For much of 2023 and 2024, Hong Kong’s property market was a study in patience. High interest rates, geopolitical uncertainty, and a subdued post-pandemic economy kept buyers on the sidelines and pushed prices steadily lower from their 2021 peaks. The correction was long, orderly, and — for those willing to wait — an opportunity.
At the midpoint of 2026, the narrative has changed decisively. Transaction volumes are up 53% year-on-year in Q1 2026. Prices have recovered approximately 8% from their mid-2025 trough. GDP expanded 5.9% in the first quarter — Hong Kong’s strongest performance in five years. Mainland buyers are returning. The rental market in premium districts is tightening.
This is PropMark’s mid-year review of the Hong Kong property market: where we stand, what is driving the recovery, and what buyers, sellers, investors, and renters should do next.
The Numbers: A Recovery Confirmed
The clearest signal of the market’s recovery is transactional. In Q1 2026, residential property transactions in Hong Kong rose 53% year-on-year — a volume increase that signals broad-based confidence, not just activity at the margins.
Prices have followed. Having corrected roughly 20–25% from their 2021 peak, Hong Kong residential values bottomed in mid-2025 and have since recovered approximately 8%. The recovery is uneven — ultra-luxury and large-format apartments in prime districts have moved faster than mass-market units in the New Territories — but the direction is consistent across segments.
Supporting the property data is a wider macroeconomic backdrop that has rarely been more favourable. Hong Kong’s GDP grew 5.9% in the first quarter of 2026, driven by strong tourism inflows, recovering financial services activity, and rising cross-boundary commerce. The unemployment rate remains low. Real wages are growing. Consumer confidence is at a three-year high.
The interest rate environment has also shifted materially. Following successive US Federal Reserve rate cuts in late 2025, the Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate (HIBOR) has eased considerably from its peak. For mortgage borrowers, the effective cost of a typical home loan is now meaningfully lower than it was 18 months ago — improving affordability and reducing the monthly holding cost for buyers who had been waiting on the sidelines.
What Is Driving Demand
Several forces have converged to drive the current recovery:
The return of mainland buyers
The removal of the Buyer’s Stamp Duty surcharge on non-permanent residents in early 2024 was a watershed moment. Mainland Chinese buyers — who had been effectively priced out of the market by the additional 15% stamp duty — have returned in meaningful numbers. They are particularly active in the luxury segment (HKD 30M+), in well-connected districts close to cross-boundary transport, and in new developments from established developers. Their return has added a demand floor beneath the market that was absent during the correction years.
Improving sentiment among local buyers
The 53% transaction increase in Q1 2026 is not solely a mainland story. Local buyers — many of whom postponed purchases during the correction — are re-entering the market with confidence. The combination of lower interest rates, improved affordability (prices are still well below 2021 peaks), and a stronger economy has unlocked latent demand that had been building for two years.
Expat and international demand
Hong Kong’s talent import schemes — the Top Talent Pass Scheme and Quality Migrant Admission Scheme — have brought a new wave of high-income professionals to the city. Many are renting first, but a significant share are transitioning to ownership, particularly in districts like Mid-Levels, Happy Valley, and Sai Kung.
The Rental Market: Tightening Fast
If the sales market tells a story of recovery, the rental market tells one of genuine supply pressure.
In the South Side — covering Bel-Air, Larvotto, and the Deep Water Bay corridor — rental values have risen approximately 15% over the past 12 months. Mid-Levels, Hong Kong Island’s most densely populated premium residential cluster, has seen rents increase by around 10% over the same period.
The cause is structural: new residential completions in premium districts have not kept pace with demand. Many of the talent scheme arrivals are renting in prime locations. Long-term expat residents who renewed leases during the low-rate years are now facing significantly higher renewal terms.
For renters, the message is clear: quality rental stock in premium districts is moving faster than it was a year ago, and landlords have recovered pricing power. If you are renewing a lease or searching for a new rental, acting quickly and being flexible on timing will matter more in H2 2026 than it did in H2 2024.
H2 2026 Outlook
The consensus among property analysts — from Knight Frank and JLL to local agencies CBRE and Centaline — is that the recovery will continue into H2 2026, albeit at a more measured pace than the sharp bounce seen in H1. The key drivers to watch:
Interest rates
If the US Federal Reserve delivers further rate cuts in 2026 — as markets currently price in — HIBOR will ease further, strengthening affordability and potentially accelerating price appreciation in mid-range segments.
Developer supply
Several large-scale new developments are scheduled for launch in H2 2026. If developers price aggressively to capture the recovery momentum, primary market launches could absorb some demand from the secondary market.
Mainland demand
Any tightening of cross-boundary policies — or a slowdown in the mainland economy — could temper demand from that segment. The consensus view is that mainland engagement will remain constructive but will not drive the kind of dramatic single-event moves seen in previous cycles.
Geopolitical backdrop
US-China relations remain the wild card. A significant deterioration in the bilateral relationship could dampen investment sentiment quickly. The base case among analysts is continued managed tension, not escalation.
For buyers who have been waiting, the window of relative affordability is narrowing. Prices are still 15–20% below their 2021 peak in most segments, and interest rates are lower than they were during the correction. That combination — discounted prices plus cheaper financing — is unlikely to persist much longer.
What This Means For You
If you are a buyer
The recovery is confirmed but prices are still below peak. Buyers who act in H2 2026 will likely pay more than they would have a year ago, but less than they will in 2027 if the current trajectory holds. The window for buying into a recovering market is open — but it is closing.
If you are a seller
Confidence has returned to buyers, which means quality properties are achieving strong prices and shorter days-on-market. If you have been waiting for the right moment to list, that moment has arrived. Presentation and correct initial pricing remain critical — overpriced listings still sit.
If you are a renter
Rental supply is tightening in premium districts. Secure your next home before your current lease expires rather than after. Ask your landlord about renewal terms well in advance of expiry.
If you are an investor
Rising rents and still-discounted capital values have created an unusually attractive yield-to-price relationship in select districts. Gross yields of 3–4% on well-located Hong Kong Island properties are achievable — a level that this market rarely offers.
The Verdict
The Hong Kong property market’s mid-year 2026 story is one of confirmed recovery. The data is consistent, the drivers are structural, and the outlook is constructive. Whether you are buying, selling, renting, or investing, the decisions you make in the second half of this year will be made against a backdrop of rising confidence and tightening supply.
PropMark’s team of specialists is here to help you navigate the recovery. Browse our full range of Hong Kong properties for sale and rent at hk.propmark.com/hong-kong-property to find the right opportunity for your next move.