CN · People's Republic of China

What's it like to live in Hong Kong?

Pros, cons, and what locals really say · 7,413,070 residents

Reddit-sourced

What locals really say

Synthesized from upvoted comments on Hong Kong's subreddit.

Living in Hong Kong means moving through a city that feels both hypermodern and stubbornly old-fashioned at the same time. People talk a lot about how efficient and visually striking it is, but daily life also comes with crowding, expensive housing, and the feeling that public space is always under pressure. At street level, you still run into old trades, tram lines, wet-market routines, and Cantonese-speaking neighborhood life even as towers, malls, and transit hubs dominate the skyline. For many residents, the city is exciting and convenient, but also tense, expensive, and increasingly aware of what has been lost.

Pros — why people love Hong Kong
  • Visual beauty and atmosphere5
  • Efficient transport and mobility3
  • Strong local character4
  • Cultural mix2
  • Food and cafe culture2
Cons — common complaints
  • Crowding and queue etiquette4
  • High cost of living3
  • Loss of old Hong Kong streetscape4
  • Social tension and discrimination3
  • Political pressure and fear3
Daily life

Daily life in Hong Kong seems fast, tightly packed, and highly rule-bound, with small frictions becoming memorable because everyone is constantly in close quarters. People notice who stands where on escalators, who blocks the platform, and who respects the invisible etiquette of crowded public transit. There is also a strong sense of neighborhood texture: old shops, street markets, trams, and university spaces still survive alongside malls and towers. Friendliness appears situational rather than uniformly warm, with practical English help in shops on one hand and complaints about prejudice or coldness on the other.

Food scene

The food scene reads as intensely local, practical, and neighborhood-based rather than flashy in the Reddit sample. A local restaurant using English to take an order, cha chaan teng references, and the mix of market life around places like Sham Shui Po suggest a city where eating is tied to routine as much as to destination dining. The strongest impression is of constant access to cheap, fast, and very specific Hong Kong comfort food, with plenty of small eateries embedded in dense residential and transit-heavy districts. At the same time, the atmosphere around old shops and market stalls hints that food culture is inseparable from the disappearing older street fabric of the city.

Nightlife & culture

There is not much direct nightlife discussion in the source material, but Hong Kong comes across as a city where nights are defined more by movement, lit streets, and after-work social life than by a single party district. The glow of the skyline, tram lines, and wet evenings gives the city a late-night cinematic feel, and people clearly appreciate its visual energy after dark. At the same time, the tone of the posts suggests a city that can feel exhausted and crowded rather than carefree, so nightlife seems embedded in urban routine more than in open-ended revelry. If you want loud, spontaneous nightlife, the sample gives less evidence than for an intense, always-on city atmosphere.

Weather, for real

Weather in Hong Kong is treated as part of the city’s mood, especially rain and typhoons. Rather than being discussed as a clean set of statistics, the weather is described through sensory scenes: rainy evenings in Kowloon, dramatic storms, and the way bad weather changes the look and rhythm of the streets. Locals seem to accept humidity, sudden downpours, and typhoon disruptions as normal features of life rather than exceptions. The feeling is that weather is often inconvenient, but also visually dramatic and deeply tied to the city’s character.

In their words

“Hong Kong is still very beautiful.”

r/HongKong· 1463 votes

“The sad, sad loss of overhead street signage (both neon and non-neon) 😢 I spent hours walking the streets of Hong Kong last week tracking down the remnants of overhead signs. It’s true to say, there is very little left now.”

r/HongKong· 2092 votes

“People standing in the walking side of the escalator. Does this seriously annoy anyone else? This is at tung Chung station when the train comes every 7 minutes.”

r/HongKong· 2086 votes
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