Every July, the same quiet miracle happens in Wan Chai. A city supposedly glued to its phones forms queues that wrap around the harbourfront, drags wheeled suitcases through the heat, and spends a week buying books by the bagful. The Hong Kong Book Fair 2026 (香港書展) — the 36th edition of Asia's great reading jamboree — returns to the Convention and Exhibition Centre this summer, and it remains one of the best-value, best-loved days out in the city. Here's how to do it properly.
In This Guide
What is the Hong Kong Book Fair?
The Hong Kong Book Fair is the city's biggest cultural event by a country mile — and one of the largest book fairs anywhere in Asia. Organised by the Hong Kong Trade Development Council (HKTDC), it began in 1990 as a modest industry showcase and has grown into a week-long, city-defining ritual that regularly pulls in around a million visitors, peaking at a record 1.04 million in 2018.
The format is simple and glorious: hundreds of publishers, booksellers and educational exhibitors fill the Convention Centre's halls with books in Chinese and English, from blockbuster fiction and children's titles to stationery, e-learning tools and collectors' editions. Around the selling floors runs a packed cultural programme — author seminars, new-book launches, autograph sessions and themed galleries.
It is also, famously, a bargain-hunter's event. Exhibitors discount heavily, loyal readers arrive with trolleys and empty backpacks, and by the final day the maths of shipping unsold stock home means prices tumble further still. Watching Hong Kong shop for books with the same intensity it brings to a sample sale is half the joy of going.
When is the Hong Kong Book Fair 2026?
The 36th edition is confirmed by the organiser for Wednesday 15 to Tuesday 21 July 2026 at the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre (香港會議展覽中心), 1 Expo Drive, Wan Chai — use the Harbour Road entrance. Event listings show daily hours of 10am to 10pm from 15 to 20 July, with a shorter 9am to 5pm session on the final Tuesday. Past editions have added late-night openings on the middle weekend, so double-check the official site once the full timetable lands.
Hong Kong Book Fair 2026 — Key Facts
Dates and venue are confirmed on the HKTDC's official fair page; hours and prices above reflect current listings and recent editions. Final details, including any late-night sessions, are published on the official Book Fair site nearer the time.
What's on at the 2026 fair
The 2026 theme
Each edition is built around an annual theme, and the Hong Kong Tourism Board's listing gives 2026's as "Cultural Legacy | Joyful Journeys" — expect the headline seminars, exhibitions and the World of Art & Culture zone to riff on heritage, travel and the stories that connect them. The HKTDC fleshes out the full themed programme on the official site in the weeks before opening.
Author seminars & signings
The fair's intellectual engine is its seminar series: hundreds of talks across the week featuring novelists, historians, scientists and media names from Hong Kong, the mainland, Taiwan and overseas, most free with admission. New-book launches and autograph sessions run wall-to-wall — the first 2026 signing schedules are already appearing on the official site — and the biggest names fill rooms fast, so arrive early for anything you care about.
Children's Paradise
For families, the Children's Paradise zone is the main event: children's publishers, picture-book illustrators, stage activities and educational exhibitors gathered in one corner of the fair. It is one of the cheapest full days out of the Hong Kong summer holidays. Pair it with our guide to the best kid-friendly things to do in Hong Kong if you're building a bigger week.
Three fairs, one ticket
In recent editions the Book Fair has shared its week with two sister events under the same roof — the HKTDC Sports and Leisure Expo and the World of Snacks — with a single admission ticket covering all three. Both are listed alongside the 2026 fair on the HKTDC's site; check the official pages for this year's exact arrangements. It means a book haul, a badminton-racquet bargain and a suitcase of regional snacks can all happen in one air-conditioned afternoon.
The Book Fair Hit List
- The bargain tables — discounts deepen through the week; the final day is legendary for clear-out prices.
- World of Art & Culture — the themed gallery zone built around 2026's "Cultural Legacy | Joyful Journeys".
- Author seminars — hundreds of free talks; the big names book out, so plan ahead.
- Children's Paradise — picture books, stage shows and activities for the school-holiday crowd.
- English-language avenues — imported fiction and non-fiction at better-than-retail prices.
- Sports & Leisure Expo + World of Snacks — the sister fairs traditionally covered by the same ticket.
How much does the Book Fair cost?
This is one of the cheapest big days out in Hong Kong. In recent editions, adult admission has been HK$30 and children's tickets HK$10, with free entry for children under three and visitors aged 65 or over. Set against a HK$190 museum special exhibition or a HK$639 theme-park day, it is absurdly good value — even before the discounted books.
Tickets are sold through the HKTDC's online ticketing channels and at the venue, though queues at the door can be fierce on weekends; buying ahead online is the smoother route. Admission typically closes 45 minutes before the hall does. Final 2026 prices and ticketing arrangements are published on the official HKTDC Book Fair site — confirm there before you go.
| Ticket (recent editions) | Typical price |
|---|---|
| Adult admission | HK$30 |
| Child admission | HK$10 |
| Children under 3 / seniors 65+ | Free |
| Sports & Leisure Expo + World of Snacks | Included with the same ticket |
How do you get to the Book Fair by MTR?
Skip the car — Wan Chai in Book Fair week is gridlock. The fastest route is the East Rail Line to Exhibition Centre Station (會展): take Exit B3 and you're about five minutes from the halls. Coming from Admiralty or Causeway Bay, the Island Line to Wan Chai Station (灣仔) works too — leave by Exit A1 or A5 and follow the covered footbridge for 10 to 15 sheltered minutes, a blessing in the July heat.
Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre
How to do the fair like a local (Priya's plan)
The Book Fair rewards strategy. On a peak Saturday afternoon the popular aisles move at a crawl, and the seminar rooms fill an hour ahead. Go in with a plan and it's a delight; drift in at 3pm on the middle Sunday and it's an endurance sport.
Priya's Book Fair Plan
- Go on a weekday morning. The first two days are the calmest — and stock of limited editions is at its fullest.
- Bring a trolley or empty backpack. The locals are right about this. Your arms will thank you by hall three.
- Bargain-hunt late. If deals matter more than first pick, the last day's clear-out prices are the stuff of legend.
- Book your seminars. Check the programme online first; the marquee author talks fill up well before they start.
- Eat before the lunch rush. The venue's food outlets queue badly from 12.30pm — eat at 11.30am or hold out until 2pm.
- Carry a water bottle and dress light. The halls are cool, but the queues outside are full July sun.
Bookish Hong Kong doesn't stop when the fair packs down, either. Our guides to the best bookshops in Hong Kong and the city's most beautiful libraries and literary spaces keep the habit going year-round, and our pick of the best books set in Hong Kong is the ideal pre-fair reading list. The fair also kicks off a packed second half of July — see the biggest events in Hong Kong this summer, including Ani-Com & Games, which takes over the same halls the very next week.
Frequently Asked Questions
Plan Your Hong Kong Summer
From a million-reader book fair to harbour-side festivals, YumChaNow tracks the season's best days out — start with our summer events guide.