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Hong Kong’s Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Ordinance (Cap. 650) became operational on 20 January 2026, creating criminal liability for specified professionals who fail to report suspected serious child abuse. For family advisory lawyers Hong Kong practitioners, mediators, school principals, medical professionals and social workers, the Ordinance demands immediate changes to everyday practice, from intake procedures and mediation protocols to cross-border Hague Convention case management. This guide delivers the practical compliance steps, reporting templates, confidentiality guidance and penalty analysis that frontline professionals need right now.
What this guide gives you:
The Ordinance imposes a legal duty on mandated reporters to report suspected serious child abuse to a designated authority, replacing the previous voluntary reporting framework with enforceable criminal obligations.
Enacted as Ordinance No. 23 of 2024 and gazetted as Cap. 650 of the Laws of Hong Kong, the Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Ordinance creates a duty for persons engaged in specified professions to make a report when they have reasonable grounds to suspect that a child has suffered serious harm, or is at risk of suffering serious harm, as a result of abuse or neglect. The statutory text, including definitions, offences and defences, is published on the Legislative Council website. The Ordinance does not replace existing child protection procedures under the Protection of Children and Juveniles Ordinance (Cap. 213); it adds a parallel, stand-alone reporting obligation.
The Ordinance came into effect on 20 January 2026, as confirmed by the HKSAR Government press release of the same date. It applies to any person under the age of 18 who is present in Hong Kong at the relevant time. The triggering threshold is “serious harm”, a term defined in the Ordinance to cover physical harm, sexual abuse, psychological harm and neglect that is, or is likely to be, significant. The focus on serious harm means that not every welfare concern triggers the mandatory reporting duty; instead, the professional must form a view on whether the harm crosses the statutory threshold.
Practitioners should bookmark the following primary resources:
The Ordinance designates approximately 25 categories of specified professionals who carry the mandatory reporting duty. These categories span education, healthcare, social services, law enforcement and other child-facing roles.
Key groups on the mandatory reporter list include:
The complete list, including sub-categories and edge cases, is detailed in the Guide for Mandated Reporters published by ACA. Practitioners should consult both the Schedule to Cap. 650 and the Guide to confirm whether their role falls within the statutory definition.
Barristers and solicitors are not expressly named in the Schedule of specified professions as it stands at commencement. However, family advisory lawyers Hong Kong practitioners should not assume zero exposure. A solicitor or barrister who also holds a qualification listed in the Schedule (for example, a registered social worker or clinical psychologist) remains subject to the duty in that capacity. Family mediators accredited under the Hong Kong Mediation Accreditation Association Limited are likewise not expressly listed, but mediators employed as registered social workers are captured.
Industry observers expect that future amendments may expand the Schedule. In the interim, the prudent step for lawyers and mediators is to:
The statutory test has two limbs: the reporter must have reasonable grounds to suspect that a child has suffered, or is at risk of suffering, serious harm as a result of abuse or neglect.
“Reasonable grounds to suspect” is an objective standard. It does not require certainty or proof on the balance of probabilities. The question is whether a reasonable person in the reporter’s professional position, with the same training and access to information, would form a suspicion. The threshold is deliberately lower than “belief” or “knowledge”, a lingering professional concern that something is seriously wrong can be enough.
“Serious harm” encompasses four heads defined in the Ordinance:
Practitioners should apply a structured assessment when a concern arises. A practical decision sequence is:
Illustrative scenarios: A school teacher notices repeated unexplained bruising on a child’s arms over several weeks, and the child becomes withdrawn when questioned. A paediatrician treats a toddler for a spiral fracture inconsistent with the parent’s explanation. A social worker conducting a home visit observes a young child left unsupervised for extended periods with no access to adequate food. In each case, reasonable grounds to suspect serious harm are present, and the mandatory reporting duty is triggered.
Good documentation protects both the child and the reporter. Before making a report, the practitioner should record:
After the report is made, the reporter should note the time, the name or reference number of the person who received the report, and any instructions received. These records should be stored securely and separately from general case files, in line with Personal Data (Privacy) Ordinance requirements and institutional data-handling policies.
Making a report under the Ordinance follows a structured sequence. The Guide for Mandated Reporters sets out the recommended process, which can be summarised in six steps:
The Ordinance itself does not prescribe a fixed number of hours within which a report must be lodged. The operative standard is that the report must be made as soon as practicable after the reasonable grounds are formed. The Guide for Mandated Reporters and the Education Bureau Circular both recommend same-day reporting wherever possible.
| Entity Type | Mandatory Reporter? | Typical Reporting Triggers & Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Education (teachers, principals, school social workers) | Yes | Reasonable grounds of serious harm or risk, immediate (same-day) report recommended per Education Bureau Circular EDBC25015E. |
| Healthcare (doctors, nurses, dentists, clinical psychologists) | Yes | Observed injuries, medical signs or disclosed abuse, immediate report and clinical safeguarding steps in parallel. |
| Social workers (registered) | Yes | Professional assessment of serious harm or risk, report per internal protocol and to the designated authority as soon as practicable. |
| Lawyers & mediators | Not expressly listed* | If holding a secondary specified-profession registration, the duty applies in that capacity. Otherwise, voluntary reporting and professional-conduct considerations apply. See mediation and confidentiality section below. |
| Police officers | Yes (specified profession) | Operational response and coordination with child protection authority; existing Police General Orders supplemented by Ordinance duties. |
*Exact categories and sub-categories are set out in the Schedule to Cap. 650 and the Guide for Mandated Reporters. Practitioners should confirm their status against both documents.
Failure to comply with the mandatory reporting duty is a criminal offence under the Ordinance. The HKSAR Government press release confirming the commencement date noted that contravention carries a maximum penalty of three months’ imprisonment and a fine at level 5 (HK$50,000). While the maximum custodial term may appear modest, the practical consequences extend well beyond the criminal sanction.
Professional and regulatory exposure: A conviction, or even a caution, for failure to report may trigger disciplinary proceedings by the relevant professional body (the Medical Council, the Social Workers Registration Board, the Education Bureau, or others). Loss of professional registration is a realistic outcome in serious cases, effectively ending a career. Civil claims for negligence may also follow if a child suffers further harm after a professional failed to report.
Statutory immunity for reporters: The Ordinance includes protections for mandated reporters who make a report in good faith. A person who makes a report honestly and on reasonable grounds is shielded from civil liability arising from that report. This immunity is essential to encourage reporting and to counterbalance the fear of defamation claims or retaliation by the child’s family.
Practical risk mitigation:
The intersection of mandatory reporting and family mediation children matters is one of the most operationally sensitive areas under the new Ordinance. Mediators are trained to maintain confidentiality as a cornerstone of the process, yet child protection concerns cannot be subordinated to mediation privilege.
For mediators (whether or not expressly captured by the Schedule):
Lawyer–client privilege: Solicitors who are not specified professionals are not directly subject to the Ordinance’s mandatory reporting duty. However, the Law Society’s guidance on professional conduct requires solicitors to act in the best interests of children in family proceedings. Where a solicitor becomes aware of a serious and immediate risk to a child’s safety, the likely practical effect will be that a voluntary report is both ethically required and legally prudent, even if it falls outside the strict letter of Cap. 650.
Template 1, Mediation agreement clause:
“The mediator is required to inform participants that, notwithstanding the confidentiality of mediation, any information giving rise to reasonable grounds to suspect that a child has suffered or is at risk of serious harm may be disclosed to the relevant child protection authority in compliance with the Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Ordinance (Cap. 650).”
Template 2, Solicitor engagement letter insert:
“We draw your attention to the Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Ordinance (Cap. 650). In the event that information comes to our attention during this retainer which gives rise to a child protection concern meeting the statutory threshold, we may be obliged or consider it necessary to make a report to the designated authority. We will discuss any such step with you to the extent consistent with the child’s safety.”
Hong Kong, as a Special Administrative Region of the People’s Republic of China, applies the Hague Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child Abduction through local implementing legislation. Hague Convention child cases frequently involve allegations of abuse or neglect, either as the basis for an Article 13(b) defence to return, or as a welfare concern that surfaces during Convention proceedings.
The commencement of the Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Ordinance adds a new compliance layer to cross-border family litigation. Where a mandated reporter, for example, a social worker preparing a welfare report for the court, or a clinical psychologist assessing a child, encounters information suggesting serious harm, the reporting duty is triggered regardless of the Convention proceedings running in parallel.
Practical steps for counsel handling cross-border cases:
Early indications suggest that the courts will expect legal representatives to proactively manage the interface between Convention proceedings and local child protection obligations, rather than treating them as separate silos.
Use the following checklist to confirm organisational and individual readiness:
The Ordinance is in force. Compliance is not optional, and the window for passive adjustment has closed. Family advisory lawyers Hong Kong practitioners and all mandated reporters should take three immediate steps: first, review and update organisational policies, engagement letters and staff training to reflect the new obligations; second, familiarise yourself with the Guide for Mandated Reporters and the reporting pathways; and third, contact Global Law Experts or consult the Hong Kong lawyer directory for case-specific advice on child protection compliance, mediation protocols or Hague Convention matters.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kay K.W. Chan at Tamar Chambers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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