Sixty hectares of mangrove boardwalk, bird hides and freshwater marsh, twenty minutes' walk from a Tin Shui Wai housing estate: Hong Kong Wetland Park (香港濕地公園) is one of the strangest and best things the government has ever built. It is also, right now, running at half capacity — every one of its four exhibition galleries is shut, along with the indoor play area, the shop and the café. The full HK$30 is still being charged. Here is what you actually get.

The short version: Hong Kong Wetland Park in Tin Shui Wai opens 10am–5pm, closed Tuesdays (except public holidays), with ticket sales stopping at 4pm. Admission is HK$30 standard, HK$15 concession, free under 3. The Wetland Reserve is open; the galleries, indoor play area, shop and café are closed for upgrading with no reopening date published. Online ticketing is suspended — pay at the counter.

In This Guide

  1. What's closed — and what's still open
  2. Is it still worth HK$30?
  3. Tickets, prices and passes
  4. Opening hours and the 4pm trap
  5. How do you get to Wetland Park?
  6. Weather closures
  7. FAQ

What's closed — and what's still open

The park's own notice, headed "Upgrading of Exhibition Galleries and some Visitor Facilities", was last updated in December 2025 and carries no reopening date. That is more than seven months of works and counting, which is worth knowing before you drag anyone out to Tin Shui Wai.

The split is essentially indoors versus outdoors. Almost everything under the Visitor Centre roof is shut; almost everything outside is fine.

StatusFacilities
ClosedAtrium; the "What are Wetlands", "Living Wetlands", "Human Culture" and "Wetland Challenge" galleries; Viewing Gallery; Indoor Play Area; Multi-function Rooms; Souvenir Shop; Café
Partly closedEntry Plaza — but the Eco-Maze and Green Roof on either side stay open
OpenThe whole Wetland Reserve — Pui Pui's Home, Stream Walk, Wetland Discovery Centre, Life Zone, Dipping Pond, Wetlands at Work, Succession Walk, Wildside Walk, Mangrove Boardwalk, Butterfly Garden, Return Route, Viewing Pavilions and Bird Hides; plus the Theatre, Information Counter, toilets, Mother's Room, First Aid Room and car park

Read that bottom row again, because it is the good news: the reserve is entirely intact. The boardwalks, the hides, the butterfly garden and — crucially for anyone bringing children — Pui Pui's Home, where the park's celebrity crocodile lives, are all open.

"The split is indoors versus outdoors. Everything under the roof is shut; the mangroves, the bird hides and the crocodile are all exactly where you left them."

Is it still worth HK$30?

Depends entirely on why you were going.

If you were going for the walk: yes, comfortably. Thirty dollars for several hours on boardwalks through mangrove and reedbed, with proper bird hides at the end, is one of the better-value tickets in Hong Kong. The reserve was always the point.

If you were going for a rainy Sunday with small children: no — and this is the important warning. The indoor play area is shut. The galleries are shut. The café is shut. In practice the park has become an outdoor-only proposition, which in a July downpour or a 34-degree afternoon is a very different day out from the one you were picturing. If that is your situation, our guide to indoor activities to beat the heat is the better bet.

If you wanted the museum bit: wait. The four galleries are the educational heart of the place, and paying full price to walk past their shutters is a poor trade.

Three Things to Check Before You Go

1. Online ticketing is suspended. The ticketing gates at the Atrium are out of service, so tickets are checked by hand and the electronic ticketing system — individual tickets, group tickets and multiple entry pass applications — is temporarily switched off. Buy at the ticket office.
2. There is no café. Bring water. Tin Shui Wai is not a five-minute walk away.
3. No reopening date has been published. The notice is dated December 2025 and has not been given an end. Check the park's own upgrading notice before you travel — it is the only reliable source.

Tickets, prices and passes

Admission is refreshingly cheap by Hong Kong attraction standards, and the concession band is unusually generous — it covers everyone from 3 to 17, all full-time students, and anyone 65 or over.

TicketStandardConcession
Single entry (individual)HK$30HK$15
Child under 3Free — no ticket required
Group, 10–19 peopleHK$27HK$13.5
Group, 20–29 peopleHK$25.5HK$12.7
Group, 30–49 peopleHK$24HK$12
Group, 50+ peopleHK$21HK$10.5
Multiple entry pass, full yearHK$100HK$50
Multiple entry pass, half yearHK$50HK$25
Family pass (max 4), full yearHK$200

Concession covers children aged 3 to 17, full-time students, people with disabilities and one accompanying carer (the carer concession does not apply to multiple entry passes), and senior citizens aged 65 or above. Bring proof — it is checked on admission.

The maths on the annual pass is blunt: at HK$100, it pays for itself on your fourth visit. If you live anywhere in the north-west New Territories and like birds, that is not a hard sell — though you might reasonably wait until the galleries reopen.

At the counter you can pay by cash, Octopus, EPS, FPS, Alipay, WeChat Pay, UnionPay or cheque. Two catches: the park does not offer Octopus add-value, and tickets are non-refundable. Full details are on the official ticketing page.

Get Out More

Trails, islands, day trips and the wild corners of Hong Kong — the YumChaNow newsletter, free every week.

Opening hours and the 4pm trap

The park opens 10am to 5pm on Mondays and Wednesdays to Sundays, plus public holidays. It is closed on Tuesdays, except when a Tuesday is a public holiday.

Here is the catch that ruins afternoons: ticket selling runs only from 9.30am to 4pm. The park is open until five, but you cannot buy a ticket after four. Turn up at 4.15pm having crossed the whole territory and you are simply not getting in.

Realistically, a reserve this size wants two to three hours anyway. A 4pm arrival would be a waste even if they sold you the ticket. Aim for the morning, when the birds are more active and the boardwalks have some shade.

Hong Kong Wetland Park — The Essentials

香港濕地公園 · Tin Shui Wai, New Territories
AddressWetland Park Road, Tin Shui Wai, New Territories (香港新界天水圍濕地公園路)
Nearest stationTin Shui Wai (Tuen Ma Line), then Light Rail 705 to Tin Sau or Wetland Park stop
Hours10am–5pm, Mon & Wed–Sun + PH; closed Tuesdays (except PH)
Ticket sales9.30am–4pm only
AdmissionHK$30 standard / HK$15 concession / under-3s free
Managed byAgriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD)
Enquiries3152 2666 (general, 9am–5pm); 2617 5218 (ticketing)
Current statusGalleries, indoor play area, shop & café closed for upgrading; reserve open

All hours, fees, transport and closure details verified against the park's own official pages on the day of publication. The upgrading notice carries no end date — re-check before travelling.

How do you get to Wetland Park?

There is no MTR station at the door, and no exit number to quote — the last leg is on the Light Rail. The park's own directions are: take the Tuen Ma Line to Tin Shui Wai station, then transfer to Light Rail route 705 and get off at Tin Sau stop (using the subway) or Wetland Park stop.

From Hong Kong Island there is a genuinely useful single-seat ride: Citybus route 967 runs from Admiralty MTR to the Hong Kong Wetland Park and Wetland Park Road stops, via the Western Harbour Crossing and Tai Lam Tunnel interchanges.

Other Ways In

Operating hours vary by route, so check before you set off. If you are building a wider New Territories day, our guide to the Hong Kong UNESCO Global Geopark covers the other end of the territory, and the best hikes in Hong Kong has the trails worth pairing it with.

Weather closures

This matters more than usual, because the bit that is open is the bit that is outside.

Under Typhoon Signal No. 8 or above, the park closes and reopens within two hours of the signal being cancelled — but if the signal is still up at 2pm, it does not open at all that day. The same 2pm rule applies to the Black Rainstorm Warning.

If a black rainstorm starts after the park has opened, the Visitor Centre stays in service but the outdoor areas close and outdoor programmes are cancelled. With the galleries currently shut, that leaves very little — another reason to watch the forecast in a Hong Kong summer.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Hong Kong Wetland Park open in 2026?
Yes, but partly. The Wetland Reserve, theatre, toilets and car park remain open. The Atrium, all four exhibition galleries, the Viewing Gallery, Indoor Play Area, multi-function rooms, souvenir shop and café are temporarily closed for upgrading. The park's notice was last updated in December 2025 and gives no reopening date.
How much does Hong Kong Wetland Park cost?
Standard admission is HK$30 and concession is HK$15, with children under 3 free and no ticket required. Concession covers ages 3 to 17, full-time students, people with disabilities plus one carer, and seniors aged 65 or above. Group rates from HK$21 apply to 10 or more people, and annual passes cost HK$100 standard.
What day is Hong Kong Wetland Park closed?
Tuesdays, except public holidays. On every other day it opens 10am to 5pm, with ticket sales stopping at 4pm. That 4pm ticket cut-off catches people out — arriving at 4.30pm means you cannot buy a ticket even though the park is technically still open.
How do you get to Hong Kong Wetland Park by MTR?
Take the Tuen Ma Line to Tin Shui Wai station, then transfer to Light Rail route 705 and alight at Tin Sau stop, using the subway, or at Wetland Park stop. From Hong Kong Island, Citybus route 967 runs from Admiralty MTR directly to the park. Buses A37 and E37 serve it from the airport.
Can you buy Hong Kong Wetland Park tickets online?
Not at the moment. Because the ticketing gates at the Atrium are out of service during the upgrading works, tickets are checked manually and the electronic ticketing system is temporarily suspended, including online individual and group tickets and multiple entry pass applications. Buy at the ticket office instead.

Go for the Boardwalk, Not the Galleries

The reserve is fully open and still the best HK$30 in the New Territories. Just check the upgrading notice before you travel — and get there in the morning, before the 4pm ticket cut-off.

Hong Kong Wetland Park Tin Shui Wai New Territories Birdwatching Family Hong Kong Outdoors Nature Hong Kong