Some evening this August you might turn a corner in Kowloon and find a small fire of paper burning on the pavement, a plate of oranges left at the kerb, or a four-storey bamboo theatre that simply was not there last week. This is the Hungry Ghost Festival in Hong Kong, and in 2026 it runs through the whole of the seventh lunar month. It is not the city's answer to Halloween. It is older, quieter and far more devotional — a month of feeding the forgotten.
In This Guide
What is the Hungry Ghost Festival?
For one lunar month each year, tradition holds that the gates of the underworld swing open and the dead are free to roam among the living. Some are ancestors coming home. Others are "hungry ghosts" — restless, neglected souls with no descendants to feed them. The living respond with food, incense and ritual, partly out of respect for their own ancestors and partly to keep the wanderers content.
The festival goes by several names. In Taoist tradition it is the Zhongyuan Festival (中元節); in Buddhist tradition it is Ullambana (盂蘭盆); in plain conversation many people simply call the whole period Ghost Month (鬼月). The story most often told is of Mulian, a devoted monk who descended into the underworld to rescue his mother from among the starving spirits — a parable about filial piety that still sits at the heart of the season.
So this is the thing to hold onto before you go looking for it: the Hungry Ghost Festival is solemn and compassionate, not spooky-for-fun. The offerings on the street are acts of care. Treat them that way and the whole month makes sense.
When is the Hungry Ghost Festival in 2026?
The festival tracks the lunar calendar, so the Gregorian dates shift each year. In 2026 the seventh lunar month opens on Thursday 13 August and closes around Friday 11 September. The emotional centre of the month is "Ghost Day" itself, the 15th of the lunar month, though in much of Cantonese Hong Kong families mark the eve on the 14th. That puts the peak on 26 and 27 August 2026.
| Date (2026) | Lunar date | What happens |
|---|---|---|
| Thu 13 Aug | 1st of 7th month | Ghost Month begins; the "gate" opens and the first kerbside offerings appear |
| Wed 26 Aug | 14th | The eve many Cantonese families observe; peak burning of offerings |
| Thu 27 Aug | 15th (Zhongyuan) | Ghost Day — the height of the festival |
| Fri 11 Sep | end of month | The month closes and the "gate" is said to shut |
One caveat worth knowing: the Chiu Chow Yu Lan grounds do not all run on the same day. Different community associations stage their three-day ceremonies on their own dates scattered right across the month, so there is almost always something happening somewhere between mid-August and mid-September. If you want to time a visit, check the calendar against our round-up of the biggest events in Hong Kong this summer.
The Yu Lan Festival: Hong Kong's living heritage
Hong Kong's most visible version of the festival belongs to the Chiu Chow (潮州) community — families with roots in the Teochew region of eastern Guangdong, around Shantou. Their celebration, the Yu Lan Festival (盂蘭勝會), is no folk curiosity: it was inscribed on China's third national list of intangible cultural heritage in 2011, and the Hong Kong government's Intangible Cultural Heritage Office records that the community has staged it for more than a century, with origins traced to the late 1890s.
The official aim, in the government's own words, is "to carry out ancestral worship ceremonies and perform rituals for wandering ghosts in the netherworld." In practice that means a month in which neighbourhood committees pool money, hire scaffolders and priests, and turn a football pitch or a car park into a temporary temple. It is one of the great examples of old Hong Kong surviving inside the new — and a reminder that the city's calendar is still shaped by the moon as much as by the office diary.
If you enjoy this kind of living tradition, it sits naturally alongside the city's other heritage festivals, from the Dragon Boat Festival in summer to the bun towers and parades you will find on a day trip to Cheung Chau.
From bamboo opera to peace rice
Walk into a Yu Lan ground and the elements repeat from district to district. Here is what you are looking at.
The bamboo theatre and "shen gong" opera
The showpiece is the bamboo theatre (戲棚), lashed together by master scaffolders without a single nail, where troupes perform shen gong opera (神功戲) — literally "theatre for the gods." The performances are staged to thank the deities and to entertain both the living and the visiting spirits. Look closely and you will often see the front rows left conspicuously empty: those seats are reserved for the guests you cannot see.
The Ghost King
Presiding over many grounds is the Ghost King (大士王), a towering paper-and-bamboo effigy that can stand around four metres tall. He is regarded as an incarnation of the Bodhisattva Guanyin, there to keep order among the spirits and oversee the giving of alms. At the close of the rites he is ceremonially burned, sending him back to the other world.
Offerings, peace rice and the auction
Around the theatre, families burn paper offerings — joss paper, paper houses, paper money — and lay out food for the wandering souls. A signature Chiu Chow custom is the distribution of "peace rice" (平安米), sacks of rice handed out to bring blessings and good health, historically a real act of charity for the elderly and the poor. Many grounds also hold a lively auction of auspicious objects, a fundraiser whose proceeds keep the following year's festival alive.
The Yu Lan Ground, Decoded
- Bamboo theatre (戲棚) — nail-free scaffolding stage for Chiu Chow opera.
- Shen gong opera (神功戲) — thanksgiving performances for gods and ghosts alike.
- Ghost King (大士王) — the ~4m alms-giving effigy, burned at the end.
- Paper offerings — joss paper and paper goods burned for the spirits.
- Peace rice (平安米) — rice given out for blessings and good health.
- Auspicious auction — bidding on lucky objects to fund next year.
Where can you experience it in Hong Kong?
This is street-level Hong Kong, so you do not buy a ticket — you stumble across it. During the seventh month, temporary Yu Lan grounds and bamboo theatres rise on open ground across Kowloon, Hong Kong Island and the New Territories, anywhere a Chiu Chow community is strong. Listen for the clang of opera gongs after dark and follow the smell of incense; that is usually all the map you need.
For something more organised, the Hong Kong Chiu Chow associations have in recent years staged a public-facing Yu Lan Cultural Festival, with bamboo-theatre opera, ritual displays and hands-on activities designed to welcome newcomers. Dates and the venue change from year to year, so check the Hong Kong Tourism Board's festival listings for the 2026 edition before you set out. If you are pairing it with the rest of the season, the lantern-lit lanes of the Temple Street Night Market capture a similar after-dark, old-Kowloon mood.
Hungry Ghost / Yu Lan Festival — Need to Know
Note: individual Yu Lan grounds set their own dates and locations each year. Confirm this year's listings with the Hong Kong Tourism Board before travelling.
How to Watch Respectfully
- Keep a quiet distance. These are acts of worship, not a performance laid on for visitors.
- Do not touch the offerings or the effigies. That includes food, ash, joss paper and the Ghost King.
- Ask before photographing people at prayer. Wide shots of the theatre are fine; faces deserve consent.
- Step around, never over, kerbside offerings. Walking over them is considered deeply rude.
- Leave the empty front-row seats alone. They are set aside for the spirits.
- Dress modestly if you plan to linger near the altars.
What not to do during Ghost Month
Even Hong Kongers who would never call themselves superstitious tend to keep a few of these customs during the seventh month — better safe than sorry. You do not have to believe them to respect them, and they are worth knowing if you want to read the city's mood in August. (Time Out Hong Kong keeps a fuller list.)
Ghost-Month Taboos
Tradition advises against: swimming in open water (spirits are said to linger there); staying out very late, as the dark is when wanderers are strongest; whistling or singing at night, which is thought to attract them; wearing red or black after dark; picking up money found on the street, which may be an offering; stepping on or kicking kerbside offerings; opening umbrellas indoors; and hanging laundry outside overnight. Many families also postpone big moves — weddings, house moves, new ventures — until the month is over.
None of this is meant to frighten. Think of it less as a horror-film rulebook and more as a month-long exercise in good manners towards the unseen — and, for newcomers, a neat shortcut to understanding how much of daily life here still runs on tradition. For more of that context, our first-timer's guide to Hong Kong sets the cultural scene, and the serene Lotus Festival at Po Lin Monastery shows the gentler, Buddhist side of the same summer.
Frequently Asked Questions
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