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Housing Guide 12 min read Beginner April 2026

Understanding Hong Kong Rental Agreements

Break down the clauses you’ll actually encounter — deposit terms, renewal conditions, and what landlords can and can’t require. Real examples included.

Why Your Rental Agreement Matters

Renting in Hong Kong can feel overwhelming. You’re looking at apartments, meeting landlords, and suddenly someone hands you a 10-page contract in English and Cantonese mixed together. It’s confusing, honestly. But here’s the thing — that contract determines whether your deposit is actually refunded, what happens if the landlord wants you out early, and who pays when the air conditioning breaks.

We’ve walked through hundreds of these agreements. Most of them contain the same clauses. Some are standard. Some are negotiable. And some are honestly just unfair. This guide shows you what you’re looking at, what you can change, and what red flags should make you walk away.

1

Key Clauses

Deposits, maintenance, termination terms

2

What’s Negotiable

Rent increases, lease length, deposit amounts

3

Red Flags

Unusual clauses that don’t protect you

Deposit Terms: Your Money, Your Protection

Almost every Hong Kong rental agreement requires a deposit. Standard is one month’s rent, sometimes two. But the contract should spell out exactly when you get it back and what deductions are allowed. Don’t assume — the contract defines everything.

Look for these specifics in the deposit clause:

  • Amount due (one month? two?)
  • When it’s due (before you move in? on signing day?)
  • What deductions are allowed (normal wear and tear vs. damage)
  • Timeline for refund (within 30 days of move-out?)
  • Where it’s held (with landlord? with agent? in trust?)

Here’s what you’ll encounter: most landlords keep the deposit themselves. That’s legal but risky. Some agents hold it in a trust account — slightly safer. The refund timeline matters. If it says “within 30 days” and you need your money back for a new place, that’s important to know upfront.

Close-up of rental agreement document with highlighted deposit clause and pen marking key terms
Hong Kong apartment interior showing living room with city skyline view through window and furniture

Renewal Conditions and Rent Increases

Most agreements are for 2 years. But they need to spell out what happens after year one and at the end of the lease. You’ll see “renewal at mutually agreed terms” in many contracts. That’s vague. It means the landlord can increase rent however much they want, and you have to negotiate or leave.

Better contracts specify a maximum rent increase. You might see “3% annual increase” or “CPI plus 2%”. That gives you certainty. If the contract doesn’t mention it, you’re vulnerable. In a hot market, landlords have been known to ask for 10-15% increases on renewal. It’s legal. It’s just not pleasant.

Watch for the renewal timeline too. Usually you need to agree on new terms 2-3 months before the lease ends. If you miss that window and haven’t negotiated, you’re stuck either accepting new terms or finding somewhere else. Not ideal when you’ve already unpacked.

Maintenance and Who Pays for What

This is where agreements get specific. Who fixes the toilet when it breaks? Who replaces the air conditioning unit? Who pays for the water heater? These aren’t small questions — they can cost thousands.

Standard practice splits it this way:

Landlord Pays

Structural issues, major appliances (AC units, water heaters), plumbing problems

Tenant Pays

Small repairs (replacing light bulbs, fixing hinges), general maintenance

But many agreements put everything on the tenant. That’s worth pushing back on. You’ll also see clauses about “returning the apartment in the same condition as when you moved in” — which is reasonable. Just make sure you take photos on day one. Don’t rely on your memory six months later.

Maintenance and repair tools laid out including wrench, screwdriver, and plumbing tools on white surface
Calendar showing months with lease dates marked and circled to indicate termination timeline

Early Termination: What If You Need to Leave?

Life happens. Job changes, family situations, you just can’t stand your neighbors anymore. Most Hong Kong leases lock you in for two years. But the contract should address what happens if you want out early.

Common clauses include:

  • Break clauses: You can leave after 12 months if you give 2-3 months notice
  • Penalty fees: You forfeit part of your deposit or pay a fee
  • No exit clause: You’re stuck for the full term
  • Mutual agreement: You can leave if the landlord agrees (they usually won’t)

Break clauses are the friendliest option. If the contract doesn’t have one, ask to add it. A reasonable landlord will agree to let you out after 12 months with proper notice. If they refuse completely, that’s a red flag. It means they’re prioritizing control over flexibility.

What You Can Actually Negotiate

Landlords present contracts as final. They’re not. Almost everything is negotiable. You won’t get everything you want, but you can shift terms in your favor.

These are the easiest wins:

  • Break clause: Request the right to exit after 12 months with 2 months notice
  • Rent increase cap: Propose a 3% annual cap instead of “mutually agreed terms”
  • Deposit timeline: Push for refund within 14 days instead of 30
  • Maintenance splits: Define what the landlord pays for (AC, plumbing, appliances)
  • Move-in condition: Get a signed inventory of the apartment’s condition

Harder to negotiate but worth trying:

  • Deposit amount (landlords usually won’t budge here)
  • Pet policies (if you have animals)
  • Who pays for utilities (usually tenant, but sometimes shared)
Two people in business casual clothing reviewing documents at table with laptop and coffee cups

Red Flags: Walk Away if You See These

Some contract terms are just unfair. You’re not being difficult by rejecting them. You’re protecting yourself. Here’s what should make you reconsider:

Unlimited Liability

Contract says you’re liable for any damage, no matter how minor. That means even normal wear and tear gets charged to your deposit.

No Deposit Protection

Clause says landlord can deduct “reasonable costs” without itemizing. They decide what’s reasonable. You don’t.

Unilateral Termination

Landlord can end the lease with 30 days notice, but you’re locked in for two years. Completely one-sided.

Excessive Penalties

Early exit costs three months rent. That’s punitive. Standard is one month or less.

Vague Renewal Terms

No mention of rent increase limits. Landlord can raise it 20%, 50%, whatever they want at renewal.

Unrealistic Condition

“Return in pristine condition, like new.” That’s impossible. Every apartment shows use. This sets you up for deposit loss.

No Inventory

Contract doesn’t require a move-in inspection. You can’t prove the apartment’s original condition. Landlord blames you for everything.

Final Thoughts: You Have More Power Than You Think

Rental agreements look intimidating. They’re long, they’re written by lawyers, they favor the landlord. But they’re also negotiable. Most landlords have rented dozens of times. They’ve seen changes requested before. They’re not surprised when you push back.

The key is knowing what matters. A break clause after 12 months? That’s reasonable. A deposit refund within 14 days? Totally doable. Unlimited liability for any damage? That’s not happening — reject it.

Don’t be intimidated by a “standard” contract. There’s no such thing. Every apartment has different terms. Every landlord has different flexibility. You won’t get everything perfect. But you can shift things in your favor. And that’s worth doing before you sign.

Disclaimer

This guide provides general information about Hong Kong rental agreements for educational purposes only. It is not legal advice, and circumstances vary significantly by situation, landlord, and specific contract terms. Property laws and rental practices change over time. Before signing any rental agreement, we strongly recommend consulting with a qualified legal professional who specializes in Hong Kong property law. Your specific situation may require individualized advice that this guide cannot provide.