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construction law changes hong kong

Hong Kong Construction Law Changes 2026, What Contractors, Subcontractors and Owners Must Do Now

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

The construction law changes in Hong Kong that took effect in 2025–2026 represent the most significant overhaul of payment, contracting and site-safety practice in a generation. Three reforms have landed in quick succession: the Construction Industry Security of Payment Ordinance (Cap. 652) brought its major provisions into force on 28 August 2025, a new standard form of building contract was launched on 6 January 2026, and the Building (Construction) Regulation introduced performance-based site controls, including a phased transition away from bamboo scaffolding. Together, these reforms alter how every contractor, subcontractor, developer and project manager drafts contracts, processes interim payments, exercises suspension rights and manages on-site compliance.

This guide provides the practical checklists, sample clause language and step-by-step workflows needed to act now.

Executive Summary: What Changed in 2026 and Why It Matters

Decision-makers who have not yet updated their contract templates, payment procedures and site management plans face immediate commercial and legal exposure. The 2026 reform package can be distilled into three pillars:

  • New standard form of building contract (6 January 2026). Revised risk allocation, tighter extension-of-time (EOT) notice requirements, restructured interim payment timelines and updated retention release mechanics demand a clause-by-clause review of every live and tendered contract.
  • Security of Payment Ordinance (Cap. 652). With major provisions effective from 28 August 2025, the regime introduces statutory payment claims and schedules, rapid adjudication and, critically, the right to suspend works for non-payment. “Pay-when-paid” clauses are rendered void for contracts within scope.
  • Building (Construction) Regulation. The Buildings Department’s shift to performance-based building controls and the phased phase-out of bamboo scaffolding alter method statements, insurance requirements and contractual risk allocation on every active site.

Immediate Actions, Next 30 Days

  1. Audit all current and tendered contracts against the new standard form and SOPO requirements.
  2. Remove or replace any “pay-when-paid” clause in contracts entered on or after 28 August 2025.
  3. Implement a statutory payment claim template aligned with Cap. 652 requirements.
  4. Update EOT and interim payment notice procedures to match the 2026 standard form timings.
  5. Review on-site method statements for scaffolding compliance under the new Building (Construction) Regulation.
  6. Brief project teams, quantity surveyors and claims managers on the adjudication and suspension workflow.

Timeline of Key Legislative and Industry Dates

The following table maps each construction law changes Hong Kong reform element to the date that creates compliance obligations, as published in the Hong Kong e-Legislation database and Buildings Department guidance.

Date Reform Element Immediate Action Required
28 August 2025 Major provisions of the Construction Industry Security of Payment Ordinance (Cap. 652) effective Update payment claim procedures; remove or replace pay-when-paid clauses in contracts entered on or after this date; establish adjudication escalation protocol.
6 January 2026 New standard form of building contract launched Review and adopt revised clause templates; amend existing subcontracts or issue variation/novation where feasible; align retention and EOT notice terms.
2026 (Buildings Department commencement) Building (Construction) Regulation, performance-based controls and scaffolding transition rules Update on-site method statements and risk assessments; plan scaffolding transition and insurance cover; amend contract risk allocation clauses.

Standard Form Contract 2026: Summary of Changes and Clause-by-Clause Action Checklist

The new standard form of building contract launched on 6 January 2026 overhauled several areas that directly affect how contractors, subcontractors and owners structure their commercial relationships. Industry observers note that the revisions were designed specifically to align with the SOPO regime and to address long-standing ambiguities in payment assessment, notice periods and retention mechanics.

Key Drafting Changes

The principal changes fall into five categories that every contracting party must address:

  • Interim payment timings. The standard form now prescribes clear deadlines for submitting payment applications, for the contract administrator’s assessment and for the employer’s payment obligation. Parties who miss these windows risk losing set-off rights or triggering adjudication entitlements under SOPO.
  • Extension of time (EOT) notices. The revised form tightens the notice requirements for EOT claims, imposing stricter time bars. A contractor that fails to serve a compliant notice within the prescribed period may forfeit the claim entirely, regardless of merit.
  • Retention percentages and release. The updated retention rules in Hong Kong now typically provide for a 10 per cent retention on interim payments (subject to a maximum cap), with the first moiety released at practical completion and the final moiety released at the end of the defects liability period. The release mechanics are now more prescriptive, reducing scope for employers to withhold retention improperly.
  • Risk allocation. The standard form redistributes certain site condition and force majeure risks, clarifying employer-side obligations in relation to unforeseen ground conditions and regulatory changes, including the new Building (Construction) Regulation requirements.
  • “No pay-when-paid” compliance. In line with Cap. 652, the standard form now includes express language prohibiting conditional payment provisions. Any bespoke amendment that attempts to reintroduce a pay-when-paid mechanism is likely to be void by operation of statute.

Recommended Clause Text

The following sample clauses are provided for discussion purposes only. Each must be adapted to the specific contract, project and jurisdiction before use. Independent legal advice is essential.

  • Sample interim payment application clause. “The Contractor shall submit each interim payment application to the Contract Administrator no later than the [specified] day of each calendar month. The Contract Administrator shall issue the payment certificate within [specified number] days of receipt. The Employer shall pay the certified amount within [specified number] days of the payment certificate date.”
  • Sample retention release clause. “The Employer shall release the first moiety of Retention (being 50 per cent of the total Retention held) within [specified number] days of the date of the Certificate of Practical Completion. The second moiety shall be released within [specified number] days of the expiry of the Defects Liability Period, subject to the Contractor having remedied all notified defects.”
  • Sample EOT notice clause. “Within [specified number] days of the occurrence or first awareness of a Relevant Event, the Contractor shall give written notice to the Contract Administrator identifying the event, its expected impact on the programme and the extension of time sought. Failure to serve notice within the prescribed period shall constitute a time bar.”
  • Sample “no pay-when-paid” compliance clause. “No provision of this Contract shall be construed as making the Contractor’s or Subcontractor’s entitlement to payment conditional upon the Employer or main Contractor receiving payment from a third party. Any such provision is void pursuant to the Construction Industry Security of Payment Ordinance (Cap. 652).”

Contract Change Checklist for Owners, Contractors and Subcontractors

  • Compare every payment clause in live contracts against the 2026 standard form timelines.
  • Insert compliant EOT notice provisions with clear time-bar language.
  • Confirm retention percentages, caps and release triggers match the updated standard form.
  • Delete or amend any pay-when-paid clause; replace with direct payment obligations.
  • Add dispute escalation language referencing adjudication under Cap. 652.
  • Review variation assessment procedures to ensure they dovetail with the payment claim workflow under SOPO.

Security of Payment Reforms (Cap. 652), Step-by-Step for Subcontractors and Contractors

The Construction Industry Security of Payment Ordinance (Cap. 652) provides a statutory regime for the recovery of progress payments on construction contracts. With its major provisions effective from 28 August 2025, the security of payment Hong Kong framework now gives subcontractors and contractors enforceable rights that override contrary contractual terms.

The practical workflow below translates the statute into an eight-step process that claims managers and quantity surveyors can follow immediately.

  1. Prepare the payment claim and supporting documents. Assemble interim valuations, daywork sheets, variation orders, programme updates and any other records that substantiate the amount claimed. Ensure the claim references the correct contract and payment period.
  2. Serve the payment claim in the prescribed form and within the statutory timeline. The claim must identify itself as a payment claim under Cap. 652 and be served on the respondent (typically the party owing payment) in accordance with the notice provisions of both the statute and the contract.
  3. Monitor the respondent’s payment schedule. The respondent must serve a payment schedule within the statutory timeframe, stating the amount it proposes to pay and (if less than the claimed amount) its reasons. If no payment schedule is served, the full claimed amount may become due.
  4. Apply for adjudication if the payment schedule is absent, late or disputed. File the adjudication application with the designated nominating body within the prescribed time limit. Include all supporting documents and a clear statement of the amount in dispute.
  5. Participate in the adjudication. The adjudicator is required to issue a determination within the statutory timeframe. Cooperate fully: provide submissions, attend any hearing and respond to the adjudicator’s queries promptly.
  6. Enforce the adjudicator’s determination. If the respondent fails to comply, the successful party may apply to the court for leave to enforce the determination as a judgment. This is a summary process, see below.
  7. Respond to defences and set-off arguments. The respondent may raise limited defences (including jurisdictional challenges and fraud). Set-off claims must generally be raised in the payment schedule to be available in the adjudication.
  8. Manage insolvency interactions. If either party enters insolvency proceedings, the interplay between the SOPO regime and insolvency law must be assessed. Early legal advice is critical in this scenario.

Adjudication Timeline

Step Action Deadline / Timing
1 Serve payment claim By the date prescribed in the contract or, if none, as specified in Cap. 652
2 Respondent serves payment schedule Within the statutory period after receipt of payment claim
3 Claimant applies for adjudication Within the statutory period after the payment schedule deadline expires or a dispute crystallises
4 Adjudicator appointed Within the period prescribed by the nominating body’s rules
5 Adjudicator issues determination Within the statutory timeframe (extendable by agreement)
6 Losing party must pay or apply to set aside Within the period stated in the determination or by court order

How to Convert an Adjudicator’s Determination to Judgment

Where the respondent fails to comply with an adjudicator’s determination, the successful party may apply to the court for leave to enforce it as a judgment. The procedure is designed to be summary in nature: the applicant files the determination, evidence of non-compliance and an affidavit in support. Industry observers expect Hong Kong courts to adopt a robust approach to enforcement, consistent with the SOPO’s policy objective of keeping cash flowing through the supply chain.

When “Pay-When-Paid” Clauses Are Void

Under Cap. 652, a provision in a construction contract that makes payment to a subcontractor conditional on the main contractor receiving payment from the employer (or any other party) is void for contracts entered into on or after the operative date. This covers “pay-when-paid”, “pay-if-paid” and equivalent formulations. Practitioners should audit every subcontract to ensure compliance and replace void clauses with direct payment obligations and, where appropriate, payment security mechanisms such as bonds or escrow arrangements.

Interim Payments, Retentions and Cashflow Remedies, How the 2026 Construction Law Changes in Hong Kong Affect Payment Practice

The combined effect of the SOPO regime and the new standard form contract 2026 has fundamentally altered interim payments in Hong Kong. The following comparison table highlights the key shifts and the contract drafting actions required.

Area Previous Position 2026 Position
Payment application timing Varied by contract; no statutory backstop Statutory payment claim regime under Cap. 652; standard form prescribes fixed monthly dates
Payment schedule / certificate Contractual obligation only; no statutory penalty for delay Failure to serve a compliant payment schedule within the statutory period may result in the full claimed amount becoming payable
Pay-when-paid clauses Generally enforceable (subject to interpretation) Void for contracts within scope of Cap. 652
Retention percentage Typically 10%, with varied release triggers Standard form codifies 10% (subject to cap), with prescriptive two-stage release (practical completion and end of defects liability period)
Suspension for non-payment Limited contractual right; significant risk of repudiatory breach Statutory right to suspend under SOPO, subject to prescribed notice requirements

Sample Retention Release Clause (Escrow Alternative)

Sample clause, for discussion only. Independent legal advice is essential before adoption.

“In lieu of retention, the Employer and Contractor may agree that Retention Monies shall be deposited into a jointly controlled escrow account held at [named bank]. Release from the escrow account shall follow the same triggers and timelines as would apply to retention release under this Contract. Interest accrued on escrowed sums shall be for the account of the Contractor.”

Escrow arrangements are an increasingly attractive alternative to traditional retention holding, particularly for subcontractors concerned about employer or main contractor insolvency. The retention rules in Hong Kong under the 2026 standard form do not mandate escrow, but the SOPO regime’s emphasis on cashflow protection makes the mechanism commercially compelling.

Suspension of Works, Notices and Contractor Remedies, Practical Steps and Templates

The right to suspend works for non-payment is one of the most consequential changes introduced by the security of payment Hong Kong regime. Before Cap. 652, a contractor or subcontractor who suspended work risked being treated as having repudiated the contract. Under the SOPO, suspension of works in Hong Kong is now a lawful statutory remedy, provided the prescribed procedure is followed precisely.

Safe Suspension Sequence

  1. Serve a compliant payment claim under Cap. 652, identifying the amount due and the payment period.
  2. Wait for the payment schedule deadline to expire or for the respondent to serve a payment schedule that is materially less than the claimed amount.
  3. Give the prescribed written notice of intention to suspend, specifying the grounds (non-payment or inadequate payment schedule) and the date on which suspension will commence.
  4. Suspend work on or after the date stated in the notice. Continue to maintain site security and protection obligations as required by the contract and applicable regulations.
  5. Keep detailed time and cost records of all impacts arising from the suspension, including standing time, demobilisation/remobilisation costs and programme delay.

Sample Suspension Notice

Sample notice, for discussion only. Adapt to the specific contract terms and the requirements of Cap. 652 before use.

“To: [Employer/Main Contractor]. Re: [Contract reference]. NOTICE OF INTENTION TO SUSPEND WORKS PURSUANT TO THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY SECURITY OF PAYMENT ORDINANCE (CAP. 652). We refer to our Payment Claim No. [X] dated [date], served in accordance with [section reference] of Cap. 652. The Payment Schedule deadline expired on [date] and [no Payment Schedule has been received / the Payment Schedule served proposes payment of HK$[amount], which is materially less than our claimed entitlement of HK$[amount]]. Accordingly, we hereby give notice of our intention to suspend performance of our obligations under the Contract with effect from [date, being not less than the prescribed notice period after the date of this notice].

This notice is given without prejudice to our other rights and remedies.

Parties contemplating suspension should obtain legal advice before issuing the notice. An improperly served notice or premature suspension may expose the suspending party to claims for breach of contract, liquidated damages and termination. For a comparative treatment of suspension to termination and contractor remedies, see the related analysis.

Building (Construction) Regulation and On-Site Practice: Bamboo Scaffolding Phase-Out and Safety Compliance

The Building (Construction) Regulation introduces a performance-based approach to construction site controls, replacing prescriptive rules with outcome-focused requirements overseen by the Buildings Department. The regulation affects site safety management, structural adequacy assessments and, most visibly, the phased transition from bamboo scaffolding to metal and modular alternatives.

Why Is Hong Kong Phasing Out Bamboo Scaffolding?

The bamboo scaffolding phase-out reflects safety modernisation objectives identified by the Buildings Department. While bamboo scaffolding has been a hallmark of Hong Kong construction for decades, metal and modular systems offer more consistent structural performance, better integration with modern safety harness and edge-protection systems, and greater suitability for the high-rise, high-density projects that dominate the current pipeline. The transition creates contractual implications for every party in the supply chain: employers must ensure specifications accommodate the new systems, contractors must update method statements and costings, and subcontractors must retrain operatives and adjust insurance cover. For a comprehensive overview of construction law terminology, consult the glossary.

Contract Clauses for the Scaffolding Transition

Projects that straddle the transition period should include express clauses dealing with:

  • Which party bears the cost of substituting bamboo scaffolding with compliant alternatives.
  • The programme and price adjustment mechanism if the transition triggers additional time or cost.
  • Testing and inspection protocols for the replacement scaffolding system.
  • Insurance and indemnity obligations covering the changeover period.

Safety and Insurance Checklist for Project Managers

  • Update the project risk assessment and method statements (RAMS) to reflect the building construction regulation requirements.
  • Confirm that the principal contractor’s and subcontractors’ insurance policies cover the use of new scaffolding systems and the transition from bamboo.
  • Add transition clauses to subcontracts addressing cost, time and specification changes.
  • Schedule operatives for training on metal and modular scaffolding erection, use and dismantling.
  • Verify that all scaffolding designs and installation procedures satisfy the Buildings Department’s performance-based criteria.

Construction Disputes in Hong Kong: Adjudication, Arbitration and Litigation, Practical Choice Matrix

The 2026 reforms expand the range of dispute resolution options available to parties on Hong Kong construction projects. The following decision matrix helps practitioners select the right mechanism based on the dispute type, value and urgency.

Factor Adjudication (SOPO) Arbitration Litigation
Primary purpose Rapid cashflow remedy Binding final determination Binding final determination (public record)
Speed Weeks (statutory timeframe) Months to years Months to years
Best suited to Payment disputes and interim valuations Complex technical and delay claims High-value, multi-party or public-interest disputes
Enforceability Enforceable as a judgment (via court leave) Enforceable under the Arbitration Ordinance Directly enforceable
Finality Interim binding, may be reopened in arbitration or litigation Final and binding (limited grounds for challenge) Final (subject to appeal)

When to Enforce an Adjudicator’s Determination vs. Negotiate

Adjudication is designed to be “pay now, argue later.” The successful party should generally seek enforcement promptly to maintain cashflow pressure. However, where the underlying dispute involves complex technical issues that are likely to proceed to arbitration in any event, a negotiated settlement based on the adjudicator’s determination may achieve a faster and more durable commercial outcome. Practitioners should consult the detailed comparison of arbitration vs. litigation and the guide to preparation for arbitration hearings when choosing the escalation pathway. For parties exploring mediation as a dispute resolution tool, the process can complement adjudication effectively.

Practical “What to Do Now” Checklist, Owner, Contractor and Subcontractor Tracks

For Owners and Developers

  • Immediate. Audit all live and tendered contracts against the standard form contract 2026 and Cap. 652 requirements.
  • Within 30 days. Issue novation or variation letters to update payment, retention and dispute clauses in existing contracts.
  • Within 90 days. Implement an internal payment certification procedure that meets the statutory payment schedule deadlines; train contract administrators.

For Main Contractors

  • Immediate. Remove all pay-when-paid clauses from subcontract templates; replace with direct payment obligations and security mechanisms.
  • Within 30 days. Establish a payment claim template and tracking log aligned with Cap. 652; brief QS teams on the adjudication workflow.
  • Within 90 days. Update on-site method statements for scaffolding compliance; confirm insurance cover for new systems; build suspension response protocols.

For Subcontractors

  • Immediate. Start using the statutory payment claim format for all new invoices and applications for payment; keep copies of all service records.
  • Within 30 days. Run a clause audit on all existing subcontracts to identify void pay-when-paid provisions; seek legal advice on enforcement options.
  • Within 90 days. Train operatives on suspension rights, notice procedures and record-keeping; prepare a sample suspension notice (see template above).

Practitioners across all three tracks should consult the GLE Lawyer directory to identify construction law specialists for jurisdiction-specific advice.

Conclusion

The 2026 construction law changes in Hong Kong mark a structural shift in how projects are contracted, paid for and managed on site. The Security of Payment Ordinance gives subcontractors and contractors enforceable statutory rights that override restrictive contractual provisions. The new standard form of building contract aligns commercial terms with these statutory protections while tightening risk allocation, EOT notices and retention mechanics. And the Building (Construction) Regulation reshapes on-site practice, from scaffolding systems to safety management, in ways that ripple through every level of the contractual chain. Parties who delay compliance risk payment disputes, adjudication exposure and regulatory non-conformance.

Those who act now, auditing contracts, updating templates and training teams, will be positioned to protect cashflow, manage disputes efficiently and meet the new regulatory baseline. Early engagement with experienced construction law practitioners remains the most effective way to translate these reforms into project-level compliance.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Paul K.C. Chan at Paul K.C. Chan & Partners, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Hong Kong e-Legislation, Cap. 652 Construction Industry Security of Payment Ordinance
  2. Buildings Department, Legal Matters and Building (Construction) Regulation Resources
  3. Ashurst, Hong Kong Construction Sector Security of Payment Regime
  4. RPC, The New Hong Kong Construction Ordinance
  5. ICLG, Construction and Engineering Laws and Regulations: Hong Kong
  6. DLA Piper Real World, Construction Law in Hong Kong
  7. Global Law Experts, Hong Kong Construction Law Changes 2026

FAQs

What is the new Building (Construction) Regulation and how does it affect projects?
The Building (Construction) Regulation, published by the Hong Kong Buildings Department, introduces performance-based building controls for construction sites. It replaces certain prescriptive rules with outcome-focused requirements covering structural safety, scaffolding systems and site management. Project managers must update method statements, risk assessments and approvals to align with the new criteria. Guidance is available on the Buildings Department’s resources page.
The bamboo scaffolding phase-out reflects the Buildings Department’s safety modernisation programme. Metal and modular scaffolding systems offer superior structural consistency and compatibility with modern safety equipment. Contractually, parties must allocate the cost and time impact of the transition, update insurance policies to cover new systems and include express specification-change clauses in subcontracts.
Cap. 652 establishes a statutory payment claim and schedule process. If a respondent fails to serve a payment schedule within the prescribed period, the full claimed amount may become due. Subcontractors and contractors also gain a statutory right to suspend works for non-payment, provided they follow the prescribed notice procedure. Adjudication is available to resolve payment disputes rapidly.
The new standard form of building contract was launched on 6 January 2026. Key areas to update include interim payment application timelines, EOT notice requirements (now subject to stricter time bars), retention percentages and release mechanics, and the removal of pay-when-paid provisions. All existing and tendered contracts should be reviewed against the revised terms.
For construction contracts entered into on or after the operative date of Cap. 652 (28 August 2025), pay-when-paid clauses are void by operation of statute. This applies equally to “pay-if-paid” and equivalent formulations. Parties should replace void clauses with direct payment obligations and consider alternative cashflow protections such as performance bonds or escrow arrangements.
The successful party may apply to the court for leave to enforce the adjudicator’s determination as a judgment. The application is summary in nature and requires filing the determination itself, evidence of non-compliance and a supporting affidavit. Courts are expected to uphold valid determinations unless limited statutory grounds for challenge (such as jurisdictional error or fraud) are established.
Project managers should implement four actions immediately: update payment claim templates to comply with Cap. 652; establish an internal notice log tracking all claim and schedule deadlines; run a clause audit on active subcontracts to identify non-compliant terms; and brief the commercial team on the adjudication and suspension workflow, including the prescribed notice periods.

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Hong Kong Construction Law Changes 2026, What Contractors, Subcontractors and Owners Must Do Now

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