Every year, around the third week of June, Hong Kong does something it almost never does the rest of the time: it slows down. The Tuen Ng (Dragon Boat) Festival lands on a Friday in 2026, and the city more or less downs tools for a proper long weekend. If you've been grinding through the humid pre-summer weeks, this is your release valve.
So here's the headline, because that's what you came for: the next long weekend in Hong Kong is the Tuen Ng holiday on Friday 19 June 2026, which rolls straight into the Saturday and Sunday for a three-day break. That's enough time to do the festival properly, get some sea air, eat your weight in sticky rice, and still have a day spare to recover. This is my plan for how to spend it.
In This Guide
When exactly is the long weekend?
Tuen Ng Festival (端午節) is a gazetted public holiday in Hong Kong, and in 2026 it falls on Friday 19 June. Because it lands on a Friday, you get a clean three-day weekend without burning any annual leave. If you want to be ambitious, taking the preceding Monday-to-Thursday off would stretch it considerably — but for most of us, three days is plenty.
The festival commemorates the poet Qu Yuan, who, according to legend, drowned himself in protest two-and-a-half thousand years ago; villagers raced out in boats and threw rice into the water to keep the fish from his body. That's the short version of why, today, the harbour fills with drumming and the bakeries fill with rice dumplings. It's one of the few public holidays where the tradition is genuinely fun to watch rather than just a day off.
Friday — the dragon boat races
This is the main event, and it's worth building your Friday around. The biggest spectacle is at Stanley; the calmest atmosphere is out on the islands. Pick your temperament.
Shangri-La Stanley International Dragon Boat Championships Free
Stanley hosts one of the largest single-day dragon boat events in the world — well over 150 teams and several thousand paddlers thundering down a 270-metre course off Main Beach. The atmosphere is part sporting fixture, part beach party: corporate crews, expat clubs, fishing-village teams and a roaring crowd along the sea wall. It's free, it's loud, and it's a brilliant introduction to the festival. Arrive early, claim a patch of shade, and stay for the finals in the afternoon. The bars and restaurants along Stanley Main Street do roaring trade, so book if you want a table with a view.
Outer-island & harbour races
If Stanley sounds like too much of a scrum, the same morning sees smaller, more local races at roughly eight other locations around the territory. Aberdeen (香港仔) has a deeply traditional, fishing-community feel; Sai Kung (西貢) pairs the racing with the best seafood lunch in the city; Cheung Chau (長洲) is a gorgeous car-free island where the whole village turns out. These races are easier to actually watch — you can stand close to the water without fighting a crowd — and they make a great excuse to explore a corner of Hong Kong you might otherwise skip.
Exact race schedules and team line-ups are confirmed closer to the date — check the Hong Kong China Dragon Boat Association and the Hong Kong Tourism Board in the week before for finalised start times.
What to eat: zongzi and Tuen Ng tradition
You can't really do Tuen Ng without eating zongzi (糉) — pyramids of glutinous rice wrapped in bamboo or lotus leaves, steamed or boiled for hours. The classic Cantonese version is a savoury bomb of fatty pork, salted egg yolk, mung bean and sometimes chestnut. There are sweet versions too, filled with red-bean or lotus-seed paste, eaten with a dusting of sugar.
In the weeks around the festival, every wet market, traditional bakery and old-school Cantonese restaurant will be selling them. It's a lovely, low-effort way to mark the holiday: grab a couple from a market stall, find a bench by the water, and eat one warm. For a deeper dive into Hong Kong's street and market food culture, our guide to the city's dai pai dong is a good companion read, and the best markets in Hong Kong piece will point you to the right stalls.
Saturday — beaches and the outlying islands
By June, Hong Kong is properly hot, which means the second day of the weekend is best spent near water. The famous beaches — Repulse Bay, Shek O, Big Wave Bay — will be heaving, so this is the day to go quieter. There's a whole network of harder-to-reach coves that reward a little effort, and we've mapped the best of them in our guide to Hong Kong's secret beaches.
If you'd rather be on the water than beside it, the long weekend is prime time for kayaking, paddleboarding and the like — see our rundown of the best watersports in Hong Kong for where to rent gear and which bays to head for. Sai Kung and the Sai Kung Peninsula remain the gold standard for a day on, in or beside the sea.
A no-stress Saturday beach plan
| Time | Do this |
|---|---|
| 8:30am | Early start — minibus or ferry to Sai Kung or an outlying island |
| 10:00am | Hire a kayak or walk to a quieter cove before the crowds |
| 1:00pm | Seafood lunch (Sai Kung waterfront) or a packed picnic |
| 4:00pm | Swim, nap, repeat — leave before the late-afternoon ferry rush |
| 7:00pm | Back in town for a cold drink and an early dinner |
Sunday — slow culture, food and nightlife
Save the third day for the indoor, unhurried pleasures — ideally air-conditioned, given the humidity. Hong Kong's cultural calendar doesn't stop for a long weekend, and there's plenty on across the city's galleries, cinemas and stages.
An exhibition or a film
The current exhibitions at M+ in West Kowloon are an easy, world-class way to spend a hot afternoon, and the museum's cinema regularly screens restored classics and indie titles. If you'd rather sit in the dark with something off the beaten track, our guide to the best art house cinemas in Hong Kong covers everywhere from Broadway Cinematheque to the Louis Koo Cinema in Wan Chai.
A long lunch, then laughs
Sunday is made for a leisurely meal — the city's restaurant scene is in a genuine purple patch, as we argued in our piece on the Hong Kong food scene's renaissance. Round the evening off with a stand-up show: our guide to the best stand-up comedy in Hong Kong lists the clubs and weekly nights worth booking, several of which run shows right through the holiday weekend.
Practical tips for the weekend
Make the most of three days
- Travel early. Friday morning sees a crush towards Stanley, the islands and the beaches. Be moving before 9am.
- Top up your Octopus. Long queues at top-up machines are the most avoidable hassle of the weekend.
- Ferries sell out. For Cheung Chau and the islands, allow buffer time at Central Piers — sailings around the festival fill up.
- Sun and humidity are real. June heat is no joke; carry water, sunscreen and a hat for any race-watching.
- Book restaurants. Stanley, Sai Kung and Sunday brunch spots all need reservations on a long weekend.
- Check the weather. June is also typhoon season's opening act — keep an eye on the Hong Kong Observatory.
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