
Major travel agencies tailor high-end visitor offers as the city co-hosts the 2025 National Games alongside Guangdong and Macau
Hong Kong’s travel sector is ramping up for a significant influx of visitors as the city prepares to co-host the 15th National Games of China from November 9 to 21 alongside Guangdong and Macau.
Travel agencies are offering bespoke packages aimed primarily at mainland Chinese tourists, with the region expecting around one hundred thousand additional visitors during the event.
The bespoke travel offerings focus on high-spend sports tourists and include four-star to five-star hotel stays, chartered transport and access to events such as rugby sevens, golf, beach volleyball and basketball.
Tour operators say the premium demographic is particularly drawn to the multifaceted experience—combining high-profile sport with Hong Kong’s famed leisure and hospitality scene.
Accommodation deals have already emerged, such as one at a flagship hotel near Kai Tak Sports Park, offering exclusive rates and benefits for National Games ticket-holders.
Meanwhile, mainstream agencies are promoting customised itineraries that bundle sports event access with luxury dining, retail and regional experience, positioning Hong Kong as a destination for more than just leisure tourism.
Independent travel, however, is expected to dominate the visitor mix.
Because ticketing for many events requires individual registration under the event organisers’ rules, large group tours face constraints.
Travel firms anticipate that many visitors will self-book their tickets and then seek premium accommodation or local experiences, resulting in strong spill-over for hospitality, retail and food & beverage sectors.
Economists caution that while this surge presents a window of opportunity for Hong Kong’s tourism industry, the long-term economic uplift may be modest.
Shared hosting with Guangdong and Macau diffuses direct financial gains for the city and high accommodation costs may discourage longer-stay mainland visitors.
Even so, tourism authorities hope the National Games will enhance the city’s sports-tourism profile and attract a more mature, high-value visitor segment in the years ahead.
As the city prepares for the Games, travel agencies and hotels alike are betting on sports tourism to accelerate Hong Kong’s repositioning as a destination for premium leisure, business and event travel alike.
Travel agencies are offering bespoke packages aimed primarily at mainland Chinese tourists, with the region expecting around one hundred thousand additional visitors during the event.
The bespoke travel offerings focus on high-spend sports tourists and include four-star to five-star hotel stays, chartered transport and access to events such as rugby sevens, golf, beach volleyball and basketball.
Tour operators say the premium demographic is particularly drawn to the multifaceted experience—combining high-profile sport with Hong Kong’s famed leisure and hospitality scene.
Accommodation deals have already emerged, such as one at a flagship hotel near Kai Tak Sports Park, offering exclusive rates and benefits for National Games ticket-holders.
Meanwhile, mainstream agencies are promoting customised itineraries that bundle sports event access with luxury dining, retail and regional experience, positioning Hong Kong as a destination for more than just leisure tourism.
Independent travel, however, is expected to dominate the visitor mix.
Because ticketing for many events requires individual registration under the event organisers’ rules, large group tours face constraints.
Travel firms anticipate that many visitors will self-book their tickets and then seek premium accommodation or local experiences, resulting in strong spill-over for hospitality, retail and food & beverage sectors.
Economists caution that while this surge presents a window of opportunity for Hong Kong’s tourism industry, the long-term economic uplift may be modest.
Shared hosting with Guangdong and Macau diffuses direct financial gains for the city and high accommodation costs may discourage longer-stay mainland visitors.
Even so, tourism authorities hope the National Games will enhance the city’s sports-tourism profile and attract a more mature, high-value visitor segment in the years ahead.
As the city prepares for the Games, travel agencies and hotels alike are betting on sports tourism to accelerate Hong Kong’s repositioning as a destination for premium leisure, business and event travel alike.







































