12 Gifts for Someone Who Misses Hong Kong (2026 Guide)
There is a specific kind of homesickness that belongs to Hong Kong. It isn't just missing a place — it's missing a pace. The rattle of a tram on Des Voeux Road. The red taxi glowing under neon at 2am. The Star Ferry crossing at golden hour, the smell of dai pai dong smoke, the improbable green of Sai Kung twenty minutes from the world's densest skyline.
If someone you love has left Hong Kong — or you did — you already know: you can't gift the city back. But you can gift a piece of it. Here's an honest guide, from a team that has spent years working with Hong Kong's street photographers.
What makes a good "Hong Kong gift"?
The gifts that land are not the ones that say tourist souvenir. They're the ones that say I know which Hong Kong you miss. Three things separate the keepers: specificity (their corner of the city, not a generic skyline), permanence (food vanishes in a week; something on the wall greets them every morning), and story (made by a Hongkonger, it carries the city in a way a factory print never will).
1. Hong Kong Taxi — for the taxi romantic
The red taxi is Hong Kong's heartbeat on four wheels. Shot by local photographer Rex, printed in a numbered edition of 50 with a certificate of authenticity. This is the one gift we've seen make grown adults cry.
Hong Kong Taxi — from HK$490, framed from HK$1,390
2. Hong Kong Tram — for the one who lived on the island line
The ding-ding is the sound of Hong Kong slowing down just enough to see it. For anyone whose commute ran Kennedy Town to Causeway Bay, this is their morning, framed.
Hong Kong Tram — from HK$490, framed from HK$1,390
3. The Star Ferry — for the harbour crosser
Ten minutes across Victoria Harbour, and somehow it never got old. The green-and-white ferry at golden hour is the postcard Hong Kong keeps in its heart.
The Star Ferry — from HK$490, framed from HK$1,390
4. Novitas — for the one who stayed out too late
The neon signs are disappearing from the real city — which makes them more precious on a wall. This is the Hong Kong of midnight noodles and last ferries, and one of our most collected prints of all time.
Novitas — from HK$490, framed from HK$1,390
5. Sai Kung — for the one who swears it's not all skyscrapers
Every Hongkonger abroad has had the conversation: "No, half of it is country park." This print of Sai Kung, by Lee Mumford, is the receipt. For the hiker, the junk-trip organiser, the weekend sea-kayaker.
Sai Kung — from HK$490, framed from HK$1,390
6. Hong Kong Maze — for the architecture lover
The impossible geometry of the vertical city, by Tom Franklin De Waart. (If they lived it rather than admired it, see also Montane Mansion.) The Hong Kong that makes every other city feel like it's lying down.
Hong Kong Maze — from HK$490, framed from HK$1,390
7. Hong Kong Culturepedia — for the storyteller
An A-to-Z of Hong Kong culture — the slang, the superstitions, the snacks — from local publisher The Lion Rock Press. The book that gets passed around the dinner table abroad.
Hong Kong Culturepedia, The Lion Rock Press — HK$180
8. Mahjong jar candle — for the family table
The clack of tiles is the soundtrack of every Hong Kong family gathering. A candle in a mahjong jar keeps the ritual burning, several time zones away.
Mahjong Jar Candle, The Lion Rock Press — HK$288
9. Skyline ceramic mug — for the morning milk tea
For the person who still makes their milk tea "si mut" strength. The skyline goes with them to every office kitchen.
Ceramic Mug: Skyline, The Lion Rock Press — HK$180
10. Hong Kong Tram building blocks — for the kid (or the desk)
Build the ding-ding brick by brick — for third-culture kids who deserve to know the city their parents can't stop talking about, or for the desk of someone who misses it.
Building Blocks: Hong Kong Tram, The Lion Rock Press — HK$499
11. Milk tea plushie — for the softie
A cup of cha chaan teng milk tea you can hug. Silly, perfect, and the most likely item on this list to appear in their next video call.
Plushie: Milk Tea, The Lion Rock Press — HK$168
12. Old Hong Kong: The Way We Were 2 — for the nostalgic
A photographic time machine to the Hong Kong of their parents — rooftop schools, kai-fong shops, the harbour before reclamation. Pairs beautifully with a print of the city as it is now.
Old Hong Kong: The Way We Were 2, The Lion Rock Press — HK$499
The free one
Take the best photo of them in the city — the one living in their camera roll — and have it printed and framed properly. It costs almost nothing and says everything.
When to give it
The moments that matter most: the farewell party (give them Hong Kong to take along), the first flat abroad (empty walls, full heart), Lunar New Year far from home, and the anniversary of the move — the one nobody talks about but everyone feels.
Why we made this guide
Kakahuette works with 18 Hong Kong street photographers to print their work in limited, numbered editions of 50 — framed locally, shipped worldwide with tracking. Every print supports the photographer who shot it. If the person you're shopping for misses Hong Kong, start with the most-loved prints — or find the photographer whose eye matches theirs in our full archive.
We have no affiliation with The Lion Rock Press — we just think they make great Hong Kong gifts. Prices checked at time of writing.











