Hong Kong's summer of K-pop has a marquee name on it. ITZY — JYP Entertainment's chart-topping five-piece — bring their 3RD WORLD TOUR ⟨TUNNEL VISION⟩ to AsiaWorld-Expo on Saturday 20 June 2026, the group's only Hong Kong date this run. The girls behind "WANNABE", "LOCO" and "SNEAKERS" are bringing a full new stage production to the AsiaWorld-Arena, and for the city's MIDZY it's the gig of the early summer. If you've got a ticket, this is your run sheet. If you're still hunting, here's exactly what's on, when, and how to do it safely.
In This Guide
Why this show matters
ITZY are not a developing act testing the water — they are one of the defining girl groups of their K-pop generation, and a third world tour confirms it. A headline arena date in Hong Kong on that tour is a statement: the city is a fixed stop on the global circuit again, not an afterthought.
It also lands at the front of a stacked summer. Hong Kong's 2026 concert calendar is the busiest it has been in years, split between the new 50,000-seat Kai Tak Stadium and the indoor AsiaWorld-Arena out by the airport. ITZY take the arena route — a tighter, louder room where a K-pop crowd's energy has nowhere to go but up. For where this fits the wider season, see our guide to the best concerts in Hong Kong 2026.
Dates, times & tickets
This is a single Hong Kong show, not a multi-night stand, so there is only one date to plan around. Here is the confirmed detail, straight from the official AsiaWorld-Expo event listing.
| Date | Show | Start time | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sat 20 Jun 2026 | ITZY 3RD WORLD TOUR ⟨TUNNEL VISION⟩ | 6:00pm | AsiaWorld-Arena (Hall 1) |
The Concert — Key Facts
Note: the standing zone has a 12+ age limit and a 140cm height minimum; the seated zone admits ages 3 and above. Always confirm the start time and zone printed on your own ticket.
Across the board, then, face value spans HK$799 to HK$1,999, with the top tier a VIP standing ticket. That sits right in the usual band for a marquee K-pop arena show in Hong Kong — pricier than a local gig, cheaper than a stadium headliner. There are also designated wheelchair and minder tickets at HK$1,399; wheelchair users can contact the venue ahead of time for admission assistance.
Can you still get ITZY tickets?
Here's the honest answer. Tickets went on general sale on 26 March 2026 through Cityline, the official agent, and — as in-demand K-pop shows here tend to — moved fast, with reports of a quick sell-through. We're not going to print a flat "sold out" claim we can't stand behind, because stock shifts: promoters sometimes release returned tickets or restricted-view seats closer to the date.
The only reliable check is the official channel itself. Go straight to Cityline and look for any released or returned stock. If it shows nothing, read the safety note further down before you go anywhere near a resale — Hong Kong has a serious problem with concert-ticket scams, and K-pop shows are a favourite target.
Who are ITZY?
ITZY (있지) debuted in February 2019 under JYP Entertainment with "DALLA DALLA", and barely paused for breath after. The line-up is Yeji, Lia, Ryujin, Chaeryeong and Yuna — five members, performing as a full group on this tour — and their fandom answers to the name MIDZY.
The catalogue is built for a live room. "WANNABE", "LOCO", "SNEAKERS" and "UNTOUCHABLE" are the kind of high-tempo, hook-heavy singles that turn an arena into a singalong, and the group's "teen crush" attitude — confident, a little defiant — has made them one of the most-watched fourth-generation acts worldwide. The Hong Kong date supports their latest mini album, TUNNEL VISION, which gives the tour its name.
The ⟨TUNNEL VISION⟩ run opened with a three-night stand at Seoul's Jamsil Indoor Stadium in February 2026 before heading across Asia, with Hong Kong among the early stops ahead of dates in Taipei, Bangkok, Manila and beyond. As ever with a K-pop tour, the set list isn't published in advance and shifts night to night — so we won't fake a track-by-track rundown. Expect the singles, expect the choreography to be razor-sharp, and expect a crowd that knows every word. For the rooms these tours play, see our rundown of the best live music venues in Hong Kong 2026.
AsiaWorld-Arena: the venue
The show is in the AsiaWorld-Arena (Hall 1), the flagship indoor arena inside AsiaWorld-Expo (亞洲國際博覽館) on Lantau, right next to Hong Kong International Airport. It's one of the city's biggest indoor concert rooms and a regular stop for international touring acts — the indoor counterweight to Kai Tak's open-air stadium. The trade-off is location: it's the most out-of-town of Hong Kong's major venues, so the night lives or dies on your transport plan.
AsiaWorld-Arena
How do you get to AsiaWorld-Expo on the night?
Take the train — it's genuinely the best way out there. The MTR Airport Express runs straight to AsiaWorld-Expo Station, the line's western terminus, and the station sits inside the venue, so you step off the platform and into the complex with no street walking. From Hong Kong Station in Central it's about 28 minutes, via Kowloon and the airport.
The one catch is cost: the Airport Express is the priciest MTR line, so a budget alternative is the Tung Chung line to Tung Chung, then a short bus or taxi hop to AsiaWorld-Expo. On big event nights the venue runs extra transport and special arrangements — worth checking before you set off. Whichever route you pick, leave early and have your journey home thought through before the encore.
Show-Night Game Plan
- Arrive early. Aim to be at the venue at least 60–90 minutes before the 6pm start — security and bag checks take time, and the airport run isn't one to cut fine.
- Standing ticket? The holding area opens around four hours before the show and admission to the hall begins about two hours before, by the queue number printed on your ticket. Get there in good time.
- Tap in with an Octopus. Faster than queuing for single-journey tickets, especially on the way out.
- Eat before, or inside. The complex has food and drink outlets; no outside food or drink is allowed in.
- Plan your exit. The Airport Express clears crowds efficiently, but trains fill after the show — have your route home set in advance.
What you can (and can't) bring
AsiaWorld-Expo runs airport-style entry screening with handheld metal detectors, and the rules are firm. The organiser publishes the specific policy for each show, so always check the official event page before you pack — but these are the standard ones to know.
Entry Rules at a Glance
- Bag size: nothing larger than 38 x 30 x 20 cm (about 15 x 12 x 8 inches). Oversized bags go to the baggage-storage counter or self-service lockers on the ground floor.
- Cameras: professional cameras, video and voice recorders and selfie sticks are not allowed in the hall, and photography or filming during the show is prohibited.
- Food & drink: no outside food or beverages. No glass bottles or cans either.
- Standing zone: a security wristband is issued for crowd control, and re-entry needs your re-entry token plus the original ticket. Long umbrellas aren't allowed in the standing area.
- Age limits: seated zone 3 and above; standing zone 12 and above with a 140cm height minimum.
Avoid the Scams
If Cityline shows nothing and you chase a resale, be careful. Hong Kong has a real problem with concert-ticket scams and inflated touting, and K-pop shows are a prime target. Stick to any official resale channel the promoter or Cityline announces, and treat private sellers on Instagram, Carousell or WhatsApp with deep suspicion. Never pay by irreversible transfer to someone you can't verify, be wary of prices far above the HK$799–1,999 face value, and remember that a screenshot of a ticket is not a ticket. The venue voids tickets found to be resold or touted — when in doubt, walk away.
And if you do miss out, the city's calendar keeps coming. Kai Tak and AsiaWorld-Expo are filling fast with K-pop tours, Cantopop royalty and global headliners — the Hong Kong Tourism Board events calendar is a reliable place to see what's officially confirmed next. Point your energy at the next on-sale: our biggest events in Hong Kong this summer round-up and our guide to i-dle's own Kai Tak Stadium run are good places to start, and our look at Sammi Cheng at Kai Tak Stadium has more of the summer's big nights.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's On in Hong Kong This Summer
From arena headliners to hidden gigs, YumChaNow tracks every show worth your night out — start with our concerts and live music guides.