When the Hong Kong summer settles in and the humidity turns your morning commute into a sauna, the cheapest and most reliable cure in the city is a length or two in cool water. You do not need a hotel membership or a club card: the public swimming pools in Hong Kong run by the Leisure and Cultural Services Department (LCSD) are clean, plentiful and gloriously cheap, and several of them double as full-blown water parks with slides, fountains and harbour views.
In This Guide
- How much do public pools cost, and how do they work?
- Kowloon Park — the central all-rounder
- Victoria Park — for serious swimmers
- Kennedy Town — the one with the view
- Pao Yue-kong — the south side's local hero
- Hammer Hill Road — best for small children
- Ma On Shan — the slide thrill-seeker's pick
- Tseung Kwan O — the New Town water park
- At a glance: the seven compared
- Which pool is right for you?
- FAQ
How much do public pools cost, and how do they work?
This is the part that delights newcomers. A single session at any LCSD pool is HK$17 per adult on weekdays and HK$19 at weekends and on public holidays. The concessionary rate — HK$8 on weekdays, HK$9 at weekends — covers children aged 3 to 13, full-time students, anyone aged 60 or above, and people with disabilities and their minder. Toddlers under three swim free, and if you go often, a monthly ticket is HK$300 (half-price for concession holders). You pay at the turnstile by cash or Octopus; there is no booking. The full breakdown is on the LCSD admission fee schedule.
Pools run on a session system. Most open from around 6:30am to 10pm through the summer season (roughly April to October), split into three sessions with two cleaning breaks, usually near midday and in the early evening. Each pool also closes for one weekday a week for maintenance, and the exact timetable differs from pool to pool, so glance at the LCSD pool information page before you set off. One genuinely useful trick: the department publishes real-time admission figures online, so on a scorching Saturday you can check whether your pool is already packed before you trek over.
A few house rules worth knowing. Children under 12 must be accompanied by an adult; most inflatable toys and floats are banned (bring proper armbands instead); and a swimming cap, while not universally required, is a good idea. Outdoor pools are at the mercy of the weather and close when there is thunder and lightning or a typhoon signal. With that out of the way, here are seven of the best, spread across all three regions of the city.
1. Kowloon Park Swimming Pool — the central all-rounder
Kowloon Park Swimming Pool (九龍公園游泳池) is the one everyone knows, and for good reason. Tucked into the green of Kowloon Park in the heart of Tsim Sha Tsui, it pairs a serious indoor competition pool with a cluster of outdoor leisure pools — irregular, lagoon-like and linked by little waterfalls and footbridges — plus a toddlers' pool and a sunbathing terrace. It is the rare pool that works for a lane swimmer, a family and a sunbather all at once, a short walk from the MTR.
Kowloon Park Swimming Pool
Check the day's session times and any closures on the official LCSD pool information page.
2. Victoria Park Swimming Pool — for serious swimmers
If your idea of a good day out is an honest 2km of front crawl, point yourself at Victoria Park Swimming Pool (維多利亞公園游泳池) in Causeway Bay. Hong Kong's very first public pool opened on this spot in 1957; the modern indoor complex that replaced it is a proper competition venue, with a 50-metre main pool, a deep diving pool and banked spectator seating. It is more athlete than playground — there are no slides here — but for uninterrupted lengths under cover, away from the sun, it is the Island's benchmark.
Victoria Park Swimming Pool
Facilities and timetable on the LCSD pool information page.
3. Kennedy Town Swimming Pool — the one with the view
For a swim with a backdrop, nothing in the public network beats Kennedy Town Swimming Pool (堅尼地城游泳池) on the western tip of Hong Kong Island. The outdoor pool looks straight out over Victoria Harbour towards the container ships and the green hump of Stonecutters Island, and in summer an operable glass wall opens the indoor pool up to the sea breeze. It is a favourite for an early-morning or sunset swim, and it sits right beside Belcher Bay Park if you fancy a picnic afterwards.
Kennedy Town Swimming Pool
Confirm session times on the LCSD pool information page.
4. Pao Yue-kong Swimming Pool — the south side's local hero
The Southern District has exactly one public pool, and happily it is a good one. Pao Yue-kong Swimming Pool (包玉剛游泳池) in Wong Chuk Hang — named after the late shipping magnate Sir Yue-kong Pao — is a big, well-equipped complex with main and secondary 50-metre pools, teaching pools, a diving pool and, crucially for families, a children's pool with colourful little slides. Since the South Island MTR line opened, it is an easy hop from the Island's business districts, and it rarely feels as crammed as the Kowloon-side giants.
Pao Yue-kong Swimming Pool
Details on the LCSD pool information page.
5. Hammer Hill Road Swimming Pool — best for small children
Over in Diamond Hill, Hammer Hill Road Swimming Pool (斧山道游泳池) is arguably the most imaginative complex in the city for little ones. Its outdoor area is a proper playground of water: leisure pools, gentle slides and a participatory fountain that keeps toddlers busy for hours. The much-loved indoor leisure hall — home to a pirate-ship play structure and water cannons that local families rave about — reopens at the end of June 2026 after a maintenance spell, but the outdoor water-play zone is open right through the summer. It is a short walk from Diamond Hill MTR and pairs nicely with a wander round the serene Nan Lian Garden next door.
Hammer Hill Road Swimming Pool
Check the current status of the indoor pools on the LCSD pool information page.
6. Ma On Shan Swimming Pool — the slide thrill-seeker's pick
For older kids and the young-at-heart, Ma On Shan Swimming Pool (馬鞍山游泳池) is the one to beat. Set on the Ma On Shan seafront in the New Territories, it has a 50-metre main pool and a toddlers' pool, but the headline act is its set of giant water slides — what regulars reckon are among the fastest in the public network, dropping you out into a splash pool below. With the green ridge of the Ma On Shan range as a backdrop, it is a proper summer outing, and the riverside Ma On Shan Promenade is right on the doorstep.
Ma On Shan Swimming Pool
Slide and session details on the LCSD pool information page.
7. Tseung Kwan O Swimming Pool — the New Town water park
Purpose-built for one of Hong Kong's biggest new towns, Tseung Kwan O Swimming Pool (將軍澳游泳池) is a sprawling complex that comes closest to a free-for-all water park. Alongside a 50-metre main pool and a diving pool, it has a toddlers' pool and two leisure pools, one of them threaded with water slides of varying speeds for different ages. A quick note for lap swimmers: the main pool has been closed for maintenance and reopens on 23 June 2026, but the leisure pools and slides — the bit the kids care about — stay open throughout. It is minutes from the MTR via the Metro City mall.
Tseung Kwan O Swimming Pool
Confirm the latest closures on the LCSD pool information page.
At a glance: the seven compared
| Pool | Region & MTR | Best for | Slides? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kowloon Park (九龍公園) | Kowloon · Jordan A2/C2 | Central all-rounder | Leisure pools |
| Victoria Park (維多利亞公園) | HK Island · Tin Hau A2 | Serious lap swimming | No (indoor) |
| Kennedy Town (堅尼地城) | HK Island · Kennedy Town B | Harbour views | Kids' splash |
| Pao Yue-kong (包玉剛) | HK Island · Wong Chuk Hang B | South-side families | Kids' slides |
| Hammer Hill Road (斧山道) | Kowloon · Diamond Hill | Toddlers & young kids | Yes (water play) |
| Ma On Shan (馬鞍山) | New Territories · Ma On Shan | Slide thrill-seekers | Giant slides |
| Tseung Kwan O (將軍澳) | New Territories · TKO A1 | New Town water park | Yes (varied) |
Entry to every pool is HK$17 on weekdays and HK$19 at weekends and public holidays (HK$8/$9 concession). Outdoor pools and slides are weather-dependent, and individual pools have their own session and maintenance timetables — always check the LCSD page before you travel.
Which pool is right for you?
Seven pools, seven different days out. Here is the quick steer I give friends every June.
Pick by who you are bringing
- Serious lengths: Victoria Park — an indoor 50m competition pool, open in any weather.
- A swim with a view: Kennedy Town — the harbour right there beyond the pool deck.
- Toddlers and little ones: Hammer Hill Road — gentle slides, fountains and water-play galore.
- Big kids who want speed: Ma On Shan — the fastest slides in the public network.
- A proper family water park: Tseung Kwan O — leisure pools, slides and space to roam.
- Central and can't decide: Kowloon Park — lanes, leisure pools and sunbathing in one spot.
- South side of the Island: Pao Yue-kong — the district's only pool, and a good one.
Before You Go
LCSD session times, weekly maintenance days and pool-by-pool closures change through the year, so always check the official LCSD pool information page before you travel — MTR exits and walk times here are a guide, not gospel. Popular pools can fill up and stop admitting swimmers on hot weekends; the LCSD's real-time admission figures will tell you in advance. Outdoor pools and slides close in thunderstorms and when a typhoon signal is up, so keep an eye on the Hong Kong Observatory. Finally, leave the big inflatables at home — most are not allowed — and remember that under-12s must be accompanied by an adult.
A public pool is summer's best-value treat, but it is far from the only way to cool down. If the forecast turns, our guide to indoor activities to beat the Hong Kong heat has plenty of dry options, while the best family beaches in Hong Kong and the best watersports in the city take the day onto open water. Want to spend a little more for loungers and a glass of fizz? See our pick of the best hotel pool day passes in Hong Kong. And for a full afternoon afloat, there is always the junk boat.
Frequently Asked Questions
Find Your Summer Swim
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