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The standard form construction contract Hong Kong industry participants have relied on for nearly two decades has been replaced: the new Standard Form of Building Contract 2025 edition was officially launched on 6 January 2026, overhauling clauses on programme management, interim payments, variations and retention across both the main contract and nominated sub-contract suites. Coinciding with amendments to the building construction regulation framework under the Buildings Ordinance and the growing momentum behind the Construction Industry Security of Payment Ordinance (CISPO), 2026 is the most significant year for contractual reform in Hong Kong’s private-sector construction market since the mid-2000s.
Contractors, building owners and their advisers now face a compressed window to redline live contracts, reset payment workflows and prepare adjudication-ready documentation, or risk disputes, delayed certifications and regulatory non-compliance.
The following highlights capture the core changes that every construction law practitioner and project stakeholder in Hong Kong should understand immediately.
The new standard form construction contract Hong Kong practitioners now use did not emerge in isolation. It is the product of coordinated reform across multiple professional bodies and government bureaux, responding to long-standing industry concerns about payment security, programme transparency and procurement modernisation.
| Date | Action | Who must act |
|---|---|---|
| 29 August 2025 | HKIS publishes pre-launch draft of the new main contract conditions | Quantity surveyors, contract administrators, legal advisers, begin familiarisation |
| Late 2025 | HKIA announces the upcoming release of the new Standard Form of Building Contract suite | Architects, employers and their legal teams, plan contract transition |
| 6 January 2026 | Official launching ceremony for the new Standard Form of Building Contract 2025 edition | All parties to private building contracts, adopt new edition for new tenders |
| 23 January 2026 | DEVB updates the Library of Standard Additional Conditions of Contract (ACC) for NEC TSC contracts | Public works contractors and consultants using NEC forms, update ACC schedules |
| 4 May 2026 | HKICM CPD event: Introduction of the new standard form, nominated sub-contract and supply contract | Subcontractors, nominated suppliers, contract managers, attend training |
Hong Kong operates a dual-track procurement system. For public works projects valued above approximately HK$1 billion, the Development Bureau’s preferred form remains the NEC4 Engineering and Construction Contract, supplemented by Hong Kong-specific additional conditions of contract. The new standard form construction contract, by contrast, governs the private sector, covering residential, commercial and mixed-use building works procured on a traditional (design-bid-build) basis. Industry observers expect that private-sector employers who have historically relied on the 2005/2006 editions will need to transition to the 2025 edition for all new tenders issued from early 2026 onward, although the prior edition may continue to govern contracts already executed.
This section provides a practical, risk-focused overview of the most commercially significant amendments in Hong Kong’s new standard form construction contract. For each topic, the commercial risk and recommended redline actions are identified.
The 2025 edition introduces prescriptive obligations for the contractor to submit a detailed programme within a defined period after the contract is signed, and to update that programme at regular intervals. Float ownership, a perennial source of disputes under the old form, is now addressed more explicitly, with provisions directing how extensions of time interact with the contractor’s planned sequence.
The restructured interim payment provisions represent the most consequential change in the new standard form. Payment claim submission windows, the architect’s certification timeline and the employer’s pay-less-notice mechanism have all been tightened. The likely practical effect is to impose discipline on both sides: contractors must submit properly substantiated claims on time, and employers must issue certifications or pay-less notices within compressed deadlines or face liability for the full claimed amount.
The new form formalises the variation notice process. Architects must issue variation instructions in writing, and contractors must submit priced particulars within a defined notice window. The valuation hierarchy, rates in the bills of quantities, fair rates, daywork, remains broadly similar but with clearer sequencing rules and time-bar consequences.
Retention payments in Hong Kong have long been a contentious issue. The 2025 edition clarifies the release of the first moiety (typically upon practical completion) and the second moiety (upon expiry of the defects liability period), and, critically, provides express machinery for the contractor to substitute a retention bond in lieu of cash retention.
Translating the clause-level changes into operational workflows is where many projects will succeed or fail. This section provides an implementation framework for interim payments in Hong Kong and retention management under the new standard form.
The standard release structure under the new form typically involves two stages:
The Construction Industry Security of Payment Ordinance (CISPO) has introduced a statutory adjudication regime designed to ensure rapid resolution of payment disputes. Where a contract does not provide an adequate payment mechanism, back-up legislative provisions will apply, inserting compliant payment terms automatically. The new standard form has been drafted with awareness of this framework, but practitioners should still verify that each contract satisfies the “adequate payment mechanism” threshold to avoid the statutory defaults overriding bespoke terms.
| Step | Standard form timeline | CISPO statutory default |
|---|---|---|
| Payment claim submission | As specified in Appendix | End of each reference period |
| Payment response / certificate | Within days specified in Appendix | Within prescribed statutory period |
| Pay-less notice | Within days specified in Appendix | Within statutory window or lose right to withhold |
| Final date for payment | As specified in Appendix | Statutory fallback date |
| Right to refer to adjudication | Available after non-payment | Available at any time after payment dispute arises |
The interaction between the new standard form construction contract and Hong Kong’s CISPO adjudication regime creates both opportunities and risks for all project participants. Early indications suggest that payment disputes under the 2025 edition will be resolved more quickly, but only for parties who are prepared.
Successful adjudication depends on the quality of contemporaneous documentation. Contractors should assemble:
Employers should ensure their project teams understand the consequences of missed deadlines. A pay-less notice that is even one day late may render the employer liable for the full claimed sum pending adjudication. Industry observers expect that the compressed timelines in the new standard form will increase the number of adjudication referrals in the first 12 to 18 months after adoption, as parties adapt to the stricter notice regime.
Beyond contractual clauses, the 2026 regulatory environment demands attention to procurement documents and technical specifications that directly affect contract risk.
The government’s policy direction on phasing out bamboo scaffolding in Hong Kong in favour of metal scaffolding systems carries direct implications for contract specifications, subcontractor engagement and site safety obligations. Contracts drafted under the new standard form should:
The promotion of modular integrated construction in Hong Kong introduces procurement complexities around off-site manufacturing quality assurance, transportation logistics and on-site assembly interfaces. Contracts should address:
Proactive dispute avoidance is always more cost-effective than adjudication or litigation. Under the new standard form construction contract Hong Kong parties should implement the following practical measures:
The following ten-step checklist provides a structured path to compliance and best practice under Hong Kong’s new standard form.
For a detailed redline comparison and downloadable clause templates, consult our Hong Kong construction law changes resource.
| Entity type | Key new reporting / contract obligations | Typical compliance timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Public works contractor (DEVB NEC / NEC TSC variants) | Use DEVB practice notes and updated additional conditions of contract; comply with tighter interim valuation rules and contract-specific ACCs | Apply at tender stage; implement within first 28 days post-award |
| Private building owner / employer | Update standard form clauses on interim payments, retention release and health & safety specs (scaffolding / MiC) | Review contracts within 30–60 days of 6 January 2026 launch; urgent for live projects |
| Subcontractor / nominated supplier | Ensure back-to-back payment and CISPO-ready notice mechanisms; nominate security options (retention bond or escrow) | Review within current payment cycle; register claims promptly (within 28–35 days depending on contract) |
The 2026 reforms represent the most significant overhaul of the standard form construction contract Hong Kong has seen in two decades. Contractors, owners and their advisers who act early, redlining contracts, resetting payment workflows and building adjudication readiness, will be best positioned to avoid disputes and capitalise on the improved clarity the new regime offers. Those who delay risk exposure to compressed notice deadlines, statutory payment defaults under CISPO and procurement non-compliance as scaffolding and MiC requirements take hold. The time to act is now.
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.
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