Compare Prices from All US Cities
| From | Airport | Est. Price | Flight Time | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
BESTSeattle | SEA | $600 | ~14h | View → |
Portland | PDX | $606 | ~14h | View → |
San Francisco | SFO | $639 | ~15h | View → |
Salt Lake City | SLC | $663 | ~15h | View → |
Los Angeles | LAX | $670 | ~15h | View → |
Las Vegas | LAS | $674 | ~16h | View → |
San Diego | SAN | $680 | ~16h | View → |
Denver | DEN | $691 | ~16h | View → |
Minneapolis | MSP | $692 | ~16h | View → |
Phoenix | PHX | $697 | ~16h | View → |
Chicago | ORD | $719 | ~17h | View → |
Detroit | DTW | $725 | ~17h | View → |
St. Louis | STL | $734 | ~17h | View → |
Boston | BOS | $735 | ~17h | View → |
Newark | EWR | $744 | ~17h | View → |
New York | LGA | $744 | ~17h | View → |
New York | JFK | $745 | ~17h | View → |
Philadelphia | PHL | $749 | ~17h | View → |
Dallas | DFW | $750 | ~17h | View → |
Baltimore | BWI | $752 | ~17h | View → |
Washington D.C. | DCA | $753 | ~17h | View → |
Nashville | BNA | $756 | ~17h | View → |
Austin | AUS | $762 | ~17h | View → |
Houston | IAH | $770 | ~18h | View → |
Charlotte | CLT | $771 | ~18h | View → |
Atlanta | ATL | $775 | ~18h | View → |
Orlando | MCO | $812 | ~19h | View → |
Tampa | TPA | $813 | ~19h | View → |
Fort Lauderdale | FLL | $828 | ~19h | View → |
Miami | MIA | $830 | ~19h | View → |
San Juan | SJU | $889 | ~20h | View → |
About Hong Kong
Hong Kong is one of the most vertically dramatic cities on Earth — a place where neon-lit wet markets operate in the shadow of $2 billion skyscrapers, and you can ride a 125-year-old tram down Nathan Road before hiking a jungle trail with panoramic harbor views. For Americans, it's simultaneously familiar enough (English is everywhere, credit cards work, food safety standards are real) and foreign enough to feel like a genuine adventure. The city runs on Cantonese efficiency: the MTR is faster than anything in the US, dim sum carts appear at 6am, and locals will eye-roll you if you hold up the escalator on the left side.
The geopolitical situation deserves an honest mention. Since the 2020 National Security Law, Hong Kong operates under a tighter political framework than it did even five years ago. Protests are gone, certain websites require a VPN, and some civil liberties that once set it apart from mainland China have narrowed. That said, daily life for tourists is virtually unchanged — the food is extraordinary, the harbor still stuns, and the shopping and nightlife scenes are as intense as ever. Travelers aren't the target of these laws, and the State Department's advisory as of 2026 remains a Level 2 (exercise increased caution), the same level as many European cities.
Flight prices from the US are genuinely excellent value for the experience level you get. Cathay Pacific runs one of the best business class products in the world, and economy fares from LA or San Francisco regularly dip to $500-700 round-trip during shoulder season. Once you're there, your dollar goes reasonably far outside of accommodation — a bowl of wonton noodles costs $1.50 at a cha chaan teng, the subway costs under $2 per trip, and the best dim sum lunch of your life will run about $15 per person. Luxury hotels like the Peninsula and Four Seasons are world-class, but stylish mid-range options have exploded in recent years.
The best framework for first-timers: split your time between Hong Kong Island (Central, Sheung Wan, Wan Chai) and Kowloon (Tsim Sha Tsui, Mong Kok), take the ferry across Victoria Harbour at least once, eat something from a street stall in Mong Kok, and get up early one morning for a hike on Dragon's Back or the Peak before the haze rolls in. Five days is a solid trip; seven days lets you add Lantau Island, a day trip to Macau via high-speed ferry, and serious temple-and-market time in the New Territories.
Best Time to Fly to Hong Kong
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Track Hong Kong flights →Airport to City: How to Get There
Airport Express train (fastest and most reliable): runs every 10 minutes from the airport directly to Hong Kong Station (Central) in 24 minutes for HK$115 (~$15 USD) or to Kowloon Station in 20 minutes for HK$105. Octopus card gets you a small discount. Buy at the machines in the arrivals hall — do not skip this option. City bus (cheapest): Cityflyer A11 goes to Central via major hotels on Hong Kong Island for HK$40 (~$5 USD); A21 serves Kowloon/Tsim Sha Tsui for HK$33 (~$4 USD); journey time is 45-75 minutes depending on traffic. Taxi: to Central or Tsim Sha Tsui runs approximately HK$300-380 ($38-50 USD) with a HK$5 luggage surcharge per bag; red taxis serve urban areas, green taxis go to the New Territories.
Neighborhoods & Where to Stay
Hong Kong Island's financial and cultural core, where you'll find the Michelin-starred restaurants, rooftop bars, and the IFC Mall. Sheung Wan bleeds into Hollywood Road's antique shops and PMQ's design studios — it's the neighborhood where Hong Kong's creative class works and drinks. Stay here if you want walkability, harbor views, and access to the Peak Tram.
Kowloon's tourist hub sits right on the harbor with the best views of the Hong Kong Island skyline — the Avenue of Stars and Clock Tower waterfront walk at dusk is free and genuinely stunning. Nathan Road is sensory overload in the best way: neon signs, electronics shops, and every cuisine on Earth within three blocks. Most mid-range hotels here offer better value than equivalent properties on the Island.
The densest district in the world and Hong Kong's most authentically working-class neighborhood — this is where locals shop, eat, and live without tourists around. Temple Street Night Market, Ladies' Market, and the best street food in the city (curry fish balls, egg waffles, stinky tofu) are all within walking distance. Budget hostels and guesthouses cluster around Chungking Mansions and Mirador Mansion; skip Chungking and spend an extra $20/night at something cleaner.
Wan Chai is the nightlife and dining sweet spot — the wet market on Wan Chai Road is phenomenal at 7am, and bars on Lockhart Road don't close until 6am. Causeway Bay is Hong Kong's Times Square equivalent: Times Square Mall, Sogo, and hundreds of restaurant floors stacked on top of each other. Great MTR connectivity and more reasonable hotel prices than Central.
The western end of Hong Kong Island has transformed into the city's hippest neighborhood over the last decade — independent coffee shops, natural wine bars, and craft cocktail spots that locals actually use. MTR access arrived in 2015 and changed everything; it's now a 15-minute ride from Central but feels like a different city. Best neighborhood to stay if you want to live like a Hong Kong expat rather than a tourist.
South side of Hong Kong Island, reachable by a dramatic bus ride over the mountain from Central — Stanley Market is touristy but the beachside restaurants and colonial architecture make it worthwhile for a half-day. Repulse Bay Beach is where wealthy Hong Kongers and expats swim; The Repulse Bay hotel's veranda for afternoon tea is a throwback colonial experience worth the splurge.
Daily Budget: What to Expect
$20 guesthouse dorm in Mong Kok, $25 food (HK$15 noodles for breakfast, HK$50 dai pai dong dinner, bubble tea), $8 MTR transport, $12 paid attractions or free hiking, $10 snacks and drinks
$90 3-star hotel in Tsim Sha Tsui, $60 food (dim sum lunch HK$150, nice dinner HK$300), $15 MTR and occasional taxi, $35 paid attractions like Victoria Peak and Star Ferry combo
$350 Peninsula or Four Seasons room, $150 food (afternoon tea at Peninsula HK$400, tasting menu at one Michelin-starred restaurant), $30 taxis everywhere, $70 private tour or boat charter experiences
What to Eat in Hong Kong
Dim sum at Tim Ho Wan (multiple locations, Michelin-starred, under $15/person) — order the baked BBQ pork buns (char siu bao) specifically; the dough is caramelized on top and unlike anything you've had at American Chinese restaurants. Go at 10am on a weekday to avoid a 45-minute queue.
Wonton noodle soup at Mak's Noodle in Central (HK$52, about $7) — the wontons are made with fresh shrimp only, no pork filler, and float in a clear, intensely shrimpy broth. The portion looks tiny to American eyes but this is intentional; order two bowls.
Egg tarts (dan tat) from Tai Cheong Bakery in Central — the late Governor Chris Patten ate here so often they still sell 'Patten's tarts.' The pastry shell is shortbread-style, the custard is silky and barely sweet, and they cost HK$8 each. Buy four, eat them warm on the street.
Roast goose at Yung Kee Restaurant in Central or Kam's Roast in Wan Chai — Hong Kong's Cantonese roasted meats are the benchmark the world measures Chinese BBQ against. The goose skin should crackle, the fat layer underneath should melt, and the plum sauce should be restrained. Kam's has a Michelin star and lower prices than Yung Kee.
Curry fish balls from any Temple Street Night Market vendor (HK$10-15 for six on a stick) — this is Hong Kong's defining street food, a working-class staple that locals eat without any self-consciousness. The sauce is spicy, slightly sweet, and deeply savory; the fish balls themselves are bouncy and made fresh daily. Eat them standing up on the street to do it correctly.
Flying from the US to Hong Kong
Airlines & Routes
- →Cathay Pacific nonstop from JFK (16 hours, daily)
- →Cathay Pacific nonstop from LAX (14 hours, multiple daily)
- →Cathay Pacific nonstop from SFO (14 hours, daily)
- →United nonstop from SFO (14.5 hours, daily)
- →American Airlines nonstop from DFW (17 hours, daily)
- →Korean Air via Seoul/ICN from multiple US gateways
- →Japan Airlines via Tokyo/NRT from LAX, JFK, SFO
- →ANA via Tokyo/NRT from LAX, SFO, JFK
- →Singapore Airlines via Singapore/SIN from LAX, SFO, JFK, EWR
- →EVA Air via Taipei/TPE from LAX, SFO, JFK, SEA
- →China Airlines via Taipei/TPE from LAX, SFO, JFK
Flight Duration
Safety Tips
Hong Kong is genuinely one of the safest major cities in the world for tourists — violent crime against visitors is essentially nonexistent and petty theft, while it exists, is far less common than in European capitals. Your biggest practical risks are traffic (cars drive on the left, look RIGHT before crossing), typhoon season disruptions (download the HK Observatory app and understand the warning signal system — a Signal 8 means everything shuts down, plan accordingly), and dehydration/heat exhaustion in summer. Avoid political conversations with locals you don't know well — not because you're in danger, but because locals have complicated feelings and it's not your place to put them in a difficult situation. The NSL applies to speech and actions within HK territory; keep political social media posts to a minimum and use a VPN for your normal browsing. Scams targeting tourists exist around Tsim Sha Tsui electronics shops — always agree on the price in writing before anything gets packaged. Credit cards work everywhere but carry HK$500-1,000 in cash for dai pai dongs, street food, and small vendors. The MTR is completely safe at all hours.
Get an Octopus card the moment you land ($15 deposit, load HK$200 to start) and use it for literally everything — MTR, buses, trams, Star Ferry, 7-Eleven, McDonald's, wet markets, and even some taxis accept it. But the real trick is this: the Octopus card Airport Express in-town check-in service lets you check your bags and get your boarding pass at Hong Kong Station or Kowloon Station the day before your flight, then spend your last day bag-free exploring the city. This service is free with your Airport Express ticket and available for most major airlines including Cathay Pacific, United, and American. No dragging bags through TST or wrestling them onto the MTR at rush hour.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the cheapest way to fly to Hong Kong?
The cheapest route to Hong Kong from the US is typically from Seattle (SEA), with estimated round-trip prices around $600. Prices vary significantly by season and booking timing.
What is the best time to visit Hong Kong?
The best time to visit Hong Kong is October, November, December, March, April. Fall (October-December) and spring (March-April) have mild weather. Summer is hot, humid, and rainy (typhoon season). Avoid Chinese New Year (crowds, closures).
Do US citizens need a visa to visit Hong Kong?
Visa-free for US passport holders for up to 90 days (tourism). Easy entry.
How long is the flight from the US to Hong Kong?
Flight time from the US to Hong Kong (HKG) is approximately 14 hours from Seattle. Flight times vary by departure city — eastern US cities are typically shorter to their destination.
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