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Last reviewed: 30 April 2026 | What’s new: The Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Ordinance (Cap.650) came into force on 20 January 2026, imposing criminal reporting duties on 25 categories of specified professionals across Hong Kong’s social welfare, education and healthcare sectors.
Mandatory reporting of child abuse in Hong Kong in 2026 is no longer a matter of professional best practice, it is a statutory obligation backed by criminal penalties. The Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Ordinance (Cap.650) represents the most significant change to child protection Hong Kong 2026 has seen in decades, shifting the legal landscape for everyone from social workers and teachers to family lawyers and mediators. This guide explains who must report, how the process works, what it means for custody disputes and mediation confidentiality, and provides a step-by-step compliance checklist for mandated reporters. It is intended as general guidance and does not constitute legal advice, practitioners and parents should seek independent legal counsel for case-specific matters.
On 20 January 2026, Hong Kong’s Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Ordinance (Cap.650) commenced operation. The Ordinance creates a new statutory duty requiring 25 categories of “specified professionals” to report suspected serious child abuse cases to the Social Welfare Department (SWD). Failure to comply is a criminal offence. The Government had signalled its intentions well in advance, publishing the Guide for Mandated Reporters in July 2025 and running training programmes across affected sectors before the commencement date.
| Date | Milestone | Significance |
|---|---|---|
| June 2024 | Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Bill passed by the Legislative Council | Enacted as Cap.650 on the Hong Kong statute book |
| July 2025 | Government publishes Guide for Mandated Reporters | Official practical guidance for all 25 professional categories; training programmes begin |
| 20 January 2026 | Cap.650 commences operation | Statutory reporting duties become legally enforceable; criminal penalties apply from this date |
The Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Ordinance (Cap.650) is codified in Hong Kong’s statute book and available in full on the Hong Kong e-Legislation platform. Its core purpose is to require certain professionals to report suspected serious child abuse cases, to provide protection for those professionals who report in good faith, and to impose penalties on those who fail to report without reasonable excuse. Below is a plain-English breakdown of its key provisions.
Cap.650 applies to 25 categories of “specified professionals” drawn from three sectors: social welfare, education and healthcare. The Ordinance defines these professionals in its schedule, and they include, among others, registered social workers, teachers, principals, doctors, nurses, clinical psychologists and hospital social workers. The law also applies to public officers performing functions in those sectors.
The Ordinance targets serious child abuse, which encompasses physical abuse, sexual abuse, neglect and psychological abuse where the harm, or risk of harm, to the child is serious. The threshold is not limited to confirmed cases; a specified professional is required to act when they have reasonable grounds to suspect that a child has suffered or is at risk of suffering serious abuse.
Under Section 4 of Cap.650, a mandated reporter must make a report when, in the course of performing their professional duties, they have reasonable grounds to suspect that a child has been seriously abused or is at serious risk of abuse. The reporting obligation arises at the point of suspicion, there is no requirement for the professional to investigate or confirm the abuse before reporting. The SWD Procedural Guide emphasises that reports should be made promptly, and that delay may itself constitute a failure to comply.
Reports are made to the Social Welfare Department through designated reporting channels. The SWD has established an online Mandatory Reporting Platform as well as telephone hotlines for urgent cases. Healthcare professionals within Hospital Authority facilities may additionally use the HA’s electronic “Child Abuse Case Record” platform for internal documentation and referral.
Cap.650 includes important protections for reporters. A specified professional who makes a report in good faith is protected from civil and criminal liability arising from the report. The identity of the reporter is treated as confidential under the Ordinance, and there are restrictions on its disclosure. These protections are designed to encourage prompt reporting without fear of professional retaliation or defamation claims.
On the penalties side, a specified professional who fails to make a report without reasonable excuse commits an offence. The Ordinance provides for criminal penalties, including a fine and potential imprisonment. It is important to note that “reasonable excuse” is an affirmative defence, the burden falls on the professional to demonstrate why a report was not made. Conversely, knowingly making a false report is also an offence, although the Ordinance distinguishes clearly between a good-faith report that may later prove unfounded and a report made with the intention to deceive.
One of the most frequently asked questions about the new law is: who are “mandated reporters” under the new law, and which organisations must comply? The answer is broad. Cap.650 designates 25 categories of specified professionals across three sectors. The obligation attaches to the individual professional, not merely to their employer, although organisations bear a practical responsibility to ensure their staff are trained, supported and equipped to comply.
| Sector | Typical Roles | Reporting Obligation and Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Social Welfare | Registered social workers, child-care centre workers, residential care home staff | Mandated, report to SWD; follow SWD procedural guide for case handling |
| Education | Registered teachers, principals, school counsellors, special education assistants | Mandated, schools should have internal SOPs and designated reporting officers |
| Healthcare | Registered medical practitioners, nurses, midwives, dentists, clinical psychologists, hospital social workers | Mandated, HA facilities may use internal electronic platform; preserve clinical evidence |
Section 3 of Cap.650 confirms that the Ordinance applies to public officers. Government employees performing duties in the social welfare, education or healthcare sectors are subject to the same reporting obligations as their private-sector counterparts. Organisations, including schools, hospitals, NGOs and government departments, are expected to designate internal reporting officers, maintain clear escalation procedures and provide regular training. While the criminal liability rests on the individual, industry observers expect that organisations failing to facilitate compliance will face significant reputational and regulatory consequences.
Understanding the mechanics of mandatory reporting of child abuse in Hong Kong 2026 is essential for compliance. The SWD Procedural Guide, published alongside the commencement of Cap.650, sets out the core procedures that mandated reporters must follow.
The Ordinance requires reports to be made promptly. The SWD Procedural Guide clarifies that this means as soon as reasonably practicable after the reasonable suspicion forms. Where there is an immediate risk to the child’s safety, the report should be made without delay, including outside regular business hours via emergency hotlines. The practical expectation, as set out in the SWD guide, is that mandated reporters should not wait to gather additional evidence or conduct their own inquiries before reporting. Delay may be difficult to justify as a “reasonable excuse” if challenged.
The SWD reporting platform and procedural guide prescribe the information that should be included in a report. While not every field may be available in all cases, mandated reporters should provide as much of the following as possible:
Once a report is received, the SWD initiates an assessment. According to the Procedural Guide, this involves an initial screening, risk assessment and, where warranted, a multi-disciplinary case conference involving police, medical professionals and social workers. The reporter may be contacted for further information. Safety planning for the child, including possible removal from the home or supervised arrangements, is coordinated through the SWD. Mandated reporters are not expected to manage the investigation themselves; their role is to report and cooperate with the subsequent inquiry.
Whether you are a sole-practitioner family lawyer, a school principal or a hospital ward manager, the following compliance checklist for mandated reporters provides a structured approach to meeting your obligations under Cap.650. Organisations should adapt these steps to their specific operational context.
This checklist is a starting point. Industry observers expect the SWD to issue further operational guidance as the reporting regime matures through its first year of enforcement.
The intersection of custody and mandatory reporting is one of the most practically significant, and most sensitive, aspects of Cap.650 for family law practitioners. Reports of suspected child abuse can fundamentally alter the trajectory of custody proceedings, mediation processes and cross-border Hague Convention cases. Practitioners who handle these matters need a clear understanding of both the legal duties and the tactical risks.
Family mediation in Hong Kong operates on a foundation of confidentiality. Parties are encouraged to speak openly, and mediators ordinarily cannot disclose what is said in sessions. Cap.650 creates an exception to this principle. Where a mediator, who falls within a specified professional category, forms reasonable grounds to suspect serious child abuse during a mediation session, the statutory duty to report overrides mediation confidentiality.
The likely practical effect is that mediators will need to revise their standard opening statements and mediation agreements to include explicit warnings about the limits of confidentiality under Cap.650. A recommended protocol involves the following steps:
In contested custody proceedings, a mandatory report of suspected child abuse can trigger immediate consequences: emergency protective orders, supervised access arrangements, and investigations that delay or reshape the litigation timetable. Family lawyers should be alert to several risks. First, a report made during proceedings may be perceived, rightly or wrongly, as tactical. While the Ordinance protects good-faith reporters, a report that appears calculated to gain a litigation advantage could attract scrutiny. Second, evidence arising from a mandatory report may become admissible in custody proceedings, potentially altering the evidentiary landscape. Third, the child’s welfare, already the paramount consideration under the Guardianship of Minors Ordinance (Cap.13), may be reassessed by the court in light of SWD findings.
Early indications suggest that family lawyers should advise clients to cooperate fully with SWD investigations and to avoid any appearance of obstructing the process. Where a client discloses information that triggers a mandatory reporting obligation on the lawyer’s part, the lawyer must navigate the tension between the reporting duty and legal professional privilege, a matter discussed further below.
For Hague Convention child abduction and return cases, mandatory reporting adds another layer of complexity. Where a left-behind parent alleges abuse as a defence to return under Article 13(b) of the Hague Convention, the mediator or lawyer involved may also be under an independent statutory obligation to report that allegation to SWD. The likely practical effect is that cross-border cases will see greater SWD involvement at an earlier stage, which could influence both the speed and the outcome of return applications. Practitioners in this area should ensure they maintain liaison protocols with both local SWD and foreign central authorities.
Education institutions face a particularly broad operational impact. Teachers and principals are among the professionals most likely to observe signs of abuse in the course of their daily work. Schools should implement internal reporting SOPs, designate a child-protection lead, and ensure that all teaching and support staff complete training. Communication with parents must be handled carefully, schools are not required to notify parents before making a report, and doing so could compromise the child’s safety or the integrity of subsequent investigations.
The Hospital Authority has developed an electronic “Child Abuse Case Record” platform to support healthcare professionals in documenting and referring suspected cases internally. Doctors, nurses and hospital social workers working in HA facilities are encouraged to use this system alongside the SWD Mandatory Reporting Platform. Preserving clinical evidence, photographs of injuries, medical records, and clinical notes, is critical, as these may be relied upon in subsequent SWD investigations or court proceedings.
For lawyers, Cap.650 raises a nuanced question about the boundary between the statutory reporting duty and legal professional privilege. The Ordinance applies to specified professionals performing their professional duties. Where a family lawyer who falls within a mandated category receives information from a client that gives rise to a reasonable suspicion of serious child abuse, the tension between the duty to report and the duty of confidentiality must be resolved. Industry observers expect that the statutory duty will generally prevail over privilege in cases involving imminent risk to a child, but practitioners should seek independent legal advice on the specific facts. Referral to the Law Society’s guidance on professional conduct is recommended.
A specified professional who is accused of failing to report under Cap.650 faces a criminal charge. The Ordinance provides the defence of “reasonable excuse,” but the burden is on the professional to establish it. The following risk management steps are essential:
Taking these steps will not guarantee a successful defence, but they demonstrate the kind of professional diligence that may support a claim of reasonable excuse.
| Entity Type | Typical Roles | Reporting Obligations and Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Education | Teachers, principals, school counsellors, special education assistants | Mandated to report suspected serious abuse to SWD; schools should have SOPs, a designated child-protection lead and parental-notification protocols that do not compromise the child’s safety. |
| Healthcare | Doctors, nurses, midwives, dentists, clinical psychologists, hospital social workers | Mandated to report to SWD; HA facilities may use the internal electronic “Child Abuse Case Record” platform; preserve and document all clinical evidence. |
| Social Welfare | Registered social workers, child-care centre workers, residential care home staff | Mandated to report to SWD; follow SWD Procedural Guide for multi-disciplinary case conferences and safety planning. |
| Legal / Mediation | Family lawyers, mediators, child psychologists involved in legal proceedings | Mandated where they fall within a specified category; lawyers must consider privilege limits; mediators must include Cap.650 confidentiality warnings in agreements and pause sessions where concerns arise. |
| Public Officers | Government employees in social welfare, education or healthcare roles | Same obligations as private-sector counterparts under Section 3 of Cap.650; departmental SOPs apply. |
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kay K.W. Chan at Tamar Chambers, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
The following official resources support compliance with mandatory reporting of child abuse in Hong Kong 2026:
This article provides general guidance on the Mandatory Reporting of Child Abuse Ordinance (Cap.650) and does not constitute legal advice. Practitioners, organisations and parents dealing with specific situations should seek independent legal counsel. For assistance from a qualified Hong Kong family lawyer experienced in child protection, custody and Hague Convention matters, contact Global Law Experts.
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