Hong Kong Education System Guide for New Residents: Local Schools, International Schools and ESF
Hong Kong has one of the densest concentrations of high-performing schools in Asia. Families relocating here have genuinely excellent options — but the landscape is complex, fees vary from zero to eye-watering, and the most sought-after schools fill up years in advance. Understanding how the system is structured before you arrive is not optional: it is the single most time-sensitive decision you will make as a relocating family.
The Three-Tier Structure
Hong Kong follows a 6-6-4 model: six years of primary school, six years of secondary school, and four years of undergraduate education (following the 2012 switch to a four-year university system aligned with international norms). Compulsory schooling runs from Primary 1 (age 5–6) through Secondary 3 (age 14–15), with the vast majority of students continuing to Secondary 6.
Where families diverge is in which track they choose — and that choice is made almost entirely along two fault lines: language of instruction, and which exit qualification the child will sit.
The Three Main School Types
Local Government and Aided Schools
The government-funded system (government schools and aided schools, which receive full public funding) is free and educates the majority of Hong Kong’s children. The medium of instruction is overwhelmingly Cantonese, with English taught as a second language. The curriculum leads to the Hong Kong Diploma of Secondary Education (DSE), the local university entrance qualification.
For children who speak Cantonese at home and whose families intend to remain in Hong Kong long-term, this path offers world-class academic standards, zero tuition cost, and direct entry to Hong Kong’s eight University Grants Committee-funded universities. The DSE is also recognised by a growing number of universities in the UK, Canada, and Australia.
The catch for most expat families: the Cantonese-medium environment is immersive and demanding. Children who arrive without Cantonese fluency at primary age can integrate successfully, but the transition requires commitment from both the child and the family.
English Schools Foundation (ESF)
ESF is the largest English-medium school network in Hong Kong, operating 22 schools (kindergartens, primary, secondary, and a sixth-form college) with roughly 17,000 students. It was established in 1967 to serve the English-speaking community and has historically received a government subsidy that keeps fees significantly below fully private international schools.
ESF secondary schools offer the International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma, widely recognised by universities worldwide. The culture is international, the teaching staff is diverse, and the schools sit comfortably in Hong Kong’s top academic tier.
Annual fees currently run HK$100,000–180,000 per child depending on year group. The government subsidy is available to families who are not eligible for the local free school system (broadly, non-permanent residents) — effectively reducing fees by roughly HK$30,000–40,000 per year for eligible families.
Demand significantly outstrips supply. Many ESF schools have waiting lists of two years or longer. Apply as early as possible — ideally before you leave your home country.
International Schools
Beyond ESF, Hong Kong has more than 60 fully private international schools serving virtually every nationality and curriculum: IB, British (IGCSE + A-Level), American (AP), French (Baccalauréat), German (Abitur), Japanese, Korean, and more. The most prominent English-medium schools include HKIS (American, IB), Kellett School (British), Harrow International, and Shrewsbury International.
Fees are the highest of any sector. Most families should budget HK$150,000–250,000 per child per year for established international schools, with some exceeding HK$300,000 at the secondary level. Capital levies (one-off admission fees, sometimes called debentures) can add HK$100,000–500,000 on top of annual tuition.
The quality is consistently high, the communities are international, and university placement records — Oxbridge, Ivy League, top Hong Kong universities — are strong. But these schools are also oversubscribed: apply 18–24 months ahead of your intended start date.
School Fee Comparison
| School Type | Annual Tuition | One-Off Levy / Debenture | Curriculum | Language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Local government / aided school | Free | None | DSE | Cantonese (English as subject) |
| ESF (with subsidy) | HK$60,000–140,000 | Application fee only | IB (PYP / MYP / DP) | English |
| ESF (without subsidy) | HK$100,000–180,000 | Application fee only | IB (PYP / MYP / DP) | English |
| International school (mid-range) | HK$80,000–160,000 | HK$50,000–200,000 | IB / IGCSE+A-Level / AP | English (or home language) |
| International school (top-tier) | HK$180,000–300,000+ | HK$150,000–500,000+ | IB / IGCSE+A-Level / AP | English |
| National school (French, German, etc.) | HK$60,000–120,000 | Varies | National curriculum | Home language |
Figures are indicative 2025–26 ranges. Check each school directly for current schedules.
Curriculum Comparison: DSE vs IB vs IGCSE+A-Level
| DSE | IB Diploma | IGCSE + A-Level | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Who offers it | Local HK schools | ESF, most international schools | British-curriculum international schools |
| Age at completion | 17–18 (S6) | 17–18 (Year 13) | IGCSE at 15–16; A-Level at 17–18 |
| Breadth | 4–7 subjects | 6 subjects + core components | 3–4 subjects at A-Level (specialised) |
| Recognised in HK | Direct JUPAS entry | Good; HKBU/PolyU/CityU and others accept | Accepted by all HK universities |
| Recognised internationally | Growing (UK, AU, CA) | Excellent worldwide | Excellent (UK especially) |
| Best for | Long-term HK residency, local university entry | Internationally mobile families, broad skill set | Families heading to UK universities, early specialisation |
| Teaching language | Cantonese | English | English |
Application Timelines: Move Fast
The single most common regret among relocating families is not applying to schools early enough. By the time you have signed a lease and sorted your visa, the best schools may already have closed their intake for your child’s year.
Practical timelines to work backwards from:
- ESF: Apply as soon as you have a confirmed move date — or before. Some primary schools have waiting lists stretching to 2028 for 2026 entry.
- Top international schools: Contact admissions 18–24 months before intended start. Ask directly about waiting list position and realistic entry points.
- Local schools: Central Allocation for Primary 1 runs annually (application in January for September intake). Secondary placement via the Secondary School Places Allocation system follows a separate timeline.
- Mid-year transfers: Most schools accept mid-year applications subject to availability. Availability is rare at oversubscribed schools; more realistic at newer or less prominent ones.
Choosing the Right Path for Your Family
Three questions frame the decision for most expat families:
How long are you staying? If you are on a two-to-three-year posting, continuity with an internationally recognised curriculum (IB or A-Level) matters enormously — your child needs to be able to transfer back into their home country’s system without losing a year. If you are building a long-term life in Hong Kong, the local system or ESF both become viable depending on language preference.
What is your child’s language background? Children who arrive at Primary 1 age (5–6) can become genuinely bilingual in a Cantonese-medium school; those arriving in upper primary or secondary with no Cantonese will find the transition very difficult. English-medium schools eliminate this barrier.
What is your budget reality? Two children in top international schools costs HK$400,000–600,000 per year in tuition alone before uniforms, activities, and levies. ESF with the subsidy is meaningfully more affordable. The local system, for families whose children can access it, is free and academically rigorous.
University Pathways
All three tracks lead to credible university outcomes. Hong Kong’s top institutions — HKU, CUHK, HKUST, PolyU — accept DSE, IB, and A-Level results. IB and A-Level graduates apply to UK, US, Canadian, and Australian universities on equal footing with home-country applicants. DSE recognition abroad is improving but remains more limited, particularly in the US.
For families planning to return home for university, align your school choice with the destination: IB travels almost everywhere; A-Levels are strongest for UK entry; the DSE is best used within Hong Kong.
For the latest fee schedules, application procedures, and waiting list status, contact schools directly. The ESF subsidy scheme eligibility criteria are published annually on the ESF website.