From the tale of the White Snake to the golden splendour of the Tang court, Hong Kong's biggest celebration of Chinese arts is back. The Chinese Culture Festival 2026 (中華文化節) runs all summer and into the autumn, and this year it has chosen a theme tailor-made for a long, hot season indoors: "Legends".
What is the Chinese Culture Festival?
The Chinese Culture Festival is Hong Kong's flagship summer celebration of Chinese arts and heritage. Now in its third edition, it is presented by the Culture, Sports and Tourism Bureau and organised by the Chinese Culture Promotion Office under the Leisure and Cultural Services Department (LCSD).
The scale is genuinely big: more than 280 stage programmes and extension activities, plus film screenings, thematic exhibitions, talks and workshops, spread across venues from West Kowloon to the New Territories. It runs alongside the LCSD's family-focused International Arts Carnival, giving the city two major cultural festivals at once. For the wider picture, our round-up of the biggest events in Hong Kong this summer maps out everything else on the calendar.
The 2026 theme: Legends
This year's festival is built around "Legends" — the myths, folk tales and heroes of Chinese tradition. The programming leans into the culture of the Sui and Tang dynasties, with the ancient capital of Luoyang named as this year's "City in Focus".
The opening programme sets the tone: a dance drama of "Lady White Snake", produced by the Shanghai Grand Theatre with internationally renowned ballet artist Tan Yuanyuan as artistic director. It blends ballet with Chinese dance to retell one of the country's best-loved legends — the kind of cross-disciplinary staging that has become the festival's signature.
What's on this summer?
July is the festival's busy stretch, with a run of marquee productions across Kowloon and the New Territories. At its heart is the Chinese Opera Festival (中國戲曲節), themed this year on "Righteousness and Loyalty", which gathers leading troupes for Peking, Kunqu, Cantonese and regional bangzi opera.
Beyond the opera stage, the line-up runs from acrobatic spectacle to suspense drama. Here are some of the headline summer programmes to know about.
Chinese Culture Festival 2026 — summer highlights
| Programme | Venue | Dates |
|---|---|---|
| "Acrobatic Spectacle of Ancient Tang" (Xinjiang Production and Construction Corps Acrobatic Troupe) | The Hall, East Kowloon Cultural Centre | 17–19 Jul |
| Nanyin Theatre: "Siu Hei's Musical Journey: Poetry in Nanyin" | Cultural Activities Hall, Tsuen Wan Town Hall | 17–19 Jul |
| "City of Lights: Spirits of the Past" | Auditorium, Sha Tin Town Hall | 18–19 Jul |
| Hong Kong Repertory Theatre: "The Diary of Song 2026" | Theatre, Hong Kong City Hall | 18 Jul–2 Aug |
Dates and venues per the LCSD announcement. Always confirm the latest schedule on the official festival website before booking, as programmes can change.
If a polished, contemporary staging of an old story is more your speed, the festival sits neatly alongside the big touring shows in town — see our guides to CATS at the Xiqu Centre and to the standout exhibitions at M+ for a fuller cultural weekend.
Free exhibitions and carnivals
Some of the festival's best moments cost nothing. The headline free exhibition is "Hong Kong Jockey Club Series: Prosperity and Magnificence – Civilisation of the Sui and Tang Dynasties in Shaanxi Province", presented with the Shaanxi Provincial Cultural Heritage Administration. It gathers more than 165 sets of artefacts that trace the splendour of the Sui-Tang golden age.
There's plenty for families and casual visitors, too. The free "Encountering Chinese Culture" Performing Arts Carnival takes over Metroplaza (新都會廣場) in Kwai Fong with stage excerpts and intangible cultural heritage demonstrations, while the Mid-Autumn Lantern Carnival later in the season lights up the city for the festive season. Hong Kong Public Libraries also run a string of themed exhibitions and story sessions.
How to get tickets
Ticketed programmes are sold through URBTIX. You can book online at urbtix.hk or by phone on 3166 1288. Several concessionary schemes are on offer, including group-booking and package discounts, plus a newly introduced "Generations Together 1+1" discount aimed at getting different age groups attending together.
Chinese Culture Festival 2026 — Key Info
Details per the official LCSD press release (9 April 2026) and the Chinese Culture Festival website. Individual programme dates, venues and prices vary — confirm each one before booking.
Frequently Asked Questions
Plan your cultural summer
See everything worth booking with our guide to the biggest events in Hong Kong this summer — festivals, concerts, exhibitions and more.