Hong Kong has won Olympic fencing gold, world titles and a stack of World Cup medals over the past five years. What it had never done — until now — was host the sport's biggest event on home soil. That changes this July. The 2026 World Fencing Championships land at AsiaWorld-Expo for nine days, and for once the city's finest fencers will hear a home crowd roaring behind them.
Officially badged the Kerry Fencing World Championships 2026 Hong Kong, China, it is the first time the territory has staged fencing's flagship championships. More than 1,000 athletes, three weapons, two genders and one very strong home team — here is everything you need to plan your trip to the piste.
In This Guide
When and Where Are the 2026 World Fencing Championships?
The championships take over AsiaWorld-Expo (亞洲國際博覽館) on Lantau Island across nine days, from Wednesday 22 to Thursday 30 July 2026. Co-organised by the International Fencing Federation (FIE) and the Fencing Association of Hong Kong, China (HKFA), it is the senior World Championships — the most prestigious title in the sport outside the Olympic Games.
The scale is genuinely global. More than 1,000 elite fencers from over 100 countries and regions are expected, competing for medals in foil, épée and sabre, in both individual and team formats, for men and women. That is a lot of steel under one roof — and a rare chance to watch reigning Olympic and world champions in the flesh.
The Championships at a Glance
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Event | Kerry Fencing World Championships 2026 Hong Kong, China |
| Dates | 22–30 July 2026 (nine days) |
| Venue | AsiaWorld-Expo (亞洲國際博覽館), Lantau Island |
| Weapons | Foil, épée, sabre — men's & women's, individual & team |
| Field | 1,000+ fencers, 100+ countries and regions |
| Tickets on sale | Tuesday 9 June 2026, via Klook |
| Prices | HK$250 – HK$1,500 |
| Organisers | FIE & Fencing Association of Hong Kong, China |
Details per the Hong Kong Government's "M" Mark major-events listing and FIE announcements; confirm the latest session times on the official channels before booking.
Why This Is a Landmark Moment for Hong Kong
For a city that punches well above its weight on the piste, hosting the worlds is a long-overdue homecoming. The last time Hong Kong staged a top-tier international fencing event was the 2017 Asian Fencing Championships — a near-decade gap that this tournament finally closes.
The award did not come out of nowhere. The FIE pointed to Hong Kong's slick delivery of the FIE Foil World Cup at AsiaWorld-Expo in May 2024 as the clincher, with one executive describing it as an "incredible" event. In other words, the city earned the worlds by proving it could run them.
And the timing could hardly be better. Hong Kong fencing is enjoying a genuine golden generation, fresh off Olympic and world success, and now gets to perform its biggest set piece at home. The HKFA has been clear about the wider goal, too: inspiring the next wave of young fencers and using the global spotlight to boost the city's standing as a sports-tourism capital.
It slots neatly into a blockbuster sporting summer. If you are mapping out the season, our round-up of the biggest events coming to Hong Kong this summer puts the fencing in context alongside everything else worth booking.
Who Should Hong Kong Fans Watch?
The home medal hopes — and the loudest cheers — will centre on the men's foil, where Hong Kong is among the best in the world. Two names sit at the top of the bill.
Edgar Cheung Ka-long (張家朗)
Cheung is the city's golden boy: a two-time Olympic men's foil champion, having struck gold at both Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024. There is, however, one prize that has eluded him — an individual world title, the only major missing from his personal "grand slam". Doing it in front of a home crowd would be the script of dreams, and Cheung has said he intends to "cherish and enjoy" the rare chance.
Ryan Choi Chun-yin
If Cheung is chasing the world title, his teammate Ryan Choi is defending it. Choi made history as the reigning men's individual foil world champion — Hong Kong's first — and climbed to world number one. Two home favourites going for the same gold, on the same piste, is exactly the kind of subplot that sells out a session.
The team — and the women's épée
Beyond the individuals, the Hong Kong men's foil team arrives in red-hot form, having taken team medals across the 2026 World Cup circuit and built on its bronze at the 2023 World Championships. In the women's draw, épée world champion Kaylin Hsieh Sin-yan carries strong home hopes. Spare a thought, too, for recently retired Paris 2024 Olympic épée champion Vivian Kong Man-wai (江旻憓) — she will not be competing, but her gold helped light the fuse for this golden era.
How Much Are Tickets — and When Do They Go on Sale?
Here is the part to diarise. Tickets go on general sale from Tuesday 9 June 2026, sold online through Klook, with prices spanning HK$250 to HK$1,500. That is an accessible entry point for a world championship — you can watch global-class fencing for the price of a decent dinner.
Expect demand to cluster around the men's foil days and the finals, when the home stars are most likely to be on the strip. If your heart is set on seeing Cheung or Choi chase gold, treat 9 June as a hard deadline rather than a vague intention.
Ticket Essentials
| What | Detail |
|---|---|
| On sale from | Tuesday 9 June 2026 |
| Where | Klook (online) |
| Price range | HK$250 – HK$1,500 |
| Hottest sessions | Men's foil days & finals |
Buy through Klook or another official channel. For event enquiries, the host body is the Fencing Association of Hong Kong, China.
Which Days Should You Book?
The full session-by-session timetable is confirmed by the FIE closer to the event, but a few marquee dates for local fans are already known. The men's individual foil — the event most likely to feature Cheung and Choi in the medal rounds — is scheduled for 25 July, with the men's team foil following on 28 July. Those are the two to circle.
Across the nine days, medals are decided in all six disciplines (foil, épée and sabre, individual and team, for men and women), so there is finals-night drama on most evenings. If you simply want to soak up the atmosphere of a world championship, any day delivers; if you want to watch Hong Kong go for gold, build your plans around the foil.
Key Dates for Home Fans
| Event | Date |
|---|---|
| Championships open | Wed 22 July 2026 |
| Men's individual foil | Sat 25 July 2026 |
| Men's team foil | Tue 28 July 2026 |
| Final day | Thu 30 July 2026 |
Specific session dates per FIE and local reporting; always reconfirm against the official schedule when booking.
Getting to AsiaWorld-Expo
The venue is easy to reach, if a little out of the way. AsiaWorld-Expo sits beside Hong Kong International Airport at 1 Airport Expo Boulevard, Chek Lap Kok, on Lantau Island, and it has its own MTR station on the Airport Express connected directly to the halls.
From Hong Kong Station in Central, the Airport Express whisks you to AsiaWorld-Expo Station in roughly 28 minutes; it is about 25 minutes from Kowloon Station and under 20 from Tsing Yi. The trains are frequent and air-conditioned — a blessing in late July — and you walk straight from the platform into the venue.
AsiaWorld-Expo is having quite a summer, by the way. If electronic music is more your thing, the same venue hosts A State of Trance Hong Kong 2026 in June — proof of how busy the Lantau arena has become. For more live sport in the flesh, line up the Hong Kong Football Festival, the Hong Kong Rugby Sevens or an easy midweek night at the Happy Valley races.
Foil, Épée, Sabre: A 60-Second Primer
Never watched fencing before? You only need to know three weapons, and the rest falls into place. Each has its own target area and its own rhythm.
Foil
The lightest weapon, scored only with the point of the blade, and only on the torso. Foil is fast, tactical and governed by "right of way" — the rule that rewards the fencer who attacks first. It is also where Hong Kong is strongest, so expect the foil sessions to draw the biggest home crowds.
Épée
The heaviest weapon, again scored with the point, but the whole body is a valid target and there is no right-of-way — first hit wins, and double hits count for both. That makes épée the most patient, chess-like of the three.
Sabre
The cavalry weapon: you score with the edge as well as the point, on anything from the waist up. Sabre is explosive and lightning-quick, with bouts that can be over in a blink — the most spectator-friendly of the trio for a first-timer.
Frequently Asked Questions
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