Secret crescent beach near Hong Kong in Sai Kung with turquoise water, green hills and small boats offshore
Travel & Outdoors

Secret Beaches Near Hong Kong You Have to Visit

By Tomo Nakamura — The Weekend Explorer  ·  Updated May 29, 2026  ·  9 min read

Written by — Travel, Outdoors & Wellness Writer, in Hong Kong since 2010  ·  Published May 29, 2026  ·  Last updated May 29, 2026

Most people who land in Hong Kong never quite believe me when I tell them the best part of the city is the coast nobody photographs. They picture neon and dim sum and a wall of skyscrapers. They do not picture a crescent of white sand with water the colour of a swimming pool, reached by a sampan and a 40-minute walk. Yet the secret beaches near Hong Kong are exactly that — and most of them sit inside a country park, less than two hours from Central.

I have spent fifteen years treating Saturdays like small expeditions, and the beaches below are the ones I keep returning to. Some take effort. That is the point. The effort is what keeps them quiet.

Quick Take: The best secret beaches near Hong Kong in 2026 are clustered in the Sai Kung peninsula. Tai Long Wan / Ham Tin (大浪灣 / 鹹田) and Sai Wan (大浪西灣) are the celebrated trio of crescents; Long Ke Wan (浪茄灣) is the wildest and quietest; Hap Mun Bay on Sharp Island (廈門灣 / 橋咀洲) is the easiest, reached by a 10-minute kaito; and Big Wave Bay (大浪灣) at Shek O is the surf beach on Hong Kong Island. Reach them by sampan from Sai Kung pier, kaito ferry, or on foot. Best months: October–November and March–May.

In This Guide

  1. Why Hong Kong's Hidden Beaches Are Worth the Effort
  2. Tai Long Wan & Ham Tin — The Famous Crescents
  3. Sai Wan — The Most Photogenic
  4. Long Ke Wan — The Wildest Cove
  5. Hap Mun Bay, Sharp Island — The Easy One
  6. Big Wave Bay — The Surf Beach
  7. How to Get to Hong Kong's Secret Beaches
  8. FAQ

Why Hong Kong's Hidden Beaches Are Worth the Effort

Here is the thing newcomers miss. Hong Kong is roughly three-quarters countryside, and a huge slice of that is protected country park running right down to the sea. The most beautiful beaches are not the gazetted ones with car parks. They are the ones at the end of a trail or a boat ride, where the only soundtrack is the surf.

The catch is access. There is no MTR to a wild beach, and the buses and minibuses that get you close run on country schedules. So plan the return journey before you set off — I have watched too many day-trippers stranded at dusk on a beach with no road. If you want the gentler, family-friendly end of the spectrum first, our guide to the best family beaches in Hong Kong is the place to start.

"A 40-minute ferry takes you from skyscrapers to somewhere that feels like rural Southeast Asia. That gap — between the city and the coast — is the single most underrated thing about Hong Kong."

Tai Long Wan & Ham Tin — The Famous Crescents

Tai Long Wan / Ham Tin (大浪灣 / 鹹田灣)

Sai Kung Peninsula · Sai Kung East Country Park · The classic Hong Kong beach hike
NeighbourhoodSai Kung East Country Park, New Territories
Getting ThereMTR Choi Hung (Exit C2) → minibus 1A to Sai Kung Town → village bus NR29 to Sai Wan Pavilion, then hike; or speedboat from Sai Kung pier
Walk~2.5 km / 45 min from Sai Wan Pavilion to Sai Wan, then on to Ham Tin
FacilitiesHam Tin has a snack store, basic toilets & watersports rental; no lifeguard
CostSpeedboat approx. HKD 150–160 each way; minibus/bus a few HKD
Best ForFirst-timers wanting the classic Sai Kung crescent experience

Tai Long Wan — "Big Wave Bay" — is the rugged bay on the northeast coast made up of four beaches stretching across roughly three kilometres. Ham Tin is the one with infrastructure: a famous beach shack serving cold drinks and instant noodles, basic toilets, and even board rental. The sand is pale, the water is clear, and the green amphitheatre of hills behind it is genuinely dramatic. It is the easiest of the wild Sai Kung beaches to reach, which is why it gets busy on summer weekends. Go on a weekday in autumn and you may have a kilometre of sand almost to yourself. Combine it with one of the routes in our best hikes in Hong Kong guide for a full day out.

Sai Wan — The Most Photogenic

Tai Long Sai Wan (大浪西灣)

Sai Kung Peninsula · The postcard beach with a hidden stream behind it
NeighbourhoodSai Kung East Country Park, New Territories
Getting ThereVillage bus NR29 from Sai Kung Town to Sai Wan Pavilion, then ~2.5 km easy walk; or speedboat from Sai Kung pier
FacilitiesA handful of simple beachside cafés; no lifeguard
HighlightSheung Luk Stream — natural rock pools in the jungle behind the beach
Best ForPhotographers, swimmers, and a swim-then-stream double bill
Bilingual NameSai Wan / 大浪西灣

Sai Wan is the one that ends up on the postcards. The walk in from Sai Wan Pavilion is gentle and mostly paved, with sweeping ridge views before the beach reveals itself below. Behind the sand, follow the path and keep left at the small concrete bridge to find Sheung Luk Stream, a chain of clear emerald rock pools tucked into the jungle — best after summer rain, between roughly June and October. A small cluster of family-run cafés sell drinks and noodles right on the beach. There is no lifeguard, so respect the surf on windier days.

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Long Ke Wan — The Wildest Cove

Long Ke Wan (浪茄灣)

Near High Island Reservoir · MacLehose Trail Stage 1 · No road, no shops
NeighbourhoodSai Kung East Country Park, near the UNESCO Geopark hexagonal columns
Getting ThereTaxi to High Island Reservoir East Dam, then 25–35 min hike; or sampan from Sai Kung pier
FacilitiesNone — no shops, no toilets, no lifeguard. Bring water and carry out rubbish
Best ForSolitude, camping, strong swimmers, sunrise people
DifficultyModerate — a steep but short descent to the sand
Bilingual NameLong Ke Wan / 浪茄灣

If you only have time for one truly secret beach, make it Long Ke. There is no road to the sand, no kiosk, no lifeguard — just a perfect arc of pale sand backed by the strange hexagonal rock columns of the Hong Kong UNESCO Global Geopark. The easiest approach is a taxi to the High Island Reservoir East Dam followed by a 25 to 35 minute walk down. Serious hikers reach it along Stage 1 of the MacLehose Trail. It is a popular wild-camping spot, so on weekends you will share it — but on a clear weekday morning it is as close to private paradise as Hong Kong gets. Come fully self-sufficient and leave nothing behind.

Hap Mun Bay, Sharp Island — The Easy One

Hap Mun Bay, Sharp Island (廈門灣, 橋咀洲)

"Half Moon Bay" · A 10-minute kaito from Sai Kung pier · Gazetted & lifeguarded
NeighbourhoodSharp Island, off Sai Kung town, within the Hong Kong UNESCO Geopark
Getting ThereKaito ferry from Sai Kung public pier, ~10–15 min, approx. HKD 15–35 return
FacilitiesChanging rooms, toilets, lifeguard in season (approx. April–October)
HighlightTombolo — a natural sand bridge to a tiny islet at low tide
Best ForFamilies, weak swimmers, anyone short on time
Bilingual NameHap Mun Bay / 廈門灣

For a "secret" beach that does not demand a hike, Hap Mun Bay is the answer. A short kaito ferry from Sai Kung pier drops you at a clean, crescent-shaped, lifeguarded beach with proper facilities — perfect crystalline water and a fraction of the crowds you would find at urban beaches. At low tide you can walk the famous tombolo, a natural sand causeway of broken volcanic rock that links Sharp Island to a tiny neighbouring islet. It is the most accessible cove on this list and a brilliant introduction to Sai Kung's coast for families. Pair it with the best islands in Hong Kong for a fuller day on the water.

Big Wave Bay — The Surf Beach

Big Wave Bay (大浪灣, Shek O)

Hong Kong Island's south coast · The city's de facto surf beach
NeighbourhoodShek O, southeast Hong Kong Island
Getting ThereMTR Shau Kei Wan (Exit A3) → bus 9 toward Shek O, alight near Big Wave Bay Road, then ~10 min walk
FacilitiesChanging rooms, showers, toilets, board rental, lifeguard in season
HighlightBronze Age rock carving on the headland; reliable beginner surf
Best ForSurfers, beginners, a half-day from the city
Bilingual NameBig Wave Bay / 大浪灣

Not strictly a secret — locals know it well — but Big Wave Bay is the closest thing Hong Kong has to a surf town, and it is far quieter than the city beaches a few stops away. It is the most reachable beach on this list, a bus ride and short walk from the MTR. Board rental and a couple of laid-back surf shacks line the approach, the swell is friendly for beginners, and a small Bronze Age rock carving sits on the headland for the curious. If you want to learn to ride waves without leaving the territory, this is where to do it — and you can build a whole day around it with our guide to the best watersports in Hong Kong.

How to Get to Hong Kong's Secret Beaches

Access at a Glance

BeachEasiest AccessLifeguardEffort
Hap Mun BayKaito from Sai Kung pier (~10 min)Yes (in season)Easy
Big Wave BayMTR Shau Kei Wan + bus 9Yes (in season)Easy
Ham Tin / Tai Long WanSpeedboat or NR29 + 45 min hikeNoModerate
Sai WanNR29 to Sai Wan Pavilion + 45 min walkNoModerate
Long Ke WanTaxi to East Dam + 25–35 min hikeNoModerate–Hard

A few hard-won rules. Always pin down your return — sampans and kaitos thin out late afternoon, and the last NR29 leaves Sai Kung in the early evening. Carry cash for boats and beach shacks. Pack water, sun cover and a rubbish bag, because the wild beaches have no bins. And check the Hong Kong Observatory before you commit, especially in summer: a typhoon signal can shut the ferries with little notice. For more low-effort ideas beyond the coast, see our best day trips from Hong Kong.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most secret beach near Hong Kong?
Long Ke Wan in the Sai Kung peninsula is among the hardest to reach and least crowded. There is no road to the sand, no shops and no lifeguard, so you arrive either by sampan from Sai Kung pier or on a 25 to 35 minute walk from the High Island Reservoir East Dam.
How do you get to Tai Long Wan in Sai Kung?
Two main routes: a speedboat from Sai Kung public pier (roughly HKD 150–160 each way, about 20 minutes), or a hike. For the hike, take village bus NR29 to Sai Wan Pavilion, then walk about 2.5 km in 45 minutes to Sai Wan beach, continuing on to Ham Tin.
Are Hong Kong's secret beaches safe to swim?
Gazetted beaches such as Hap Mun Bay and Big Wave Bay have lifeguards and shark nets in season (roughly April to October). The remote Sai Kung coves like Long Ke and Sai Wan have no lifeguards and can have strong currents, so swim with caution, never alone, and check the weather first.
When is the best time to visit Hong Kong beaches?
October and November are ideal — clear skies, calm seas and 22 to 27 degrees Celsius. March to May is also lovely. Avoid June to September for typhoon risk and humidity, and expect beach buses and ferries to be far busier on summer weekends and public holidays.

Plan the Whole Weekend

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