11 min read · 21 March 2026

Is Co-Living Legal in Hong Kong? A Landlord's Complete Guide to Compliance

Everything Hong Kong landlords need to know about co-living compliance — licence agreements, building regulations, fire safety, and tax implications.

Key Takeaways

  • Co-living is legal in Hong Kong when operated under licence agreements rather than tenancy agreements.
  • Professional co-living is distinct from illegal subdivisions — no structural alterations, no building safety compromises.
  • Stays of one month or longer do not require a Hotel and Guesthouse Accommodation Ordinance licence.
  • The DMC is the most important document to review before converting a property.
  • A responsible operator handles compliance on your behalf — fire safety, insurance, member verification, reporting.

The Short Answer

Yes, co-living is legal in Hong Kong. It operates under licence agreements — a well-established legal framework for serviced accommodation. The distinction between legal co-living and illegal boarding houses matters enormously, and this guide walks you through every aspect.

Disclaimer: This guide is for informational purposes and reflects our understanding of the regulatory environment as of early 2026. It is not legal advice. Consult a solicitor for questions specific to your situation.

Licence Agreements vs Tenancies: The Legal Basis

A tenancy (governed by the Landlord and Tenant (Consolidation) Ordinance, Cap. 7) grants exclusive possession. The tenant can exclude others, including the landlord.

A licence grants permission to use premises without exclusive possession. The licensor retains control, provides services, and can access the property.

Co-living is clearly in the licence category: members occupy a private room but share common areas, the operator retains management control, provides services (cleaning, utilities, furnishing), and accesses the property regularly.

Hong Kong courts have consistently upheld this distinction based on the substance of the arrangement, not just the label on the document.

How Co-Living Differs From Illegal Subdivisions

Illegal subdivisions (劏房) involve structural alterations — removing or adding walls, installing additional plumbing — without Buildings Department approval. They create serious safety risks.

Professional co-living is fundamentally different:

  • No walls removed. We never touch load-bearing or structural walls.
  • No additional plumbing. Existing kitchen and bathroom are used as-is.
  • Partitioning, not subdivision. Removable, non-structural partitioning. Can be removed without trace.
  • No change to flat's footprint. The building unit is unchanged structurally.
  • Fire safety maintained. Clear exit routes. Fire extinguishers and smoke detectors installed.

The simplest test: if you removed all furniture and partitioning, you'd have the original flat in its original condition.

The Hotel and Guesthouse Accommodation Ordinance

Cap. 349 requires any premises providing sleeping accommodation for fewer than 28 consecutive days to hold a licence. The requirements (fire-rated doors, sprinklers, building plan submissions) are designed for commercial premises.

Co-living involves minimum stays of one month, with most members staying 3–12 months. This is residential, not hospitality. We maintain strict minimum stay policies and monthly licence agreements.

Be cautious of operators offering nightly or weekly rates — this pushes towards the hospitality category and may trigger licensing requirements.

Building Management Considerations

What to Look for in the DMC

Usage restrictions: Co-living is residential. If the DMC restricts use to "domestic" purposes, this is generally not a concern. Specific prohibitions on "boarding houses" or occupancy limits need closer review.

Occupancy limits: Some DMCs specify maximum occupants per unit. The co-living configuration must respect these.

Nuisance clauses: A well-managed co-living property with house rules and quiet hours is typically less likely to cause complaints than unmanaged flats.

Older Walkups vs Newer Developments

Older tong lau buildings tend to have simpler DMCs with fewer restrictions — these are often the most suitable. Newer developments with management companies require more careful review but aren't necessarily unsuitable.

During every assessment, we obtain and review the DMC. If there are concerns, we flag them immediately.

Tax Implications for Landlords

The following is general information only and does not constitute tax advice.

Property Tax is levied at 15% on net assessable value (rental income minus irrecoverable rent, minus 20% statutory allowance for repairs).

Under a revenue-share model, the income you declare is the amount you actually receive (your payout). The expenses deducted before your payout are the operator's, not yours to claim.

Some landlords benefit from Personal Assessment, which allows property tax to be assessed alongside other income. A tax adviser can determine if this is beneficial.

Commune's monthly reports provide comprehensive documentation for tax filing — clear audit trail of all income received.

What a Responsible Co-Living Operator Handles

Fire Safety

Smoke detectors in each room and common areas (tested monthly). Fire extinguishers inspected annually. Fire blanket in kitchen. Clear evacuation signage. Member briefing on fire procedures during move-in.

Utilities

All utility accounts managed by operator. Costs included in operating expenses. No chasing members for utility contributions.

Member Identity Verification

Government-issued photo ID verified before signing. Selfie for identity confirmation. Emergency contact collected. Stored securely.

Insurance

Commune maintains contents insurance and public liability coverage. Landlords should maintain their own building insurance.

Financial Reporting

Monthly P&L with every dollar documented. Provides confidence, supports tax filing, creates audit trail, and enables informed decisions.

Building Management Liaison

We maintain constructive relationships with building management — notifying of use, ensuring member compliance with building rules, responding to any concerns promptly.

Ongoing Compliance Monitoring

Our team monitors regulatory developments — Buildings Department guidance, Hotel and Guesthouse Accommodation Ordinance updates, fire safety changes, tax amendments. If a change affects your property, we notify you proactively.

Partnering with a professional operator doesn't add compliance risk — it reduces it. Your property is managed to a higher standard, income is documented, and regulatory exposure is minimised.

Ready to Explore What Co-Living Could Mean for Your Property?

Commune Share operates properties across Hong Kong, from Sai Ying Pun to Causeway Bay. We offer free, no-obligation property assessments — we'll visit your property, evaluate its co-living potential, and walk you through the numbers.

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