Hong Kong has a reputation as one of the most expensive cities in the world. For international students considering HKU, CUHK, HKUST, PolyU, CityU, or the other Eight, the first question after tuition is almost always: “How much will I actually spend per month, and can I afford it?” This article gives you a realistic, ground-level answer for 2026 — not the marketing brochures from universities, and not the scare stories you read on Reddit. Actual monthly expense categories, typical ranges, cheap strategies versus comfortable strategies, and what a full-year budget looks like for three different spending profiles.
For international students studying full-time in Hong Kong, the total annual cost outside of tuition typically falls into these ranges:
To put this in context: the cheapest international student budget in Hong Kong is roughly similar to London but slightly cheaper. The mid-range budget is similar to Singapore but with more expensive housing. The comfortable budget is significantly higher than Berlin or Tokyo but lower than New York.
Your tuition is additional — the Eight UGC-funded universities typically charge HK$145,000-180,000 per year for international undergraduates (varies by programme), and taught postgraduate tuition varies dramatically by programme (HK$130,000-500,000+ for one year).
Housing is both the biggest expense and the most variable. In Hong Kong, where you live can easily double or halve your total costs.
All eight HK universities provide on-campus housing. The rent is heavily subsidised:
Dorms are typically shared (2-4 people per room) with communal bathrooms, kitchens, and lounges. You get a bed, desk, chair, wardrobe, and shared fridge. Wi-Fi is included. Meals are not.
Important: Dorm availability for international students is not guaranteed. Most universities offer dorm priority to first-year international undergraduates and PhD students, but taught postgraduate (MSc/MA) students often have limited dorm access. Apply for dorms as early as possible after accepting your admission offer — usually within weeks, not months.
Monthly cost equivalent: HK$850-1,800
Most international students (especially MSc/TPG students) end up renting off-campus. The typical arrangement is sharing a 2-3 bedroom flat with 2-3 other students.
Typical monthly rent per person for a shared flat:
These prices include a bedroom (sometimes a room with private bathroom for premium), shared kitchen, shared living room. Utilities (electricity, water, gas) are typically not included — expect HK$500-1,200 extra per month.
Monthly cost: HK$6,500-15,000 per person
If you want your own place (studio or one-bedroom), costs rise substantially:
Studios are small — typically 200-400 sq ft (19-37 sq m). Expect a bedroom-living room combination, mini kitchen, small bathroom. Air conditioning is standard. Some include basic furniture.
Monthly cost: HK$11,000-20,000
Hong Kong food costs are less intimidating than housing. You can eat well on a modest budget if you adapt to local eating habits.
University canteen: HK$25-45 per meal. This is the cheapest reliable option.
If you cook most meals yourself:
Monthly cost for a typical student:
Tip: The university canteen is your friend. HK universities subsidise canteen meals for students, and you can get a decent lunch for HK$30-40. This alone saves HK$1,500-2,500/month if you eat there regularly.
Hong Kong has a world-class public transport system (MTR, buses, minibuses, trams, ferries) and the fares are subsidised for students.
Full-time students can apply for a Student Octopus Card which gives:
Typical student monthly transport cost:
Taxis are available but expensive. Uber/Didi are also available. Most students take public transport daily and use taxis only occasionally.
Monthly phone budget: HK$100-200 is more than enough for most students.
Annual healthcare budget: HK$1,000-3,000 for most healthy students (most universities cover basic needs through their health centres).
Monthly social budget:
Monthly total: HK$300-1,000
One of the advantages of studying in Hong Kong is travel access: Hong Kong International Airport (HKIA) is one of the major hubs in Asia, and short-haul trips are affordable.
Annual travel budget: HK$5,000-20,000 is realistic for a student who takes 2-3 short trips per year.
| Category | Monthly (HK$) | Annual (HK$) |
|---|---|---|
| Dorm | 1,200 | 14,400 |
| Food (mostly canteen + cook) | 3,000 | 36,000 |
| Transport | 300 | 3,600 |
| Utilities (minimal, shared) | 400 | 4,800 |
| Phone | 100 | 1,200 |
| Social | 500 | 6,000 |
| Shopping | 300 | 3,600 |
| Healthcare | 150 | 1,800 |
| Travel | 1,000 | 12,000 |
| Total | 6,950 | 83,400 |
Plus tuition: HK$145,000-180,000 (undergraduate) + HK$83,400 living = HK$228,400-263,400/year total
| Category | Monthly (HK$) | Annual (HK$) |
|---|---|---|
| Shared flat (1 person) | 8,500 | 102,000 |
| Food (mixed) | 5,000 | 60,000 |
| Transport | 450 | 5,400 |
| Utilities + phone | 900 | 10,800 |
| Social | 1,500 | 18,000 |
| Shopping | 600 | 7,200 |
| Healthcare | 250 | 3,000 |
| Travel | 1,500 | 18,000 |
| Total | 18,700 | 224,400 |
Wait — let me recalculate. Monthly expenses 18,700 × 12 = 224,400. That’s for the “average” student. This is high because of rent.
Plus tuition: HK$145,000-180,000 + HK$224,400 = HK$369,400-404,400/year total
| Category | Monthly (HK$) | Annual (HK$) |
|---|---|---|
| Studio | 15,000 | 180,000 |
| Food (mostly out) | 7,500 | 90,000 |
| Transport | 700 | 8,400 |
| Utilities + phone | 1,400 | 16,800 |
| Social | 3,500 | 42,000 |
| Shopping | 1,200 | 14,400 |
| Healthcare | 300 | 3,600 |
| Travel | 2,500 | 30,000 |
| Total | 32,100 | 385,200 |
Plus tuition: HK$145,000-180,000 + HK$385,200 = HK$530,200-565,200/year total
Prioritise on-campus dorm if possible. It’s the single biggest cost reduction — from HK$8,500/month rent to HK$1,200/month.
Eat at the university canteen. Subsidised meals at HK$25-45 are your cheapest reliable food option.
Share cooking duties with flatmates. Batch cooking 2-3 times per week is much cheaper than ordering delivery.
Use Student Octopus Card religiously. The 50% discount adds up over a year.
Buy groceries at PnS / Wellcome / Market Place weekly sales. Chain supermarkets have weekly deals.
Limit nightlife spending. Bars and clubs are the fastest way to blow your budget. Try free university events and student parties first.
Buy used textbooks. Via campus bookshops, Facebook groups, or senior students.
Use free gym, free Wi-Fi, free library resources. University infrastructure is surprisingly extensive.
Split large purchases with flatmates. Cooking equipment, furniture, bulk household supplies.
Find part-time work if legally permitted. Your student visa allows limited on-campus work and relevant internships. Even a few hundred dollars per week helps.
For context, here’s a rough comparison of living costs (excluding tuition) for international students in similar cities:
| City | Monthly living cost (average) | Annual |
|---|---|---|
| Hong Kong (shared flat) | HK$18,700 | HK$224,000 |
| Singapore (shared flat) | SGD 2,500 = HK$14,500 | HK$174,000 |
| Tokyo (shared flat) | JPY 180,000 = HK$9,800 | HK$118,000 |
| Seoul (shared flat) | KRW 1.4M = HK$8,100 | HK$97,000 |
| Shanghai (shared flat) | RMB 8,500 = HK$9,300 | HK$112,000 |
| Taipei (shared flat) | TWD 30,000 = HK$7,500 | HK$90,000 |
| London (shared flat) | GBP 1,800 = HK$17,500 | HK$210,000 |
| New York (shared flat) | USD 2,800 = HK$21,800 | HK$262,000 |
Hong Kong is among the more expensive Asian study destinations, similar to Singapore, but cheaper than London and New York. The main driver of the high cost is housing.
Living as an international student in Hong Kong is manageable on a moderate budget of around HK$180,000-230,000 per year (excluding tuition), and comfortable on HK$280,000-360,000 per year. The single biggest swing factor is housing — a dorm vs. a shared flat vs. a studio can change your total budget by 2-3x.
For most international students, the realistic plan is:
With this setup, you can enjoy a rich Hong Kong student experience — world-class universities, incredible food scene, vibrant city life, travel access — for a total annual cost that is competitive with any major global city.
This article is part of the DSE Knowledge Hub, a free educational reference on Hong Kong university admissions and student life. Prices are estimates for 2026 and will vary by individual circumstance.