Getting Around Hong Kong: MTR, Tram, Ferry & Taxi Guide (2025)
Hong Kong's Octopus card covers the MTR, buses, ferries, trams, and mini-buses. Here's how to navigate one of Asia's most efficient transport networks in 2025.
Hong Kong's public transport is a masterclass in urban mobility. The MTR (Mass Transit Railway) is fast, clean, and covers all major areas; the iconic Ding Ding (double-decker tram) costs HKD $3 flat; and the Star Ferry (HKD $3.40) is one of the world's great harbour crossings — all payable with a single Octopus card.
Hong Kong Transport Options (2025)
Essential Octopus Card Tips
Buy an Octopus card (HKD $150 including HKD $100 stored value + HKD $50 refundable deposit) at the Airport Express counter on arrival or any MTR station. Top up at any 7-Eleven, Circle K, or MTR machine. The card works on all MTR lines, buses, trams, Star Ferry, mini-buses, and some taxis. At trip end, refund the HKD $50 deposit at any MTR customer service centre. The Tourist Octopus (HKD $39 for 1-day unlimited MTR) is available but rarely worth it compared to pay-per-trip pricing.
The Airport Express In-Town Check-In service at Hong Kong and Kowloon stations allows you to check your bags and receive your boarding pass up to a day before departure — leaving you free to spend your last day in Hong Kong without luggage. Available for most major airlines. Included in your Airport Express ticket.
Pertanyaan yang Sering Diajukan
Is Hong Kong a walkable city?
Very walkable in specific areas — Central, Sheung Wan, Wan Chai, Tsim Sha Tsui, and Mong Kok are all excellent on foot. The hillside Mid-Levels Escalator (world's longest outdoor covered escalator, free) connects Central to SoHo and Hollywood Road. However, the hills and heat (May–October) make trams and MTR preferable for longer distances.
Is it safe to take taxis in Hong Kong?
Yes — Hong Kong taxis are among Asia's safest and most regulated. Red (urban), green (New Territories), and blue (Lantau) taxis all use meters and receipts. Drivers are licensed and the system has extremely low fraud rates. No app-based ride-hailing (Uber) operates commercially in Hong Kong — taxis are the standard.
Book a pre-arranged transfer in Hong Kong
Fixed price · no meter disputes · book in advance
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