Star Ferry Hong Kong – Routes, Fares and Tour Options
Operating since 1888, The Star Ferry has operated essentially non-stop ever since carrying passengers between Honk Kong Island and Kowloon. It is, IMHO, the essential Hong Kong experience, heading to Victoria Harbour, pay your 2.20HKD and take an ever so elegantly peaceful journey across one of the worlds most spectacular and historic harbours. It has to be one of the greatest bargains on earth!
Ferry Routes
Central <> Tsim Sha Tsui Star Ferry Service
From either side: Operates Mon-Sat from 6.30 am to 11.30 pm at a frequency of between 8 minutes in peak times and 20 minutes in off-peak times. Adults fares are 2.20HKD Lower Deck/2.70HKD Upper Deck and on weekends and holidays, it’s 3.10HKD Lower Deck/3.70HKD Upper Deck. Discounts available for children and seniors.
Wanchai <> Tsim Sha Tsui Service Star Ferry Service
From Wan Chai: Operates daily from 7.30 am to 11.00 pm at a frequency of between 6 minutes in peak times and 12 minutes in off-peak times. On Sun & Public Holidays from 7.40 am to 11.30 pm at a frequency of between 12 minutes in peak times and 20 minutes in off-peak times. From Tsim Sha Tsui, ferries start and finish ten minutes earlier. Adults fares are 2.70HKD and on weekends and holidays, it’s 3.70HKD. Discounts available for children and seniors.
Harbour Tours
You have a choice of daytime tour, nighttime tour, or Symphony of Lights Tour. With the tour route and fares as follows.
The tour lasts for approximately one hour. During the Symphony of Lights Tour, the ferry stops in the middle of the harbor to take in the light show spectacle. The route traveled is a little shorter than the daytime and nighttime tours. The ferries used are luxury versions of standard ferry boats with refreshments available, washroom, and some displays.
Tsim Sha Tsui Star Ferry Pier | Central Pier No.7 | Wanchai Pier |
Adult
Fare
|
Concessionary Fare |
|
Star Ferry’s Harbour Tour (Daytime) | 11:55 / 12:55 / 13:55 / 14:55 / 15:55 / 16:55 / 17:551 | 12:15 / 13:15 / 14:15 / 15:15 / 16:15 / 17:151 | 12:30 / 13:30 / 14:30 / 15:30 | HK$110 | HK$95 |
Star Ferry’s Harbour Tour (Nighttime) | 18:55 / 20:55 | 2015 | N/A | HK$200 | HK$175 |
Star Ferry’s Harbour Tour‧“A Symphony of Lights” | 19:55 | 19:15 | N/A | HK$230 | HK$200 |
See the Star Ferry website for notices, conditions and timetable adjustments.
Wikipedia Says
History
Before the steam ferry service was first established, people would cross the harbour in sampans. In 1870, a man named Grant Smith brought a twin-screw wooden-hulled boat from England and started running it across the harbour at irregular intervals.
In July 1873, an attempt was made to run steam ferries between Hong Kong and Kowloon. This was stopped at the request of the British consul in Canton, who feared it would enable visits to gambling houses in Kowloon. It is thought that a service to the public was established in the mid-to-late 1870s, after the cession of Kowloon to the British in 1860.
The company was founded by Parsee merchant Dorabjee Naorojee Mithaiwala as the “Kowloon Ferry Company” in 1888. Naorojee bought Smith’s boat, and later acquired the steam vessels Morning Star and Evening Star from a Mr Buxoo. The popularity of this means of transport enabled him to increase his fleet to four vessels within 10 years: the Morning Star, Evening Star, Rising Star and Guiding Star. Each boat had a capacity of 100 passengers, and the boats averaged 147 crossings each day. He incorporated the business into the “Star Ferry Co Ltd” in 1898, prior to his retirement to India. The company name was inspired by his love of Alfred Lord Tennyson’s poem “Crossing the Bar”, of which the first line reads “Sunset and evening star, and one clear call for me!”.
At the time regular service was initiated, ships were moored by having a sailor on the vessel toss the rope to another on the pier, who would then catch it with a long billhook. This is still done today.
On his retirement in 1898, Naorojee sold the company to The Hongkong and Kowloon Wharf and Godown Company Limited, at that time owned by Jardine, Matheson & Co. and Sir Paul Chater.
A pier constructed on the western end of Salisbury Road opened in 1906, it was a fine massive structure at that time and it also had a separate compartment for the first and second class. However, it was destroyed by a typhoon in September 1906.
In the early 1950s, construction of the present twin-piered terminal commenced on both sides of Victoria Harbour, designed to handle 55 million passenger trips a year. The structure was completed in 1957, concurrent with the Edinburgh Place Ferry Pier built on the island side.
At the turn of the century, Hong Kong currency and Canton currency were both accepted as legal tender in Hong Kong. In the autumn of 1912, following a devaluation, the Star Ferry caused a controversy by insisting, together with the tramways, that payment had to be made in Hong Kong currency only. Canton coinage would no longer be accepted.
In 1924 the Yaumati Ferry operated the route to Kowloon in a duopoly. In 1933 the Star Ferry made history by building the Electric Star, the first diesel electric passenger ferry of its kind.
By 1941, the company had six vessels. During the Japanese Occupation of Hong Kong, the competing Yaumati Ferry was allowed to continue, while the Japanese commandeered the Star Ferry for their own purposes. The Golden Star and the Meridian Star were used to transport prisoners of war from Sham Shui Po to Kai Tak Airport. In 1943, the Golden Star was bombed and sunk in the Canton River by the Americans, and the Electric Star was sunk in the harbour. After the war, the ferries were recovered and returned to service.
The Star Ferry accepted the request by the government of operating the Hung Hom route in 1963, it almost failed to operate as the company thinks it cannot make profit from it. But with the reconsideration by the Star Ferry, the route were confirmed to be started operating starting from March 1965.
Until the opening of the Cross Harbour Tunnel in 1972, the Star Ferry remained the main means of public transportation between Hong Kong Island and the Kowloon side.
The Star Ferry operates on a franchise from the Government, which was last renewed in March 2018.
Public protests
In 1966, a fare increase of 5 cents (or 25%) of the ferry was a political milestone, as it caused a 27-year-old student to go on hunger strike in protest at the Edinburgh Place terminal. His arrest sparked the 1966 Hong Kong Riots.
On 11 November 2006, the end of an era was marked when the third generation pier in Central, the Edinburgh Place Ferry Pier, ended its mission, along with the big clock tower. The pier was demolished to make way for reclamation, amidst great controversy and important protests.
Financial problems
Since the Central Star Ferry Pier was moved from its old pier next to City Hall to the new location outside International Finance Centre, passenger numbers have fallen drastically to mainly tourists and a small number of commuters. This has meant the Star Ferry company has lost many millions of dollars since the relocation. Therefore, it decided not to re-tender for the loss-making Hung Hom-Central and Hung Hom-Wan Chai routes and stopped operating these routes and the relevant piers at Hung Hom Ferry Pier on 31 March 2011.
Filmography
The Star Ferry appears in the 1960 film The World of Suzie Wong. In the beginning of the film, Robert Lomax (played by William Holden) disembarks from the SS President Wilson (an old American President Lines transpacific passenger vessel) and takes the Star Ferry to Hong Kong Island, and on the ferry meets Suzie Wong (played by Nancy Kwan), who scorns his attentions.
Several brief scenes in the 1988 TV miniseries Noble House are set aboard the ferry. It also appears in the French films Les Anges gardiens (1995) and La Moustache (2005).
Source: Wikipedia
Map
Hong Kong, Tsim Sha Tsui, 梳士巴利道