Some concerts are just concerts. This one is a moment. When Sammi Cheng (鄭秀文) walks out at Kai Tak Stadium in July, it will be the first time the Cantopop icon has ever played Hong Kong's giant new arena — and the closing chapter of her sprawling "You & Mi" Asia tour. Tickets for all three nights vanished almost as fast as they appeared. If you have a ticket, this guide is your run sheet. If you don't, here's exactly what's happening and why the whole city is talking about it.
In This Guide
Why this run matters
Sammi Cheng is not a new name. She won TVB's New Talent Singing Contest in 1988, started recording in 1990, and spent the next three decades becoming one of the most successful artists Hong Kong has ever produced — a singer and actress so embedded in the city's pop culture that fans simply call her the "Goddess of Pop." The "You & Mi" project has been a long time coming, too. Her Hong Kong Coliseum residency under the same banner finally landed in July 2024, after a Covid-era postponement, and turned into one of the most talked-about Cantopop runs in years.
So why does Kai Tak change the story? Scale. The Coliseum holds around 12,500 people. Kai Tak Stadium holds 50,000. Moving a homegrown Cantopop headliner from Hung Hom to a 50,000-seat stadium is a statement about how big the local star circuit can now go — a stage that, until Kai Tak opened in 2025, simply didn't exist in Hong Kong. This is the tour's grand finale, on the biggest stage the city can offer, by an artist who has earned it.
Dates, times & the ticket story
The run was announced as a two-night stand, then grew. After the original 10 and 11 July dates sold out within minutes of going on sale on 28 April 2026, organisers added a third and final night on 12 July, which went on sale on 11 May. That one sold out too. Here's the confirmed schedule.
| Date | Show | On-sale date | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fri 10 Jul 2026 | You & Mi — Asia Tour Finale | 28 Apr 2026 | Sold out |
| Sat 11 Jul 2026 | You & Mi — Asia Tour Finale | 28 Apr 2026 | Sold out |
| Sun 12 Jul 2026 | You & Mi — Asia Tour Finale (added) | 11 May 2026 | Sold out |
The Concert — Key Facts
Note: HKD 1,280 and HKD 880 tiers included some restricted-view seats. Official start times had not been published at the time of writing — typical Kai Tak Stadium shows begin around 8–8.30pm. Always confirm the time printed on your ticket.
A quick word on the set. Cheng will draw on the same "You & Mi" repertoire that powered her 2024 Coliseum residency and the wider Asia tour — a career-spanning mix of her Cantopop hits and newer material. We won't print a track-by-track set list, because the running order isn't officially confirmed and these things change night to night. Expect the staging to scale up for the stadium.
Kai Tak Stadium: the venue
Kai Tak Stadium is the centrepiece of Kai Tak Sports Park, built on the site of the city's former airport in Kowloon. It opened on 1 March 2025 and immediately became Hong Kong's marquee venue, hosting Coldplay, Jay Chou and Mayday in its first year. The headline feature is a retractable roof — it takes roughly 30 minutes to open or close — which means a summer show goes ahead rain, shine, or typhoon-season downpour. For a July date in Hong Kong, that roof is doing a lot of quiet work.
Kai Tak Stadium
How do you get to Kai Tak Stadium on the night?
Take the train. The whole sports park was designed around the MTR, and on a sold-out stadium night the roads will be the slowest way in. The Tuen Ma Line serves the venue from two stations: Sung Wong Toi Station (use Exit D, then a 5–10 minute walk) gives the most direct approach to the stadium, while Kai Tak Station is the other option — both sit within roughly a 10-minute walk.
From Central, that's about 20–25 minutes door to door. Expect crowd-control measures, extended MTR service and special traffic arrangements on show nights — the kind of operation Kai Tak has run for its big concerts since opening. Build in extra time, leave the car at home, and have your return journey thought out before the encore. For more on the city's stadiums and arenas, see our guide to the best concert venues in Hong Kong and our rundown of the best live music venues in Hong Kong 2026.
Game-Day Game Plan
- Arrive early. Aim to be at the venue 60–90 minutes before the printed start time. Security and bag checks for 50,000 people take time.
- Use Sung Wong Toi, Exit D. It's the most direct walk to the stadium; Kai Tak Station is the back-up.
- Tap in with an Octopus. Faster than queuing for single tickets on the way out, when half the stadium hits the gates at once.
- Eat before, or inside. The Sports Park has food and drink outlets; outside food and drink can't come in.
- Plan your exit. Trains will be packed after the show. If you can wait out the first surge with a drink, the platforms clear quickly.
What you can (and can't) bring
Kai Tak Stadium runs airport-style entry screening, and the rules are stricter than the old Coliseum. The big ones to know before you pack:
Entry Rules at a Glance
- Bag size: nothing larger than 38 x 30 x 20 cm. Leave the backpack and the tote at home.
- Cameras: professional cameras, detachable-lens cameras, GoPros, telephoto and clip-on phone lenses, and selfie sticks are not allowed. Mobile phones and compact point-and-shoot cameras are fine — but no flash.
- Devices: tablets, laptops and recording devices are prohibited.
- Food & drink: no outside food or beverages. You may bring one empty reusable plastic or silicone bottle/cup of 600ml or less to refill inside.
- Expect screening: bags, clothing and personal items may be checked on the way in and inside the venue.
No ticket? Read this
All three nights are gone, and that's genuinely the situation — there is no official release left to wait for. The temptation is the resale market, and here's the honest advice: be careful. Hong Kong has a real problem with concert ticket scams and inflated touting, and stadium shows are the prime target. Buying from a stranger on social media is how people lose money and turn up to a barcode that's already been scanned.
Avoid the Scams
If you do chase a resale, stick to any official resale channel the promoter or HK Ticketing 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 HKD 880–1,880 face value, and remember that a screenshot of a ticket is not a ticket. When in doubt, walk away — there will be other shows.
And there will. Kai Tak's calendar is filling fast with Cantopop royalty, K-pop tours and global headliners — the Hong Kong Tourism Board events calendar is a reliable place to see what's officially confirmed next. If you missed Sammi, point your energy at the next on-sale — our Hong Kong concerts 2026 guide and the broader biggest events in Hong Kong this summer round-up are the places to start. For a full night-out plan around a show, our live music venues guide and 2026 music festivals rundown have you covered.
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