Cheap no longer cuts it. Loud doesn’t mean meaningful. And human experience is everything.
As Lunar New Year 2026 has shown, the way people in Hong Kong are shopping, gifting, and gathering is changing. Where hefty price tags and flashy gifts once dominated, tradition ruled and status mattered, behaviour is shifting towards intentional choices that reflect personal connection and unique experiences.
This shift is perfectly consistent with the “Proof of Human” theme of the latest global Edges report, released globally yesterday by Omnicom Advertising Consumer Intelligence Unit, Backlash. The report identifies human input as a new signal of value, highlighting a growing reassessment of the point at which the convenience and optimisation enabled by technology and AI begin to cost us.
Increasingly, people are seeking proof of human involvement: evidence that what they’re engaging with came from a real person – who thought, who cared, who showed up and did the work. The opportunity, in moments that matter most, like LNY, is to matter more… and what matters is now being redefined, transforming how Hong Kong consumers view value.
Less Flash, More Meaning: Value isn’t Cheap
In the current climate of prolonged economic uncertainty, Hong Kong consumers have become far more deliberate in how they spend. The overriding theme this year is the prioritizing of value-driven choices – not just seeking lower prices, but choosing products, services, and experiences that feel genuinely worth the investment.
LNY gifts in 2026 shifted from showy to thoughtful – valued not for their price, but for the time and care behind them – and thus difficult to replicate through mass production or technology.
This mindset also played out in LNY gatherings. Retail and dining outlets delivering clear quality, a unique experience and value for money attracted long queues during the reunion period. Additionally, the surge in outbound travel over the LNY period (21.6% increase in outbound travel compared to last year) indicated yet another way we are seeing higher spending on meaningful, experience-led activities, reinforcing a quality-over-quantity approach to how families want to spend time together.
Against this backdrop, it’s increasingly important for brands to articulate and reinforce what they stand for. Tactical promotions may still drive short-term sales, but they’re no longer sufficient on their own. The brands most likely to withstand challenging market conditions will be those that clearly communicate their unique value proposition, create meaningful experiences, and use tactical activations to complement, not replace, their brand story.
Additional Global Forces Shaping LNY and Hong Kong
Several of the global “Edges” (significant long-term cultural shifts) are resonating strongly in Hong Kong right now – you likely saw some of them play out over Lunar New Year as well. As these shifts continue into the months ahead, they’re worth factoring into how brands shape their brand strategy for the Year of the Horse.
Maturity Paradox
If you didn’t already notice it at LNY, look out for the age-flipping at other multi-generational gatherings this year. Where older family members brag about their latest marathon, perhaps a “kidult” relative proudly shows off their plush toys, or the kids share impressive achievements that seem beyond possible for their age.
This cultural phenomenon will grow even stronger moving forward. From silver generations embracing physical challenges, to adults finding joy in play, to youth achieving excellence earlier than ever. Brands that understand these nuances, validate without judgement, and offer joy across generations stand to win this year, and especially in the season defined by togetherness.
Health Hedonism
As a city with perpetual burnout, indulgence is being refined. Health is no longer about restriction but reward. During LNY, this showed up in alcohol-light gatherings, wellness-infused gifting, and social rituals centered around movement and recovery.
Health Hedonism here in Hong Kong this year is body-mind balanced, a form of escape, and of course, insta-worthy. It’s not just the reformer Pilates, fascia release treatments, or candlelit yoga. It’s the rise of Gen Zs drinking less and socialising at coffee raves, morning run clubs, and spin studios instead. This represents a huge opportunity for all types of brands to consider how they contribute to people’s wellbeing, and how strategic partnerships might enhance and deepen the overall brand experience.
Dark Mode
In one of the world’s most hyper-visible cities, the next form of status is privacy. Hong Kong has always been socially dense and digitally connected, but in 2026, the most meaningful signals are moving off the main feed. Taste is no longer performed publicly – it’s curated quietly. Invite-only WhatsApp resale groups, Close Friends drops, private supper clubs, underground art spaces, and Telegram investment chats are becoming the real arenas of influence. In a city tired of algorithmic sameness, cultural capital now lives in places that don’t scale.
We saw this shift during the Lunar New Year: the most coveted restaurant bookings weren’t the loud openings with influencer walls but the discreet, word-of-mouth kitchens. The most interesting fashion isn’t what’s trending on global platforms – it’s what’s sourced through small, human networks. Even gifting is becoming more insider: niche local brands, limited collaborations, handmade editions that signal discernment rather than spend. For brands in Hong Kong, this means resisting the urge to chase visibility at all costs. Design for intimacy. Being seen by everyone is less powerful than being chosen by a few.
The Undeniable Local Force: Never Normal, Always Hong Kong
At the same time, a uniquely Hong Kong trend has emerged where local uniqueness and quirky authenticity are celebrated. More and more, people are drawn to brands that creatively express their cultural roots and tell an extraordinary Hong Kong story. Lunar New Year becomes a natural high point for this – a moment when contemporary creative content can spotlight the city’s uniqueness while still honouring its age-old traditions. It’s when Hong Kong’s energy, resilience, and distinct identity are most visible. But this appetite for authentic “Hong Kong-ness” won’t disappear now that the festivities have; brands that express it meaningfully will be appreciated long after the season ends.
“Hong Kong Never Normal”, a collaboration platform with 60+ brands and influencers, proved the pride that locals can have about their true identity. Launched at the end of 2024, the platform has gained huge momentum through connecting with people and by celebrating the fact that Hong Kong couldn’t ‘get back to normal’ when it was never normal to begin with…. Homegrown brands that have a ‘Never Normal’ perspective to share will excite the local market that continues appreciate what is deeply authentic and culturally unique.
How to Win in Hong Kong
In a market evolving as quickly as Hong Kong, the latest Edges report, coupled with LNY behaviours, provides strong indicators for how brands can expect consumers to behave in the year ahead. With what we are seeing in the market, my advice: step beyond your comfort zone – challenge familiar formats, test bolder, more culturally specific ideas, and learn fast in the market. Do the brave thing: not reckless, but focused exploration and experimentation anchored in a sharp point of view and clear value. Be authentic, be human, and embrace and empower others. The brands that do this – consistently – will be the ones people notice, choose, and return to.

This thought leadership piece is written by Terence Ling, Chief Strategy Officer at TBWA Hong Kong.
