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how to sue someone in hong kong

How to Sue Someone in Hong Kong (2026): Step‑by‑step Civil Claim Process, Limitation Periods, Costs and Enforcing Judgment

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Understanding how to sue someone in Hong Kong is the first step toward recovering a debt, enforcing a contract or obtaining any other civil remedy through the territory’s courts. Hong Kong’s civil claim process is governed by well‑established procedural rules, but 2026 has brought renewed attention to enforcement infrastructure, particularly reciprocal arrangements for Mainland Chinese judgments under the Mainland Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Ordinance (Cap. 597) and ongoing Department of Justice consultations on dispute‑resolution modernisation. This guide consolidates every stage of the claimant’s journey, pre‑action preparation, court selection, filing, service, limitation periods, realistic costs, and the full enforcement toolkit, into one practical playbook current as of May 2026.

1. Before You Sue: Pre‑Action Steps and Preparation

Rushing to court without adequate preparation is one of the costliest mistakes a claimant can make. Hong Kong courts expect parties to have explored settlement and gathered evidence before issuing proceedings. Getting these foundations right strengthens your position, manages costs and may resolve the dispute without litigation entirely.

When to Consider Mediation or Arbitration First

Check whether your contract contains a mandatory arbitration or mediation clause. If it does, commencing court proceedings without first following that clause can result in proceedings being stayed. Even without a contractual obligation, Hong Kong’s Practice Direction 31 encourages parties to attempt mediation before trial. Courts can impose adverse costs orders on parties who unreasonably refuse to mediate.

If you are dealing with a breach of contract claim in Hong Kong, consider whether the amounts and relationship justify litigation or whether a quicker, more confidential arbitration, administered by the HKIAC, for example, better serves your commercial interests.

Pre‑Action Checklist

Before issuing any claim, complete this checklist:

  • Identify the correct defendant. Confirm the full legal name and registered address. For companies, search the Companies Registry. For individuals, verify identification details.
  • Assemble your evidence. Gather contracts, invoices, delivery records, email and messaging correspondence, payment records and any expert reports. Organise documents chronologically.
  • Quantify your claim. Calculate the principal amount, interest (contractual or statutory) and any consequential losses you intend to recover.
  • Send a formal demand letter. State the amount owed, the legal basis and a reasonable deadline (typically 14–28 days). A well‑drafted letter of demand demonstrates good faith and may prompt payment without proceedings.
  • Check the limitation period. Confirm your claim is not time‑barred (see Section 4 below). Limitation periods run from the date the cause of action accrues and cannot usually be paused once started.
  • Assess the defendant’s ability to pay. Winning a judgment against an entity with no assets or insufficient assets wastes time and money. Conduct a basic asset search or company financial review first.

2. Which Court to Start In: Thresholds and How to Choose

Choosing the correct court is critical. Filing in the wrong forum can delay proceedings or increase costs unnecessarily. Hong Kong’s civil court structure offers three main tiers for first‑instance claims, each with different monetary jurisdiction and procedural rules.

Court Monetary Threshold Typical Procedure and Timeframe
Small Claims Tribunal (SCT) Claims up to HK$75,000 Informal hearing before an adjudicator; no lawyers permitted (parties represent themselves). Hearings usually scheduled within weeks. Designed for quick, low‑cost resolution.
District Court Generally HK$75,001 – HK$3,000,000 Formal proceedings by writ or originating summons. Pleadings, discovery, and trial. Typical duration: 12–24 months from filing to trial, depending on complexity.
High Court (Court of First Instance) Above HK$3,000,000 (or claims with no upper monetary limit, injunctions, complex remedies) Full civil procedure, case management conferences, potential interlocutory applications. Duration: 18–36 months or longer for complex commercial disputes.

Example scenario: A supplier is owed HK$500,000 for goods delivered but unpaid. This falls within the District Court’s jurisdiction. The supplier would issue a Writ of Summons endorsed with a Statement of Claim and file at the District Court Registry. If the amount were HK$50,000, the Small Claims Tribunal would be the appropriate venue.

3. Step‑by‑Step Filing and Civil Claim Process in Hong Kong

The civil claim process in Hong Kong follows a structured sequence from drafting the originating document through to trial and judgment. Below is a practical step‑by‑step guide for District Court and High Court claims, the most common routes for commercial creditors.

  1. Draft your originating document. For most monetary claims, this is a Writ of Summons endorsed with a Statement of Claim (or a general endorsement, with a full Statement of Claim to follow). For claims involving questions of law or the construction of documents, an Originating Summons may be appropriate. Sample forms and guidance are available from the Judiciary’s Resource Centre for Unrepresented Litigants (RCUL).
  2. Pay the filing fee. Court fees are prescribed by regulation. Filing a writ in the High Court or District Court attracts a set fee, with additional fees for subsequent steps (setting down for trial, issuing summonses, etc.). Fee schedules are published by the Judiciary.
  3. File at the Registry. Attend the relevant court registry (or use electronic filing where available) with the original and copies for sealing. The court seals the writ and assigns a case number.
  4. Serve the sealed writ on the defendant. Service must comply with the Rules of the High Court (RHC) or Rules of the District Court (RDC). Personal service on the defendant is the default method. Substituted service (by advertisement, email, or other means) can be ordered if personal service proves impossible. For service outside Hong Kong, leave of the court is generally required, a process detailed in the Bird & Bird service overview.
  5. Defendant’s response. The defendant has 14 days from service (28 days if served outside Hong Kong) to file an Acknowledgement of Service. If the defendant contests, a Defence must follow within a further 28 days. If no Acknowledgement or Defence is filed, the claimant may apply for default judgment.
  6. Discovery, disclosure and case management. Both parties exchange relevant documents (discovery). The court conducts case management conferences to set timetables for witness statements, expert evidence and pre‑trial reviews.
  7. Trial and judgment. At trial, witnesses give evidence and are cross‑examined, legal submissions are made, and the judge delivers judgment. The successful party is usually entitled to a costs order in their favour.

The Default Judgment Route

Where the defendant fails to acknowledge service or file a defence, the claimant can apply for judgment in default. For liquidated (fixed‑sum) claims, default judgment can often be obtained without a hearing. This is a powerful tool in straightforward debt recovery, industry observers note that a significant portion of commercial debt claims in Hong Kong are resolved at this stage without ever reaching trial.

Sample Forms and Where to Download Them

The RCUL website provides downloadable templates for writs of summons, statements of claim, acknowledgements of service and various interlocutory applications. The Community Legal Information Centre (CLIC) also offers plain‑language guidance on starting a civil action, useful for claimants who want to understand procedures before engaging a solicitor.

4. Limitation Periods in Hong Kong: Critical Deadlines

A limitation period is the statutory deadline within which you must issue proceedings. Once the period expires, the claim is time‑barred and the court will decline to hear it, regardless of its merits. Understanding the limitation period in Hong Kong for your type of claim is non‑negotiable.

Cause of Action Limitation Period When It Starts (Accrual)
Simple contract (debt, breach) 6 years Date of breach or when the debt fell due
Contract under seal (deed) 12 years Date of breach
Tort (negligence, nuisance) 6 years Date damage was suffered (with discoverability rules for latent damage)
Personal injury 3 years Date of injury or date of knowledge
Recovery of land 12 years Date the right of action accrued
Enforcement of a foreign judgment 6 years (common law) or as specified in statute Date the foreign judgment became enforceable

Worked example: A Hong Kong supplier delivered goods on 15 March 2020 with payment due on 15 April 2020. The buyer never paid. The limitation clock started on 15 April 2020, meaning the supplier must issue proceedings before 15 April 2026. Failing to act by that date permanently extinguishes the claim.

Practical tip: Do not wait until the last weeks of a limitation period to issue. Courts close during public holidays, filing errors occur, and service requirements take time. Aim to commence proceedings at least two to three months before the deadline expires. If you discover a claim close to limitation, issue a protective writ immediately and amend pleadings later if needed.

5. Costs to Sue in Hong Kong: Realistic Bands and Funding Options

Understanding the costs to sue in Hong Kong is essential for making a sound commercial decision about whether litigation is worthwhile. Costs fall into three main categories: legal fees, court fees and disbursements.

Legal Fee Bands

  • Solicitor hourly rates: Junior solicitors typically charge HK$2,000–HK$3,500 per hour; senior partners and specialists range from HK$3,500 to HK$6,000 or more, depending on firm size and case complexity.
  • Barrister (counsel) fees: Junior counsel may charge HK$3,000–HK$8,000 per day for advisory work and higher daily refreshers for trial. Senior counsel (silks) command significantly more.
  • Court filing fees: These are modest relative to legal fees, a few hundred to a few thousand HK dollars depending on the court and application type.
  • Disbursements: Expert reports, translation, process server fees, court reporter charges and travel for overseas service can add meaningfully to total outlay.

Example Cost Ranges by Case Type

Case Type Estimated Total Costs (Claimant) Key Cost Drivers
Small Claims Tribunal (up to HK$75,000) Filing fee only (no lawyer costs, self‑represented) Minimal; designed for accessibility
Straightforward District Court debt recovery (settled or default judgment) HK$30,000 – HK$150,000 Pleadings, service, limited correspondence
Contested High Court commercial trial (2–5 day trial) HK$500,000 – HK$3,000,000+ Discovery volume, expert evidence, counsel fees, trial preparation

Funding Options

  • Legal aid. The Legal Aid Department provides assistance to Hong Kong residents who pass means and merits tests. Eligibility thresholds are modest, so most commercial claimants will not qualify.
  • Conditional fee agreements (CFAs). Since the Arbitration and Legal Practitioners Legislation (Outcome Related Fee Structures for Arbitration) (Amendment) Ordinance 2022 and subsequent developments, outcome‑related fee structures are available for arbitration and certain proceedings. Availability for standard litigation remains limited, check current rules before proceeding.
  • Third‑party litigation funding. Available for arbitration and certain insolvency proceedings. Funders cover legal costs in exchange for a share of any recovery. Not yet broadly available for general commercial litigation, though the landscape is evolving.
  • Free legal advice. The Government’s Free Legal Advice Scheme offers preliminary guidance through the Home Affairs Department and the Duty Lawyer Service.

6. Getting Judgment, What Happens Next

Obtaining a judgment in your favour is a milestone, but it is not the finish line. A judgment only creates a legal entitlement to the sum or remedy awarded, it does not automatically transfer money or property. Enforcement begins once the judgment is final, meaning the time for appeal has expired or the judgment is otherwise immediately enforceable.

Types of Remedies Available

  • Money judgment: An order for the defendant to pay a specific sum (plus interest and costs).
  • Specific performance: An order compelling a party to perform contractual obligations (e.g., complete a property transfer).
  • Injunction: An order requiring the defendant to do, or refrain from doing, a particular act.
  • Costs order: The losing party is usually ordered to pay a proportion of the winning party’s legal costs.

If the judgment debtor does not voluntarily comply, the creditor must initiate formal enforcement proceedings.

7. How to Enforce a Judgment in Hong Kong: Practical Measures

Enforcing a judgment in Hong Kong requires selecting the right enforcement tool based on the debtor’s assets, their location and the nature of the judgment. Hong Kong law provides several well‑established mechanisms, each with distinct advantages and procedural requirements.

Enforcement Method When to Use Key Steps / Pros and Cons
Writ of Fieri Facias (FIFA) / Writ of Execution When the judgment orders payment of money and the debtor has local moveable assets Issue writ at the Court Registry → instruct the Judiciary Bailiff Section → bailiff seizes and sells goods. Pros: Direct, well‑understood process. Cons: Debtor may have no attachable goods; perishable or low‑value goods yield poor returns.
Garnishee Order When the debtor’s funds are held by a third party (e.g., bank or employer) Apply to Court for a garnishee order nisi → serve on the garnishee (bank) → Court makes the order absolute, directing payment to the creditor. Pros: Can capture bank balances quickly. Cons: Requires a known garnishee and traceable funds; the debtor may dissipate funds before service.
Charging Order When the debtor owns land or securities in Hong Kong Apply for a charging order nisi over land or shares → register against the property at the Land Registry → apply to make absolute → enforce by sale if necessary. Pros: Secures the debt against a tangible asset. Cons: Realisation through sale can be slow.
Examination of Judgment Debtor When the creditor needs to discover the debtor’s assets before choosing an enforcement method Apply for an order requiring the debtor to attend court and disclose assets on oath. Pros: Identifies assets for targeted enforcement. Cons: Debtor may fail to attend (though contempt proceedings can follow).
Registration of Foreign Judgment / Common Law Proceedings When the judgment originates from a foreign court (non‑Mainland) Register under the Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Ordinance if the originating country is covered, OR bring a fresh writ at common law to convert the foreign judgment into a local one. Pros: Statutory registration is often faster. Cons: Not all countries are covered; common law proceedings require meeting recognition requirements.

Enforcing Foreign Judgments in Hong Kong

Hong Kong offers two principal routes for enforcing a foreign judgment. First, the statutory route: under the Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Ordinance, judgments from designated countries can be registered with the High Court and enforced as if they were local judgments. The Department of Justice publishes the list of countries covered. Second, at common law, a creditor can bring fresh proceedings in Hong Kong using the foreign judgment as a cause of action, provided the judgment is final, for a definite sum, and the foreign court had jurisdiction recognised by Hong Kong law. The Timothy Loh LLP enforcement guide provides a detailed comparison of both approaches.

Enforcing Mainland Chinese Judgments Under Cap. 597

For judgments from Mainland Chinese courts, the Mainland Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Ordinance (Cap. 597) provides a registration mechanism. A judgment creditor must apply to the Court of First Instance for registration, demonstrating that the Mainland judgment is effective and enforceable. The applicant must provide a certified copy of the judgment and evidence that the judgment has not been fully satisfied. Once registered, the Mainland judgment is enforceable in Hong Kong as though it were a local court order. Early indications suggest that practitioners are seeing increased use of Cap. 597 in 2026, reflecting growing cross‑border commercial activity and the practical need to enforce obligations across the boundary. The CLIC enforcement guide offers accessible explanations of the registration process.

Mareva (Freezing) Injunctions

Where there is a real risk that the debtor will dissipate assets to frustrate a future judgment, a creditor can apply, often without notice to the defendant, for a Mareva injunction freezing the debtor’s assets. This is a powerful but high‑threshold remedy: the applicant must demonstrate a good arguable case and a real risk of dissipation. Providing a cross‑undertaking in damages is also required.

8. Practical Enforcement Checklist and Sample Timelines

Use the following checklist when moving from judgment to enforcement:

  • Obtain a sealed copy of the judgment from the court registry.
  • Confirm the judgment is final (appeal period expired or waived).
  • Identify the debtor’s assets through an examination order, asset searches or commercial intelligence.
  • Select the appropriate enforcement method (FIFA, garnishee order, charging order, etc.).
  • Draft and file the enforcement application with supporting affidavit evidence.
  • Serve the enforcement documents on the debtor and, where relevant, on the garnishee or Land Registry.
  • Attend any enforcement hearing (e.g., garnishee order absolute hearing, charging order hearing).

Sample Timelines

  • Domestic debt recovery (default judgment + FIFA): Industry observers expect a typical timeline of 2–4 months from filing to bailiff execution, assuming straightforward service and no opposition.
  • Garnishee order (known bank account): 4–8 weeks from application to order absolute, depending on court listing times and the garnishee’s response.
  • Registering a foreign or Mainland judgment: 2–6 months, depending on the complexity of evidence and whether the debtor contests registration.

9. When Enforcement Fails or the Judgment Debtor Is Overseas

Sometimes, domestic enforcement yields nothing, the debtor’s Hong Kong assets are insufficient or non‑existent. When this happens, creditors have several options to explore:

  • Winding‑up or bankruptcy petition: If the debtor is a company, a creditor holding an unsatisfied judgment debt can present a winding‑up petition. For individuals, bankruptcy proceedings may be appropriate. These proceedings create statutory obligations for the debtor to disclose assets and can incentivise payment.
  • Tracing assets: Engage forensic accountants or specialist investigators to locate hidden or offshore assets, including property, bank accounts and corporate interests.
  • Cross‑border enforcement: If the debtor holds assets in another jurisdiction, the creditor may need to bring fresh enforcement proceedings in that jurisdiction, either registering the Hong Kong judgment (where reciprocal arrangements exist) or suing on the judgment as a debt at common law.
  • Mutual legal assistance: In certain circumstances involving fraud or asset freezing, government‑to‑government channels may assist with evidence gathering and restraint orders.

Cross‑border enforcement planning, including enforcing a Hong Kong judgment against overseas assets, is a developing area that increasingly requires specialist advice from practitioners experienced in multi‑jurisdictional recovery.

10. Conclusion: How to Sue Someone in Hong Kong, Next Steps

Suing in Hong Kong follows a logical, well‑documented process: prepare your evidence and send a demand letter, choose the right court, file and serve your claim, meet limitation deadlines, and, once judgment is obtained, enforce it through the most appropriate remedy. With Cap. 597 making Mainland judgments easier to register and the Department of Justice continuing to refine cross‑border enforcement frameworks, 2026 is a year of growing practical options for creditors. The single most important action is to check your limitation period now, a meritorious claim becomes worthless the moment it is time‑barred.

For any commercial claimant considering how to sue someone in Hong Kong, obtaining experienced legal counsel early in the process saves time, controls costs and maximises the likelihood of full recovery.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ronald Tong at Ronald Tong & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Hong Kong Judiciary, Small Claims Tribunal
  2. Community Legal Information Centre (CLIC), How to Start a Civil Action
  3. Community Legal Information Centre (CLIC), Enforce Judgment
  4. Hong Kong Department of Justice, Litigation
  5. Hong Kong Department of Justice, Reciprocal Enforcement of Judgments
  6. eLegislation, Mainland Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Ordinance (Cap. 597)
  7. Judiciary, Resource Centre for Unrepresented Litigants (RCUL) Sample Forms
  8. Judiciary, Bailiff Section
  9. Timothy Loh LLP, Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Hong Kong
  10. Gall Solicitors, Enforcement of Judgments (Hong Kong)
  11. Bird & Bird, Service of Claim Documents in Hong Kong
  12. Legal Aid Department, FAQ
  13. GovHK, Free Legal Advice Scheme

FAQs

How do I start a civil claim in Hong Kong?
Issue the correct originating document, a claim form for the Small Claims Tribunal, or a Writ of Summons (or Originating Summons) for the District Court or High Court. Pay the filing fee, file at the court registry, and serve the sealed documents on the defendant in accordance with the Rules of Court. Sample forms are available on the Judiciary RCUL website.
The standard limitation period for breach of contract claims in Hong Kong is six years from the date the cause of action accrued (i.e., when the breach occurred or when money fell due). For contracts executed as deeds, the period extends to twelve years. Once expired, the claim is permanently barred.
Costs depend on the court and complexity. Small Claims Tribunal cases incur only a modest filing fee (no lawyers). District Court debt recovery may cost HK$30,000–HK$150,000 in legal fees. Contested High Court commercial trials typically cost HK$500,000 to well over HK$1,000,000, driven by discovery, expert evidence and counsel fees.
If the originating country is covered by the Foreign Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Ordinance, you can register the judgment with the High Court and enforce it as a local order. Otherwise, commence fresh proceedings at common law, using the foreign judgment as the cause of action. Mainland Chinese judgments follow a separate registration process under Cap. 597.
A garnishee order in Hong Kong compels a third party, typically a bank, holding funds belonging to the judgment debtor to pay those funds directly to the judgment creditor. The creditor applies for an order nisi, which is served on the bank; if not challenged, the court makes the order absolute and the bank must pay.
The Legal Aid Department provides legal aid to Hong Kong residents who satisfy both a means test (financial eligibility) and a merits test (the case has reasonable prospects). Commercial claimants with significant resources will usually exceed the means threshold and must fund litigation privately or through alternative arrangements.
If the debtor holds no local assets, consider petitioning for winding‑up or bankruptcy (which triggers compulsory asset disclosure), tracing assets through forensic investigation, or pursuing cross‑border enforcement in the jurisdiction where assets are located, either under a reciprocal arrangement or at common law.
By Cem Arda Tepe

posted 1 hour ago

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How to Sue Someone in Hong Kong (2026): Step‑by‑step Civil Claim Process, Limitation Periods, Costs and Enforcing Judgment

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