Stretch it: take 4 days of leave (Dec 28–31) for 10 days off (Dec 25 – Jan 3).
Long Weekends in Hong Kong 2027
Hong Kong has 7 long weekends (3 or more consecutive days off) in 2027, counting public holidays and Sat–Sun weekends; the longest natural break runs 4 days (Feb 6 – 9). Placed well, 1 day of leave stretches a break to 4 consecutive days off — every option is below.
- Long weekends
- 7
- Longest break
- 4 days
- Best bridge
- +1 → 4 days
- Weekend
- Sat–Sun
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Every break in 2027
Lunar New Year’s Day · The third day of Lunar New Year · The fourth day of Lunar New Year
Stretch it: take 3 days of leave (Feb 10–12) for 9 days off (Feb 6 – 14).
Good Friday · The day following Good Friday · Easter Monday
Stretch it: take 4 days of leave (Mar 30 – Apr 2) for 11 days off (Mar 26 – Apr 5).
Stretch it: take 4 days of leave (Mar 30 – Apr 2) for 11 days off (Mar 26 – Apr 5).
Birthday of the Buddha — a lone day off, bridge it:
Stretch it: take 1 day of leave (May 14) for 4 days off (May 13 – 16).
Tuen Ng Festival — a lone day off, bridge it:
Stretch it: take 2 days of leave (Jun 7–8) for 5 days off (Jun 5 – 9).
Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Establishment Day — a lone day off, bridge it:
Stretch it: take 1 day of leave (Jul 2) for 4 days off (Jul 1 – 4).
The day following the Chinese Mid-Autumn Festival — a lone day off, bridge it:
Stretch it: take 1 day of leave (Sep 17) for 4 days off (Sep 16 – 19).
Stretch it: take 4 days of leave (Oct 4–7) for 10 days off (Oct 1 – 10).
Stretch it: take 4 days of leave (Oct 4–7) for 10 days off (Oct 1 – 10).
Christmas Day · The first weekday after Christmas Day
Stretch it: take 4 days of leave (Dec 28–31) for 9 days off (Dec 25 – Jan 2).
All bridge plans, ranked by date
Each plan books leave only on working days between two natural breaks, so every one of them returns more than one day off per day of leave.
| Days off | Leave | Span |
|---|---|---|
| 10 | 4d · Dec 28–31 | Dec 25 – Jan 3 |
| 9 | 3d · Feb 10–12 | Feb 6 – 14 |
| 10 | 4d · Mar 22–25 | Mar 20 – 29 |
| 11 | 4d · Mar 30 – Apr 2 | Mar 26 – Apr 5 |
| 9 | 4d · Apr 6–9 | Apr 3 – 11 |
| 6 | 3d · May 10–12 | May 8 – 13 |
| 9 | 4d · May 10–12 + May 14 | May 8 – 16 |
| 4Best value | 1d · May 14 | May 13 – 16 |
| 5 | 2d · Jun 7–8 | Jun 5 – 9 |
| 9 | 4d · Jun 7–8 + Jun 10–11 | Jun 5 – 13 |
| 5 | 2d · Jun 10–11 | Jun 9 – 13 |
| 6 | 3d · Jun 28–30 | Jun 26 – Jul 1 |
| 9 | 4d · Jun 28–30 + Jul 2 | Jun 26 – Jul 4 |
| 4 | 1d · Jul 2 | Jul 1 – 4 |
| 6 | 3d · Sep 13–15 | Sep 11 – 16 |
| 9 | 4d · Sep 13–15 + Sep 17 | Sep 11 – 19 |
| 4 | 1d · Sep 17 | Sep 16 – 19 |
| 9 | 4d · Sep 27–30 | Sep 25 – Oct 3 |
| 10 | 4d · Oct 4–7 | Oct 1 – 10 |
| 9 | 4d · Dec 28–31 | Dec 25 – Jan 2 |
Computed from Hong Kong's public holidays plus Sat–Sun weekends. Substitute days count as days off; observances don't. Bridges spend at most 4 leave days, booked only on working days.