Family on a ferry boat in Hong Kong waters with islands in the background
Family · Day Trips · Islands

Best Day Trips for Families from Hong Kong 2026

By Tomo Nakamura — The Weekend Explorer  ·  May 2026  ·  12 min read

On a Saturday morning in October, we board the 9:30am ferry to Cheung Chau. My daughter is eight. She has a small backpack containing sunscreen, a book she won't open, and a piece of pineapple cake saved from yesterday's breakfast. The crossing takes thirty-five minutes. By the time we arrive, the island has already begun to feel like somewhere else entirely — the absence of cars is felt before it is understood, like a sound you didn't know was there until it stops.

This is what Hong Kong's outlying islands do for a city family. They supply, in a single ferry ride, the sense of departure — of having genuinely left — that resets something in the mind. The city is still visible on the horizon. But it is there, and you are here, and these are different things.

TL;DR: Hong Kong's best family day trips are all within 1–2 hours of the city. Top picks: Cheung Chau (bikes, temples, beaches — 35 min ferry), Lamma Island (seafood, easy walking — 30 min ferry), Lantau (Big Buddha + Tai O + Cheung Sha beach), Sai Kung (seafood + kayaks + nearby beaches). All accessible without a car. Ferries depart from Central Piers 4–6.

In This Guide

  1. Cheung Chau — The Car-Free Island
  2. Lamma Island — Seafood and Slow Living
  3. Lantau Island — Big Buddha and Tai O
  4. Sai Kung — Kayaks and Seafood
  5. Pat Sin Leng — Family Hiking in the NT
  6. Planning Tips
  7. FAQ

Cheung Chau — The Car-Free Island

Cheung Chau (長洲) is the most accessible and arguably the most satisfying family island day trip from Hong Kong. The ferry from Central Pier 5 takes 35–40 minutes on the fast ferry and 55–65 minutes on the regular service. No cars are permitted on the island — only small utility vehicles and bicycles — and this single fact transforms the quality of the experience. Children can walk in the street. There is no anxiety about traffic.

Cheung Chau Day Trip 長洲
Ferry FromCentral Pier 5 (Central Ferry Piers)
Journey Time35 min (fast ferry, HKD 26–37); 55 min (regular, HKD 15–22)
Ferry OperatorNew World First Ferry; ferries every 30–60 min
Chinese Name長洲島
Best ForAll ages; especially good for 4–12 year olds
Suggested TimeFull day; depart 9–10am, return 5–6pm

From the pier, the main street runs west to Tung Wan Beach — Cheung Chau's main beach, with lifeguards, showers, and a reliable surf for bodyboarders. The walk takes about ten minutes and passes through a market street selling dried seafood, mango mochi, and the island's famous fishballs. Bicycle hire is available immediately at the pier (approximately HKD 30–50 per hour for a child's bike; HKD 50–70 for an adult) and the island is flat enough for comfortable family cycling.

The Pak Tai Temple (北帝廟), a ten-minute walk from the pier, is one of Hong Kong's most significant — eighteenth century, elaborately decorated, and the centre of the famous Bun Festival each May. The Cheung Po Tsai Cave, accessible via a thirty-minute coastal walk, is a pirate's cave associated with the legendary Cheung Po Tsai. Eight-year-olds find this irresistible.

Food: The waterfront restaurants along the promenade serve excellent fresh seafood at moderate prices. East Bay Seafood Restaurant and Hometown Teahouse are local favourites. The egg waffles (雞蛋仔) from street vendors near the pier are obligatory.

"The thing about Cheung Chau is that it asks nothing of you. You don't need to plan. You arrive, you rent bicycles, you eat fishballs, and somewhere in the middle of all this your family remembers how to be together without schedules."

Lamma Island — Seafood and Easy Walking

Lamma Island (南丫島) offers something slightly different to Cheung Chau — a little more grown-up, a little more rugged, with a walk between two villages (Yung Shue Wan and Sok Kwu Wan) that is among the most pleasant family hikes in Hong Kong. The 4km trail between the two ferry piers takes about one and a half hours, passes through coastal countryside, and is genuinely manageable for children aged five and above.

Lamma Island Day Trip 南丫島
Ferry FromCentral Pier 4 to Yung Shue Wan (30 min, HKD 18–28); or Aberdeen to Sok Kwu Wan
Ferry OperatorHong Kong Ferry (HKF); approx. every 30–60 min
Chinese Name南丫島
Best ForFamilies with children 5+; seafood lovers
Suggested RouteArrive Yung Shue Wan, walk to Sok Kwu Wan (1.5 hrs), lunch, return ferry from Sok Kwu Wan to Central (35 min)

The walk passes Lo So Shing Beach (洛水坑泳灘), a lovely small beach about halfway along where you can stop for a swim. The seafood restaurants at Sok Kwu Wan are the destination for lunch: whole steamed fish, garlic butter prawns, typhoon-shelter crab. Rainbow Seafood Restaurant is the most established, but the row of open-fronted restaurants along the pier will all do you well.

Lantau Island — Big Buddha, Tai O, and Cheung Sha

Lantau (大嶼山) is Hong Kong's largest island and offers the richest day out — enough, in fact, for two separate day trips for families who want to go deep. The classic itinerary combines the Tian Tan Buddha (天壇大佛) at Ngong Ping with the fishing village of Tai O (大澳) and, if energy allows, Cheung Sha beach for an afternoon swim. This is a full, rewarding day.

Lantau Island — Big Buddha and Ngong Ping 大嶼山天壇大佛
Getting ThereMTR to Tung Chung (Exit B), then Ngong Ping 360 cable car (25 min) or Bus 23
MTR ExitTung Chung Exit B
Cable Car PriceStandard cabin: HKD 185 adult / HKD 95 child return; Crystal cabin (glass floor): HKD 250/135
Big Buddha AdmissionFree to view; walking up the 268 steps is free; combo packages available
Chinese Name天壇大佛, 昂坪360
Best Time to VisitBefore 11am; crowds build significantly by midday

The cable car is a highlight in its own right — 5.7 kilometres of aerial crossing above Tung Chung Bay and the Lantau highlands. The Crystal cabin, with its glass floor panels, is viscerally entertaining for children (and mildly alarming for adults with height sensitivities). Book tickets online to skip the queue, which can reach two hours at peak times.

Tai O village (大澳), reached by Bus 11 from Ngong Ping (25 min), is one of Hong Kong's most distinctive communities — a stilt village built over the water at the western tip of Lantau. The narrow alleys, the dried seafood hanging in the sun, the resident Chinese white dolphins in the surrounding waters — it is genuinely unlike anywhere else in the territory. Dolphin-watching boat trips run from the Tai O waterfront (approximately HKD 50–80 per person; 45 min).

For the full Lantau experience including Cheung Sha beach, see our guide to the best family beaches near Hong Kong.

Sai Kung — Kayaks, Seafood, and Clear Water

Sai Kung (西貢) sits in the New Territories at the edge of a vast country park and marine park, and its combination of waterfront town, accessible beaches, and available kayak hire makes it perhaps the most versatile family day out in Hong Kong. The town itself is lively and unhurried — a contradiction that Sai Kung somehow manages — with seafood restaurants spilling onto the waterfront and fishing junks anchored in the harbour.

Sai Kung Town 西貢墟
Getting ThereMTR to Diamond Hill (Exit C2), then minibus 1A or green minibus 1 to Sai Kung Town (30 min); or taxi from Diamond Hill (~HKD 90)
MTR ExitDiamond Hill Exit C2
Chinese Name西貢
Kayak HireHKD 50–80/hour single kayak; HKD 80–120 tandem; from waterfront hire shops
Best ForFamilies with children 4+; kayaking best for 7+

Kayak hire shops operate along the Sai Kung waterfront, and the sheltered water immediately in front of the town is safe for beginners and young paddlers. For a more adventurous day, kaito boats from the town pier can carry families to nearby islands — Kiu Tsui (Sharp Island) has excellent snorkelling and a sand tombolo that appears and disappears with the tide. A kaito to Sharp Island costs approximately HKD 30–40 per person return and takes fifteen minutes.

Weekend Escapes — Delivered Thursday

Day trip ideas, ferry schedules, and family adventures across Hong Kong.

Pat Sin Leng — Family Hiking in the New Territories

For families with older children (eight and above) who want a proper hiking day rather than a beach day, the Pat Sin Leng (八仙嶺) range in the northern New Territories offers manageable terrain with genuinely dramatic views. The family-friendly approach is from Hok Tau Reservoir — a flat, shaded trail around the reservoir that takes about ninety minutes return and involves no significant climbing.

Pat Sin Leng Country Park 八仙嶺郊野公園
Getting ThereMTR to Fanling (Exit C), then taxi to Hok Tau Reservoir car park (~HKD 60–80); or Bus 78K from Fanling
MTR ExitFanling Exit C
Chinese Name八仙嶺郊野公園
Family RouteHok Tau Reservoir loop: 4km, 90 min, flat and shaded
Advanced RoutePat Sin Leng ridge: 10km, 4–5 hrs, suitable for fit children 10+
PriceFree

The reservoir loop is genuinely beautiful — wooded, quiet, with views of the mountains that frame the northern edge of the territory. In spring, the surrounding hills bloom with azaleas and wild orchids. Pack a picnic; there are no facilities on the trail. The nearby Plover Cove Reservoir is a longer walk but offers the rare experience of walking along a dam wall with sea views on both sides.

Planning Tips for Family Day Trips

Day Trip Quick Reference

DestinationTravel TimeBest AgeTop ActivityReturn Last Ferry/Bus
Cheung Chau35–65 min (ferry)All agesCycling, beaches~11:30pm ferry
Lamma Island30 min (ferry)5+Village walk, seafood~11:30pm ferry
Lantau (Big Buddha)40 min (MTR + cable car)4+Big Buddha, Tai OLast cable car 6pm; buses run late
Sai Kung45–60 min (MTR + bus)4+Kayaking, seafood, kaitoLast minibus ~11pm
Pat Sin Leng60+ min (MTR + taxi)8+Reservoir walk, ridgelineTaxi back to Fanling

For more island exploration, see our complete guide to Hong Kong's best islands. For a broader list of things to do with children across the territory, see our guide to kid-friendly activities in Hong Kong.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the easiest island day trip for families?
Cheung Chau is the easiest and most rewarding. The ferry from Central takes 35–40 minutes, no cars are allowed on the island, bicycle hire is available right at the pier, and the island is flat enough for young cyclists. There are beaches, temples, and excellent street food all within easy walking distance.
How do you get to the Big Buddha on Lantau?
Take the MTR to Tung Chung (Tung Chung Line terminus), then the Ngong Ping 360 cable car (HKD 185 adult / HKD 95 child return) or Bus 23 from the bus terminus. The cable car takes 25 minutes and offers spectacular views — worth it for families despite occasional queues. Book tickets online to save time.
What should families eat on a Lamma Island day trip?
Lamma is famous for seafood restaurants along the waterfront at Yung Shue Wan and Sok Kwu Wan. Rainbow Seafood Restaurant is a reliable choice. Arrive before 12:30pm or after 2pm to avoid the peak lunch queue. Whole steamed fish, butter prawns, and typhoon-shelter crab are the highlights.
Is Sai Kung suitable for families with young children?
Very much so. Sai Kung town has an excellent waterfront for young children to explore. The beaches nearby are calm and accessible, kayak hire suits older children (7+), and the seafood restaurants welcome all ages. A kaito boat trip to Sharp Island is a particularly good adventure for children aged 5 and up.

Plan Your Hong Kong Weekend

From island ferry timetables to hiking trail maps — YumChaNow has every family adventure in Hong Kong covered.

Day Trips Family Islands Cheung Chau Lamma Lantau Sai Kung Hiking