No room of their own: Hong Kong youth impatient for revamped hostel scheme to take off while some operators weigh potential of tourism comeback
- NGOs can rent hotels and guest houses to run as hostels, aiming for 3,000 spaces over five years
- Hong Kong has been easing Covid curbs in phases, with hotel quarantine already dropped

Sharing a 350 sq ft public flat in Hong Kong’s Kwai Chung with his mother, older sister and two cats, Sit Kai, 30, has often longed for space of his own.
A community officer with a housing concern group, he is a part-time social work student and sometimes has to work late from his bed, discussing projects with his classmates while his mother and sister are asleep.
“I’ve tried lowering my voice, but it didn’t work and led to arguments,” he said.
He was delighted when the government announced recently that it was expanding the city’s youth hostel scheme to turn 3,000 hotel rooms into hostels for young working adults aged 18 to 30 within five years.
It promises rents that are up to 40 per cent lower than the market price, and successful tenants must commit to serve the community for 200 hours a year.

Sit said he would apply as soon as the first batch became available. He will be able to rent for two years, with the possibility of extending to five years.