Mention a "trade fair" to most people and their eyes glaze over. Then they walk into the Hong Kong Sports and Leisure Expo (香港運動消閒博覽), try archery, take a swing in a golf simulator, test an e-bike and walk out clutching a discounted yoga mat — and the penny drops. This is Hong Kong's biggest summer playground for anyone who likes moving, and the 2026 edition lands at the Convention Centre in Wan Chai this July. Here's how to do it properly.
In This Guide
What is the Sports and Leisure Expo?
The Hong Kong Sports and Leisure Expo is a giant consumer fair built around one simple idea: get people moving and let them shop while they do it. Organised by the Hong Kong Trade Development Council (HKTDC), it fills the Convention Centre with sports brands, fitness gear, outdoor kit and travel deals — and, crucially, hands-on free trials of all of it.
The official billing is "Fun on move", and that captures the energy. Where the neighbouring Book Fair is about quiet browsing, this hall hums with people testing running shoes, swinging rackets and queueing for a go on the latest e-scooter. It is part bargain bazaar, part activity day.
It does not run alone. The expo shares its week and its roof with two sister fairs — the Hong Kong Book Fair and the World of Snacks — and in recent years a single admission ticket has covered all three. That three-in-one ticket is the single best reason to go: a book haul, a badminton-racket bargain and a suitcase of regional snacks in one air-conditioned afternoon.
When is the Hong Kong Sports and Leisure Expo 2026?
The 2026 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. Listings for the July fairs show daily hours of 10am to 10pm, with a shorter 9am to 5pm session on the final Tuesday. Past editions have added a late-night opening on the middle weekend, so check the official site once the full timetable lands.
Sports and Leisure Expo 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 are published on the official expo site nearer the time.
The zones: what's actually inside
The fair is carved into themed zones, and knowing them in advance saves you wandering. The headline draw is the Sports Hub (運動大本營) — rackets, balls, team-sport gear and the e-sports corner — flanked by Health & Fitness (健康。健身), where the yoga mats, recovery gadgets and home-gym kit live. For weekend warriors, Outdoor Adventure (戶外體驗) stocks hiking, camping and cycling gear, while Travel & Tourism (旅遊專區) dangles holiday deals to spend your new kit on.
It is not all sweat. Photography World (攝影世界) draws gear nerds, the Board Games (棋樂無窮) and Fun & Learn (學遊天地) zones keep younger kids busy, and the Handicraft Market (手作市集) is a browse-and-buy corner of local makers. The thread running through all of it is the free trials: archery, fitness classes, skateboarding, ball games and more, most included with entry.
| Zone | What you'll find |
|---|---|
| Sports Hub (運動大本營) | Rackets, balls, team-sport gear, e-sports |
| Health & Fitness (健康。健身) | Yoga, home-gym kit, recovery tech, fitness trials |
| Outdoor Adventure (戶外體驗) | Hiking, camping, cycling and watersports gear |
| Travel & Tourism (旅遊專區) | Holiday packages and travel deals |
| Fun & Learn / Board Games | Family activities, games and learning |
| Handicraft Market (手作市集) | Local makers and craft stalls |
Is the Sports and Leisure Expo worth it?
For the money, yes — with a caveat. These July fairs are huge: HKTDC's 2025 figures put the three concurrent events at around 770 exhibitors and some 890,000 visits between them. That scale is the appeal and the catch. You will find genuine bargains and try things you would never pay for, but on a peak weekend the aisles crawl.
Go in with a goal — new trainers, a tennis racket, a camping stove — and the discounts and free trials make a HK$30 ticket look generous. Drift in with no plan on a Saturday afternoon and it can feel like a very sweaty supermarket. The trick, as with any HKTDC summer fair, is timing and a target.
It also pairs neatly with the rest of the season. The same week kicks off a packed stretch of summer events — see our guide to the biggest events in Hong Kong this summer and the city-wide Hong Kong Summer Fun programme — and any gear you buy has somewhere to go, whether that is our pick of the best outdoor activities in Hong Kong or a session at one of the best gyms in the city.
How much does the Sports and Leisure Expo cost?
This is one of the cheapest big days out in Hong Kong. In recent editions, one ticket has covered all three fairs — the Sports and Leisure Expo, Book Fair and World of Snacks — at HK$30 for adults and HK$10 for children, with free entry for children under three and visitors aged 65 or over. For a full air-conditioned day of trials, browsing and bargains, that is hard to beat.
Tickets are sold through the HKTDC's online channels and at the venue, though door queues can be fierce on weekends; buying ahead online is the smoother route. Admission typically closes 45 minutes before the halls do. Final 2026 prices and the exact three-fair ticket arrangement are published on the official HKTDC 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 |
| Book Fair + World of Snacks | Included with the same ticket |
How do you get to the HKCEC by MTR?
Skip the car — Wan Chai in fair week is gridlock. The fastest route is the East Rail Line to Exhibition Centre Station (會展): take Exit B3 and you are 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 expo like a local (Kit's plan)
The fair rewards a bit of strategy. On a peak Saturday the popular trial queues stretch long and the bargain bins get picked over. Go in with a plan and it is a brilliant, cheap day; wing it at 3pm on the middle Sunday and it is an endurance event.
Kit's Expo Plan
- Go on a weekday morning. The first two days are the calmest, and stock of the popular gear is at its fullest.
- Bring a foldable bag or trolley. If you buy a racket, a mat and a pair of trainers, your arms will thank you.
- Do the free trials first. Archery, fitness classes and the e-sports stations build queues fast once the crowds arrive.
- Compare before you commit. The same kit often appears at several booths — a quick lap of a zone can save real money.
- Combine your ticket. One entry covers the Book Fair and World of Snacks too — plan a loop so you are not backtracking.
- Carry water and dress light. The halls are cool, but the door queues sit in full July sun.
Before You Go
Ticket arrangements and the exact three-fair deal can change year to year, and the July fairs are occasionally hit by a typhoon — in 2025 the fairs adjusted opening times around a storm. Check the official HKTDC site for the final 2026 prices, hours and any extreme-weather arrangements before you set off.
And once you have the gear, put it to use. Our guides to the best hikes in Hong Kong and the city's best watersports are the natural next step — or, if the expo leaves the kids wanting more action, JOYPOLIS SPORTS at Kai Tak keeps the energy going indoors.
Frequently Asked Questions
Plan Your Hong Kong Summer
From three-in-one fairs to harbour-side festivals, YumChaNow tracks the season's best days out — start with our summer events guide.