The expenditure was disclosed by the Home Affairs Department in response to an access-to-information request.
The largest portion of spending – about HK$8.5 million – went to the display of national flags and Hong Kong regional flags.
Banners cost roughly HK$4.9 million, lighting decorations consumed about HK$3.0 million, and lamppost bunting accounted for some HK$2.1 million.
Additional costs included stickers (HK$2.3 million), large installations (HK$2.4 million), flower displays (HK$1.1 million) and poster-based elements (HK$0.3 million).
According to the department, the decorations served a dual purpose: to create a “festive ambience” across Hong Kong and to mobilise community participation in celebrating National Day together, thereby promoting “the spirit of patriotism” and cultivating a sense of national identity among residents.
The department said that the costs were absorbed by various bureaux and departments within existing budgets.
The disclosure followed a two-month period after the event during which the department initially provided limited information on the number of items but not cost details.
The full cost breakdown came in response to an official access-to-information request which noted that the processing required consultations with multiple parties.
In comparison, previous reporting revealed that in 2023 Hong Kong spent HK$31.2 million to display over 120,000 items for the 75th anniversary celebrations.
The 2025 spending thus marks a lower total cost but still reflects the government’s sustained commitment to large-scale public decorations linked to National Day.
While the decorations were installed across government buildings, district offices, schools, major roads, footbridges and commercial premises, the Home Affairs Department emphasised that the impetus was territorial “mobilisation” of the city’s sectors rather than purely infrastructural display.
A government official involved in district-level event coordination noted that celebration activities ranged from carnivals and music performances to football matches—designed to coincide with the visual displays and engage citizens.
The disclosure has drawn public attention to the magnitude of spending on what critics may regard as ornamental, but the department emphasised that the investment was part of broader efforts to integrate Hong Kong’s civic identity with national development.
The government’s flag- and banner-heavy approach underscores the symbolic dimension of this year’s National Day festivities, amplifying the visual presence of national and regional flags across the cityscape.
According to the Home Affairs Department, the rollout involved more than 130,000 individual items installed across multiple districts and was accompanied by promotional events and media outreach to enhance public visibility.
Observers note that while the need to foster civic engagement and national identity may justify such efforts in official terms, the transparency and cost-effectiveness of the programme may attract further scrutiny as Hong Kong balances festive celebration with fiscal prudence in a tight budgetary environment.



























