Hong Kong is a vibrant city that offers many tourist attractions to the visitors. This bustling metropolis is the one location in Asia where “east meets west�. It combines all cultures to make it one of the most thrilling places on earth.
There are so many things to do in Hong Kong that it may be hard for you to decide how to prioritize among them. The city offers a number of top attractions for children and adults of all ages. Let Hong Kong Private Tour Guide introduce you to Hong
Kong’s top 20 activities.
The quickest and most picturesque way to get up to The Peak, Hong Kong’s Island’s highest point, rising 1,300 feet above sea level as it passes the city’s buildings at an almost impossible gradient.
Tian Tan Buddha (more commonly referred to as just the Big Buddha) is the largest outdoor seated Buddha in the world. Visitors must climb a calf-aching 268 steps before reaching to the statue.
A local neighbourhood gem offering some of the best dim sums in Hong Kong. This is your chance to dine at one of the cheapest Michelin-starred restaurants in the world.
A nightly street bazaar where hundreds of stalls pop up after the sun goes down offering a dizzying array of knick-knacks.
The city’s ground zero for debauchery. Tourists, expats and locals alike party hard in Hong Kong’s most popular nightlife spot and the steep street.
Hong Kong’s most colourful and amusing Buddhist temples, the monstery is home to lifesized, gold-painted Buddha statues, each entertainingly unique.
A popular and picturesque hike that offers stunning views of Tai Tam, Shek O and Big Wave Bay as you walk along the mountain ridge.
One of Hong Kong’s biggest and busiest temples, Wong Tai Sin Temple is home to three religions: Taoism, Buddhism and Confucianism.
The city’s original and popular marine theme park, Ocean Park is home to many adrenalineinducing amusement rides and animal habitats of both the aquatic and land-based variety.
The world’s longest outdoor covered escalator system, linking Central to Mid-Levels.
Regarded as one of the best cha chaang tengs in town – essentially the Hong Kong equivalent of a greasy spoon.
A modestly-sized market home to a wide variety of birds from delicate canaries to colourful parrots, hand-crafted bamboo bird cages, as well as various live crickets and grasshoppers.
The Rugby Sevens is the premier tournament on the World Rugby Sevens Series competition that takes place every year over a weekend in late March or early April. But really, it’s the biggest outdoor party of the year.
One of over 250 outlying islands in the Hong Kong territory, Tung Ping Chau a Unesco-listed site where you can hike, climb and swim for the day.
A traditional Chinese festival taking place on the fifth day of the fifth month of the Lunar calendar (which usually falls around May or June) that sees local and overseas teams compete and battle it out in colourful dragon boats as part of the annual celebrations.
A popular Australian steakhouse offers a none-too-shabby view of Wan Chai, Victoria Harbour and Tsim Sha Tsui without feeling removed from the city.
Clockenflap is the city’s biggest music and arts festival that takes place over a weekend with a world-class line-up.
2020 HONG KONG NEW YEAR'S EVE FIREWORKS LUXURY OPEN BAR CRUISE LOBSTER BUFFET DINNER
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