Hong Kong Employment Law: Key Provisions Every Employer Should Know
Hong Kong’s employment framework is one of the most efficient and transparent in Asia. Built on a compact statutory foundation — primarily the Employment Ordinance (Cap. 57) — the system sets clear baselines that protect workers without the administrative complexity found in many other major business jurisdictions. For companies setting up or expanding in Hong Kong, understanding the framework is less a compliance burden and more a competitive advantage: predictable rules mean predictable costs, and a well-treated workforce contributes to the low turnover rates that make Hong Kong operations highly productive.
This guide covers the core provisions every employer should understand — from continuous contracts and statutory leave to MPF contributions, termination mechanics, and anti-discrimination obligations.
The Employment Ordinance: A Lean but Complete Foundation
The Employment Ordinance (Cap. 57) has governed employment relationships in Hong Kong since 1968. It is supplemented by a handful of focused statutes covering pensions, discrimination, and safety, but the Ordinance itself is the primary reference for day-to-day employment matters.
What makes it employer-friendly: the Ordinance is prescriptive on minimums, not maximums. Employers are free to offer better terms — higher pay, more leave, greater severance — and many do so to attract talent in a competitive market. What it does not do is impose European-style codetermination, union recognition requirements, or mandatory collective bargaining. Employment relationships in Hong Kong are largely contractual, with the Ordinance setting a reliable floor.
Key legislation at a glance:
| Ordinance | Cap. | Primary scope |
|---|---|---|
| Employment Ordinance | 57 | Leave, wages, termination, contracts |
| Mandatory Provident Fund Schemes Ordinance | 485 | Retirement contributions |
| Sex Discrimination Ordinance | 480 | Sex, marital status, pregnancy |
| Disability Discrimination Ordinance | 487 | Physical and mental disability |
| Family Status Discrimination Ordinance | 527 | Discrimination based on family responsibility |
| Race Discrimination Ordinance | 602 | Ethnicity and national origin |
| Employees’ Compensation Ordinance | 282 | Work injury insurance |
Continuous Contracts: When Full Protections Kick In
The concept of a continuous contract is foundational to the Ordinance. Most statutory entitlements — annual leave, sickness allowance, long service payment, severance pay — apply only to employees employed under a continuous contract.
An employee is employed under a continuous contract if they work for the same employer for four or more weeks, with at least 18 hours per week. This threshold is deliberately low: it means that almost all regular employees, including part-timers working reasonable hours, qualify for the full suite of protections.
For employers, this is a clarity benefit. There is no grey area about who has statutory rights. The rule is simple, and it encourages employers to structure relationships honestly rather than attempting to engineer around protections through nominal part-time arrangements.
Statutory Holidays and Annual Leave
Statutory Holidays
All employees — regardless of whether they are on a continuous contract — are entitled to 13 statutory holidays per year. These are fixed public holidays set by the General Holidays Ordinance, including Chinese New Year (three days), Ching Ming, the Buddha’s Birthday, National Day, and others.
Statutory holiday pay equals one day’s wages for each holiday.
Annual Leave
Employees under continuous contracts earn paid annual leave on a scale that rises with length of service:
| Years of continuous service | Minimum annual leave entitlement |
|---|---|
| 1 year | 7 days |
| 2 years | 8 days |
| 3 years | 9 days |
| 4 years | 10 days |
| 5 years | 11 days |
| 6 years | 12 days |
| 7 years | 13 days |
| 8 years | 14 days |
| 9+ years | 14 days (statutory minimum) |
Annual leave pay is calculated at the employee’s daily average wages based on the 12 months prior to the holiday. In practice, most professional roles in Hong Kong offer 10–20 days from the first year as a market norm, well above the statutory minimum.
Sickness and Maternity / Paternity Benefits
Sickness Allowance
Employees accrue paid sickness days at a rate of two days per month for the first year of employment, and four days per month thereafter, up to a maximum of 120 accumulated days. Sickness allowance is payable at four-fifths (80%) of daily wages.
Sickness allowance applies only when the employee takes at least four consecutive days of sick leave and produces a valid medical certificate. Employers may not terminate an employee on a day when sickness allowance is payable.
Maternity Leave
Female employees who have been in continuous employment for at least 40 weeks are entitled to 14 weeks of paid maternity leave. The leave pay is set at 80% of average daily wages for the statutory portion, with the government subsidising the equivalent of two additional weeks (weeks 11–14) up to a cap.
Paternity Leave
Male employees with at least 40 weeks of continuous service are entitled to 5 days of paid paternity leave following the birth of their child. Leave pay is at 80% of average daily wages.
Mandatory Provident Fund (MPF)
The Mandatory Provident Fund is Hong Kong’s mandatory private retirement savings scheme, governed by Cap. 485. It applies to all employees aged 18–64 who have been employed for 60 days or more (or who are employed on a contract shorter than 60 days in an industry with special arrangements).
Contribution rates
| Party | Mandatory contribution rate | Calculated on |
|---|---|---|
| Employer | 5% | Relevant income |
| Employee | 5% | Relevant income |
Relevant income means monthly employment income between HKD 7,100 (minimum — employees earning below this still receive the employer’s 5%) and HKD 30,000 (maximum for mandatory contribution purposes). This cap means the maximum combined mandatory contribution per month is HKD 3,000 (employer) + HKD 3,000 (employee) = HKD 6,000.
Contributions above the cap are voluntary; many employers offer voluntary top-up contributions as a retention benefit. Contributions must be made no later than the 10th day of the following month.
Employer Offset Arrangement (Phase-out in Progress)
Historically, employers could offset severance and long service payments using MPF employer contributions. This offset arrangement has been progressively phased out. For employment commencing from 1 May 2025, no MPF offset applies to severance or long service payments. For existing employment, a transition mechanism applies to contributions made before that date. Employers should plan for the full cost of severance as a separate liability from MPF.
Termination: Notice, Grounds, and Restrictions
Notice Periods
Either party may terminate the contract by giving notice as specified in the employment contract. In the absence of a contractual term, the statutory minimum applies:
| Length of continuous service | Minimum notice |
|---|---|
| Less than 3 months | As agreed, or 7 days if unspecified |
| 3 months or more | 1 month (or 7 days if expressly contracted) |
In practice, most professional employment contracts in Hong Kong specify one to three months’ notice. Payment in lieu of notice is expressly permitted.
Summary Dismissal
An employer may terminate without notice in cases of gross misconduct — including wilful disobedience, fraud, assault, or conduct inconsistent with the employment relationship. This provision gives employers a clear mechanism to address serious misconduct without being locked into notice periods or severance obligations, provided the grounds are genuine and documented.
Restrictions on Termination
While Hong Kong law does not require employers to demonstrate cause for ordinary terminations, it does prohibit dismissal in certain protected circumstances:
- An employee may not be dismissed while sickness allowance is payable
- A pregnant employee may not be dismissed while on maternity leave or after the employer has been notified of pregnancy, unless for reasons other than pregnancy
- A male employee may not be dismissed while on paternity leave for the same reasons
Dismissals that are found to be unreasonable — particularly where the statutory test under the Employment (Amendment) Ordinance applies — may give rise to remedies including reinstatement or terminal payments, but this applies to a defined class of cases rather than functioning as general unfair dismissal law comparable to the UK or EU.
Severance Pay and Long Service Payment
These are two distinct, means-tested lump-sum payments that recognise long-term employment relationships.
Severance Payment
Payable to employees who have been continuously employed for at least 24 months and are dismissed by reason of redundancy, or whose fixed-term contract is not renewed due to redundancy.
Formula: 2/3 × last month’s wages (or average of last 12 months, whichever is lower) × years of service
The cap on monthly wages for calculation is currently HKD 22,500. The maximum severance payment is capped at HKD 390,000.
Long Service Payment
Payable to employees with at least 5 years of continuous service who are dismissed for any reason other than serious misconduct, who resign due to ill health, or whose fixed-term contract is not renewed (for reasons other than misconduct).
Formula: Same as severance payment — 2/3 × capped monthly wages × years of service
An employee cannot receive both severance pay and long service payment for the same period of service. Whichever applies takes precedence.
| Payment type | Qualifying service | Trigger |
|---|---|---|
| Severance Payment | 2+ years | Redundancy dismissal or non-renewal |
| Long Service Payment | 5+ years | Dismissal (non-misconduct), ill-health resignation, non-renewal |
| Cap on monthly wages | — | HKD 22,500 |
| Maximum payment | — | HKD 390,000 |
Anti-Discrimination Ordinances
Hong Kong’s four anti-discrimination ordinances — covering sex, disability, family status, and race — are enforced by the Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC). They apply to all stages of the employment relationship: recruitment, terms of employment, promotion, training, and dismissal.
What the framework covers
Sex Discrimination Ordinance (Cap. 480): Prohibits less favourable treatment on grounds of sex, marital status, or pregnancy. This covers both direct discrimination (treating someone worse because of their sex) and indirect discrimination (applying a condition that disproportionately disadvantages one sex without justification).
Disability Discrimination Ordinance (Cap. 487): Requires employers to consider persons with disabilities on the basis of their ability to perform the role, with or without reasonable accommodation. Employers are not required to make changes that would impose an unjustifiable hardship.
Family Status Discrimination Ordinance (Cap. 527): Protects employees who have responsibility for the care of an immediate family member. In practice, this is most relevant in dismissal and promotion decisions.
Race Discrimination Ordinance (Cap. 602): Prohibits discrimination based on race — defined as colour, descent, and national or ethnic origin. This is particularly relevant in Hong Kong given its highly international workforce.
The EOC has statutory power to investigate complaints and publish codes of practice. For employers, the practical takeaway is to document employment decisions on objective, merit-based criteria. Hong Kong’s anti-discrimination framework is principles-based rather than prescriptive — it sets clear prohibitions but does not mandate specific hiring processes or quotas.
Employees’ Compensation: Mandatory Insurance
Under the Employees’ Compensation Ordinance (Cap. 282), all employers must maintain valid insurance to cover employees against work-related injuries and occupational diseases. This is not optional — operating without valid cover is a criminal offence.
The insurance requirement applies to all employees, including casual and temporary workers. Minimum benefit levels are set by the Ordinance and include:
- Compensation for permanent incapacity based on a multiple of earnings and degree of incapacity
- Death benefits payable to dependants
- Medical expenses arising from work injuries
Premiums are relatively modest compared to many jurisdictions, and the scheme is administered through the commercial insurance market rather than a government fund, giving employers flexibility in their choice of insurer.
Why Hong Kong’s Framework Works for Business
The features that make Hong Kong’s employment law attractive for business are structural, not accidental:
Flexibility with clear floors. The Ordinance sets minimum entitlements precisely, giving employers complete freedom to offer competitive packages above the floor without regulatory complexity.
No mandatory collective bargaining. Unlike many OECD jurisdictions, Hong Kong does not require employers to recognise or negotiate with trade unions. Employment terms are set bilaterally.
Streamlined dismissal mechanics. Notice pay and severance are calculable, finite obligations. There is no open-ended unfair dismissal regime that creates unlimited liability.
Low payroll overhead. The combined MPF mandatory contribution rate of 10% (split equally) is among the lowest pension contribution rates among developed economies. Compare this to CPF in Singapore (37% combined for younger workers) or social security in most European countries (often 25–40% on top of wages).
International workforce compatibility. The anti-discrimination framework and the absence of nationality-based hiring restrictions make it straightforward to build internationally diverse teams.
English common law foundation. Employment contracts are enforced in Hong Kong courts under principles familiar to international businesses, with strong protection of contractual provisions above the statutory minimums.
Practical Checklist for Employers
When setting up employment in Hong Kong, the following baseline obligations apply from day one:
- Issue written employment contracts before or on the first day of employment (best practice; contractual terms govern where they exceed statutory minimums)
- Enrol employees in an MPF scheme within 60 days of commencement
- Obtain employees’ compensation insurance before the first day of employment
- Maintain a record of wages, leave, and working hours — required under the Ordinance
- Pay wages promptly: within 7 days of the end of each wage period for continuous employees
- Provide payslips detailing wages, allowances, and MPF contributions
- Track leave accruals and ensure statutory minimums are met for continuous employees
Summary
Hong Kong’s employment law balances worker protections with business practicality in a way that few other jurisdictions achieve. The Employment Ordinance provides a clear, low-overhead baseline — statutory holidays, annual leave, sickness allowance, MPF contributions, and defined termination mechanics — while leaving substantial room for employers to differentiate on compensation and benefits.
For companies considering Hong Kong as a hiring base, the combination of low payroll costs, no mandatory collective bargaining, a skilled international talent pool, and a transparent legal framework makes the jurisdiction one of Asia’s most compelling places to build a team.
Last updated: 18 April 2026. This article reflects the Employment Ordinance (Cap. 57) and related legislation as currently in force. Legislative amendments, particularly regarding the MPF offset phase-out, are ongoing — consult the Labour Department or qualified legal counsel for the latest position.
Licensed under CC BY 4.0. Published by HK Guide Editorial Team for hkguide.org.