Hong Kong summers are brutal — 33°C heat, soupy humidity and a typhoon signal never far away. So when the mercury climbs, the smart play is an air-conditioned day out that still burns off some energy. JOYPOLIS SPORTS Hong Kong (JP超動感世界) is built for exactly that: a five-storey indoor "sportainment" park at Kai Tak Sports Park, and the first flagship that Japan's CA SEGA JOYPOLIS has ever opened outside its home country.

The short version: JOYPOLIS SPORTS Hong Kong is a five-storey indoor sports amusement park at Kai Tak Sports Park — Japan's first JOYPOLIS SPORTS flagship abroad, open since December 2024. Across about 30,000 sq ft sit a licensed SONIC Stadium, a Ninja Dojo and a Future Arena. Passes start from HK$180; the nearest MTR is Sung Wong Toi or Kai Tak, Exit D.

In This Guide

  1. What is JOYPOLIS SPORTS Hong Kong?
  2. What can you play, floor by floor?
  3. Tickets, prices & opening hours
  4. How to get to Kai Tak
  5. Is it worth it? Tips before you go
  6. FAQ

What is JOYPOLIS SPORTS Hong Kong?

JOYPOLIS SPORTS Hong Kong is an indoor sports-and-technology amusement park run by CA SEGA JOYPOLIS, the Japanese company behind Tokyo's long-running JOYPOLIS arcades (the brand dates to 1994). Hong Kong landed its first overseas flagship: the park opened on 20 December 2024 inside the Health and Wellness Centre at Kai Tak Sports Park (啟德體育園), the regenerated district built on the old airport runway.

The pitch is "sportainment" — SEGA's projection mapping, motion-tracking and virtual reality bolted onto real, physical play. Instead of joysticks, you climb, jump, dodge and sprint. It spreads over five storeys and roughly 30,000 square feet, with more than 20 attractions, and because it is fully indoors and air-conditioned it makes our shortlist of indoor activities to beat the Hong Kong heat.

It is squarely a family destination, but not only for small children — the harder obstacle courses and reaction games reward teenagers and competitive adults too. If you are planning a day out with kids, it slots neatly alongside our guide to the best kid-friendly activities in Hong Kong.

"Five floors, a licensed SONIC Stadium and an augmented-reality climbing wall — JOYPOLIS SPORTS is the slickest way to keep restless kids moving when it's 33°C outside."

What can you play, floor by floor?

The complex is organised by floor, with the active zones stacked above a ground-floor entrance and a top-floor restaurant. Here is how it breaks down, based on the operator's own floor plan.

The floors, top to bottom

A few attractions are worth flagging. Valo Climb is an augmented-reality climbing wall that mixes projection mapping with motion tracking, turning a straightforward clamber into a game. Valo Jump does the same for a trampoline. And HK Racing Legend is a virtual-reality ride that puts you in the saddle as a jockey — a neat nod to the city's racing obsession, and reason enough to brush up with our beginner's guide to Happy Valley racing first.

Entry works on timed sessions — up to 120 minutes on busier "peak" days — so you choose a slot and work through as many activities as you can fit in. That is plenty for one focused visit, though serious climbers and ninjas could happily burn a full afternoon.

Tickets, prices and opening hours

Pricing splits into "regular" and "peak" days, and the difference matters, so check which applies to your date before you book. A single JPS Pass covers the three active floors — Ninja Dojo, SONIC Stadium and Future Arena. These are the official rates at the time of writing.

PassAges 12+Ages 4–11
Regular day — 60 minsHK$180HK$180
Regular day — all-day (members only)HK$360HK$360
Peak day — 120 minsHK$360HK$300
JoyYou Card holder (seniors)HK$100HK$100

Children aged 3 and under enter free with a paying adult, and anyone aged 11 or under must be accompanied by an adult aged 18 or over. Some rides need grip socks, sold on site for HK$30 a pair if you do not bring your own, and every visitor signs a liability waiver — do it online beforehand to save time at the door. Tickets are non-refundable; book through the official JOYPOLIS SPORTS website or platforms such as Klook, KKday, Trip.com and K11.

Opening hours move around, so the park asks you to check its official business calendar. As a rough guide, most floors run from about 10:30am to 6:30pm, with the 3/F Future Arena and busier peak days stretching to 8:30pm; the last entry is two hours before closing. Prices and session times can change without notice.

JOYPOLIS SPORTS Hong Kong — Visitor Essentials

JOYPOLIS SPORTS HONG KONG (JP超動感世界) · Kai Tak, Kowloon City
VenueG/F–4/F, Health and Wellness Centre, Kai Tak Sports Park, Kai Tak, Kowloon City
Opened20 December 2024 (open year-round)
HoursApprox. 10:30am–6:30pm; 3/F & peak days to 8:30pm (check official calendar)
PricePasses from HK$180; JoyYou HK$100; under-3s free
Nearest MTRSung Wong Toi or Kai Tak, Exit D (≤10-min walk)
TicketsOfficial site, Klook, KKday, Trip.com, K11

Note: nearly every activity involves movement — wear trainers and comfortable clothing, and confirm the day's hours and ticket type on the official site before you travel.

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How do you get to JOYPOLIS SPORTS Hong Kong?

The good news, compared with some Kai Tak attractions, is that this one is an easy MTR hop. JOYPOLIS SPORTS sits in the Health and Wellness Centre on the edge of Kai Tak Sports Park, beside Kai Tak Mall.

Take the MTR Tuen Ma Line to either Sung Wong Toi (宋皇臺) or Kai Tak (啟德) station and leave via Exit D at either — both are within a 10-minute walk, and the park has posted walking-route videos for each. Buses 106, 11B, 22M, 297 and 5D serve the area. Driving, the Arena Carpark sits on the basement level of Kai Tak Mall 2 (enter from Shing Kai Road), and there is a taxi drop-off on the mall's ground floor.

The wider district is fast becoming the city's events hub — the same precinct hosts the new 50,000-seat stadium, as our guide to the Hong Kong Football Festival at Kai Tak explains, and the nearby cruise terminal is home to summer pop-ups like Bubble Planet Hong Kong. It is easy to build a half-day east of the harbour around any of them.

Is JOYPOLIS SPORTS worth it? Tips before you go

For active families and tech-curious teenagers, it is a strong rainy-or-roasting-day option, and it earns a place in our round-up of rainy-day indoor activities. A few practical notes will make the visit smoother.

Before you book

Weather & Event Days

This is typhoon country, so check the forecast. The park stays open under Amber and Red rainstorm warnings and Signals No. 1 and No. 3, but suspends operations under a Black rainstorm warning or Typhoon Signal No. 8 or above — if that hits, keep your ticket and reschedule via your booking platform within a month. Also note that on Kai Tak Sports Park event days — a stadium concert or big match — the Arena Carpark can be suspended and the area gets busy, so plan your transport in advance.

For where a JOYPOLIS day fits in the wider season — from stadium gigs to harbourfront festivals — our overview of the biggest events in Hong Kong this summer maps out the calendar, and our best outdoor activities guide covers the cooler-evening alternatives.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where is JOYPOLIS SPORTS Hong Kong and how do I get there?
JOYPOLIS SPORTS Hong Kong occupies the ground to fourth floors of the Health and Wellness Centre at Kai Tak Sports Park, Kai Tak, Kowloon City. The nearest MTR stations are Sung Wong Toi and Kai Tak, both on the Tuen Ma Line; take Exit D from either, each within a 10-minute walk. Buses 106, 11B, 22M, 297 and 5D also serve the area.
How much are JOYPOLIS SPORTS Hong Kong tickets?
On regular days a 60-minute JPS Pass is HK$180 for ages 4 and up, with a members-only all-day pass at HK$360. On peak days a 120-minute session is HK$360 for ages 12 and up and HK$300 for ages 4 to 11. JoyYou Card holders pay HK$100, and children aged 3 and under enter free with a paying adult. Prices and sessions change without notice, so confirm on the official site.
What are the opening hours at JOYPOLIS SPORTS Hong Kong?
Hours vary by day, so the operator asks visitors to check the official business calendar before booking. As a guide, most floors run from about 10:30am to 6:30pm, with the 3/F Future Arena and busier peak days extending to 8:30pm. Entry is by timed session and the last entry is two hours before closing.
Is JOYPOLIS SPORTS Hong Kong suitable for young children?
Yes. It is pitched at families, with a SONIC Stadium Kidz zone and height-appropriate activities. Children aged 3 and under go free, and anyone aged 11 or under must be accompanied by a paying adult aged 18 or over. Some rides require grip socks (sold on site for HK$30), and there are nappy-changing facilities on the 2nd and 3rd floors plus stroller storage.
What happens at JOYPOLIS SPORTS if there is a typhoon or rainstorm?
The park stays open during Amber and Red rainstorm warnings and Typhoon Signals No. 1 and No. 3. It suspends operations under a Black rainstorm warning or Typhoon Signal No. 8 or above. If you cannot visit, keep your ticket and contact the booking platform (Klook, KKday, Trip.com or K11) within one month to reschedule.

Plan Your JOYPOLIS SPORTS Day

Pick a session, pack grip socks and a charged phone — then let YumChaNow keep you ahead of the next big opening in town.

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