 90-minute flight to Taipei and realise you've arrived somewhere completely different in less time than a car journey from London to Manchester.
I have spent fifty years making these trips. Japan is obvious — I go back often and the closeness of home is both comforting and strange. But the genuinely life-enriching journeys have been the others: first time in Bangkok in the 1980s, when it was something else entirely. First time in Bali, when it still felt like a secret. First time in Seoul, before the K-wave made it into a destination. Each of these cities is itself changed by the years; each time I return I am measuring what has stayed and what has moved on. This is the particular pleasure of returning to a place from close proximity — you can track its changes in finer grain than the once-a-decade visitor.
In This Guide
Quick Reference — All 7 Cities at a Glance
Asian City Short Trips from Hong Kong 2026
| City | Flight Time | Best Season | 3-Night Budget (HKD)* | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Taipei | ~90 min | Oct-Dec, Mar-May | 3,000–6,000 | Food, culture, mountains, proximity |
| Ho Chi Minh City | ~2 hrs | Dec-Apr (dry season) | 3,500–7,000 | History, street food, budget travel |
| Bangkok | ~2.5 hrs | Nov-Feb | 4,000–8,000 | Food, temples, nightlife, massage |
| Singapore | ~3 hrs | Year-round (Feb-Apr drier) | 6,000–12,000 | Gardens, hawker food, architecture |
| Tokyo | ~3.5-4 hrs | Mar-May (cherry blossom), Oct-Nov | 7,000–15,000 | Culture, food, design, nature nearby |
| Seoul | ~3.5 hrs | Apr-Jun, Sep-Nov | 5,000–10,000 | K-culture, food, palaces, beauty |
| Bali | ~4.5 hrs | Apr-Oct (dry season) | 5,000–12,000 | Temples, rice terraces, surf, retreat |
*Budget = flights + 3 nights mid-range accommodation. Highly variable depending on airline, dates, and hotel choice.
Taipei — The Closest Great City
Taipei 台北
Taipei is the natural first short trip from Hong Kong — not only because it's the closest (90 minutes makes it genuinely feel like a weekend, not a journey), but because the city offers a specific combination of qualities that Hong Kong residents find particularly restorative: a slower pace, extraordinary food culture (the night markets, the beef noodle shops, the tea houses), a mountain environment within 30 minutes of the city centre, and a cultural warmth and accessibility that is immediately felt. The two cities share Chinese cultural heritage and Cantonese and Mandarin linguistic overlap makes navigation comfortable. The differences are what make it interesting: Taipei is noticeably less dense, more laid-back, and has a café and bookshop culture that Hong Kong's real estate economics have largely prevented from developing.
3-4 Day Taipei Itinerary Sketch: Day 1: Arrive, settle in Da'an or Zhongzheng district, evening at Raohe Street Night Market. Day 2: Morning at National Palace Museum, afternoon walk in Dadaocheng old district, evening beef noodles and tea at a traditional tea house. Day 3: Day trip to Jiufen and Jinguashi — the mountain tea town that inspired Spirited Away — then Yeliu Geopark for dramatic coastal rock formations. Day 4: Morning at Yangmingshan National Park (hot springs, volcanic landscape), afternoon departure.
Ho Chi Minh City — The Best Value Short Trip
Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) 胡志明市
Ho Chi Minh City is the best-value short trip from Hong Kong in 2026 — a city where HKD buys extraordinary purchasing power, the food is world-class at street-level prices, and the visual density of colonial architecture, street markets, and scooter traffic creates an experience genuinely unlike anything in more familiar Asian destinations. The war history and the French colonial layer sit alongside a city that has grown with extraordinary energy over the past two decades — the rooftop bars, the design cafés, the galleries in converted villas. It is a city of complexity and contradiction that rewards curious visitors. The street food culture here — banh mi, pho, bun bo Hue, fresh spring rolls — is one of the world's great culinary experiences at prices that feel impossible by Hong Kong standards.
Bangkok — The World's Great Food City
Bangkok 曼谷
Bangkok is one of those cities that rewards return visits more than almost any other. What seems chaotic on the first trip reveals itself, by the third or fourth, to have a logic and a rhythm — the canal boats and the sky trains, the morning markets and the night food courts, the incredible density of temples within the old city and the rooftop cocktail bar culture of the new. The food is the single most compelling reason to go: Bangkok has a legitimate claim to being the world's best food city at the intersection of quality and value. The street pad thai and the 1,000-baht tasting menu at a Michelin-starred restaurant are both remarkable, and they're within a few blocks of each other. Thai massage, available everywhere at prices that remain extraordinary by Hong Kong standards, is the other non-negotiable part of any Bangkok trip.
Singapore — The Comfortable Mirror
Singapore 新加坡
Singapore is in some ways the most comfortable short trip from Hong Kong — similar culture of efficiency, similar international outlook, English widely spoken, excellent public transport, and a hawker food culture that is a genuine world-class culinary experience at accessible prices. The Gardens by the Bay are extraordinary and genuinely unmissable on a first visit. The colonial architecture of the Civic District, Chinatown, Little India, and Kampong Glam creates a culturally layered city that rewards slow walking. The main criticism from frequent visitors is that Singapore is expensive — comparable to Hong Kong — which narrows the cost advantage for Hong Kong residents. But the ease and quality of the experience make it consistently popular.
Tokyo — The Richest Cultural Contrast
Tokyo 東京
Tokyo is, for me, the most rewarding short trip from Hong Kong — not only because it is my cultural home, but because it offers the sharpest and most interesting contrast to Hong Kong life. Both cities are dense, efficient, and food-obsessed. But where Hong Kong is loud and improvised, Tokyo is quiet and precise; where Hong Kong embraces disorder as creative energy, Tokyo orders everything with an aesthetic intention that produces, at its best, an experience of beauty in the mundane. The ramen shop in a basement, the perfectly pressed soba, the way the subway maps are designed — all of it is the product of a culture that takes ordinary things seriously. Add the world's most extraordinary restaurant density (more Michelin stars than any other city on earth) and a neighbourhood culture of extraordinary variety, and Tokyo rewards any length of visit.
Seoul — K-Culture, Food, and History
Seoul 首爾
Seoul's transformation into one of Asia's most visited cities over the past decade has been dramatic, driven by the global expansion of K-pop, K-drama, K-beauty, and Korean food culture. For Hong Kong residents, who often encounter these cultural exports before visiting the source, Seoul is a city of recognition and surprise: the things you know in mediated form (the music, the beauty products, the television dramas) exist here in their natural habitat, embedded in a city that also has extraordinary historical depth — Joseon Dynasty palaces, Buddhist temples in mountain parks, the DMZ as the most surreal day trip in Asia. The food culture is one of the world's great: Korean BBQ, bibimbap, Korean fried chicken, haemul pajeon, tteokbokki, and a café culture that has become globally significant.
Bali — Nature, Retreat, and Deceleration
Bali 峇里
Bali sits at the longest end of this list in terms of flight time — 4.5 hours — and represents a categorically different kind of trip from the city destinations above. You don't go to Bali for food tourism or cultural institution-hopping in the Tokyo sense; you go for the quality of the natural landscape, the Hindu religious culture that creates extraordinary visual texture through the thousands of temples and daily offerings, the surf if that is your practice, and the retreat and wellness infrastructure that has developed around Ubud particularly. The Tegalalang rice terraces north of Ubud, the Tanah Lot and Uluwatu coastal temples, the extraordinary beaches of the Bukit Peninsula — these are the draws. For Hong Kong residents who live entirely within a dense urban environment, the combination of rice paddy, mountain, temple, and ocean is specifically restorative.
For more travel ideas, see our guides to the best islands in Hong Kong for day trips closer to home, the best weekend getaways from Hong Kong, and the best staycation hotels for when leaving Hong Kong is too much effort.
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