Our Expert in Hong Kong
No results available
For decades, the question of whether you could sue a foreign state in Hong Kong had a short and frustrating answer: in most circumstances, no. Hong Kong followed the doctrine of absolute sovereign immunity, shielding foreign states from the jurisdiction of local courts regardless of whether the underlying dispute was commercial or governmental in character. That position changed fundamentally when the PRC Foreign State Immunity Law (FSIL) took effect on 1 January 2024, replacing absolute immunity with a restrictive model that recognises a commercial‑exception to state immunity.
The Hong Kong Judiciary’s announcement on 28 May 2026, reinforcing the city’s push to become a premier hub for international commercial litigation, further signals that claimants, banks, creditors, trading houses, arbitration award‑holders and litigation funders, now have a realistic pathway to sue a foreign government in Hong Kong and, critically, to enforce the resulting judgment or award against commercial assets located in or passing through the jurisdiction.
TL;DR, Can you sue a foreign state in Hong Kong? Yes, in many commercial cases. If your claim arises from a commercial act (a private‑law transaction rather than a core sovereign function), and you can identify commercial assets against which to enforce, Hong Kong courts can and will exercise jurisdiction. Early asset‑tracing, meticulous pleading and a clear enforcement strategy are essential from day one.
Understanding why the law changed, and the constitutional framework within which it operates, is the starting point for any claimant considering whether to sue a foreign state in Hong Kong.
Before 2024, Hong Kong’s position on foreign state immunity was governed by the common law as shaped by PRC state practice. Unlike the United Kingdom (which adopted restrictive immunity through the State Immunity Act 1978) or the United States (which enacted the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act in 1976), Hong Kong’s courts applied a doctrine of absolute immunity. A foreign state could not be sued in Hong Kong regardless of the nature of the dispute, even if the claim arose from a straightforward commercial contract for the supply of goods or the financing of a sovereign wealth fund’s investment portfolio.
This absolute position was anchored in the Basic Law. Article 19(3) of the Basic Law provides that the courts of Hong Kong shall have no jurisdiction over acts of state such as defence and foreign affairs. The practical effect was that Hong Kong courts, even when presented with plainly commercial disputes, deferred to the executive branch’s certification that immunity should apply. Academic commentary, including scholarship from HKU, has explored how this interaction between judicial restraint and executive certification shaped the boundaries of the rule‑of‑law principle in the SAR’s first quarter‑century.
The FSIL, promulgated by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, marked a watershed. For the first time, PRC law, and by extension, the legal framework applicable in Hong Kong, adopted a restrictive approach to foreign state immunity. The FSIL’s central innovation is the commercial‑exception: a foreign state does not enjoy immunity in respect of proceedings arising from commercial activities. The law also codifies exceptions for personal injury and property damage on PRC territory, employment contracts, intellectual‑property disputes and arbitration agreements, but for most cross‑border creditors and trading counterparties, it is the commercial exception that matters.
Because Hong Kong’s legal system operates under “one country, two systems,” the FSIL does not automatically form part of SAR law in the same way as a local ordinance. However, the Hong Kong government confirmed that the SAR would adopt the commercial‑activities exception in line with national policy. Industry observers expect that Hong Kong courts will interpret the commercial exception consistently with international norms, drawing on persuasive authority from UK, US and UN Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities case law.
On 28 May 2026, the Hong Kong Judiciary announced a suite of measures to strengthen international commercial litigation in the city, including initiatives related to the proposed Hong Kong International Commercial Court (HKICC). While the announcement covers procedural modernisation broadly, its timing and substance reinforce a clear message: Hong Kong is positioning itself as a credible and efficient forum for complex cross‑border disputes, including claims against foreign states and state‑owned enterprises.
| Date | Instrument / Announcement | Effect for Claimants |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2024 | PRC Foreign State Immunity Law (FSIL) enters into force | Replaces absolute immunity with restrictive model; commercial‑exception claims now permissible in PRC and HK courts |
| September 2023 | Leading law‑firm alerts (Reed Smith, Hogan Lovells) signal HK adoption of commercial exception | Early practical guidance for contract drafting, dispute‑resolution clauses and enforcement planning |
| 28 May 2026 | Hong Kong Judiciary announcement on international commercial litigation and HKICC initiatives | HK strengthens procedural infrastructure for complex cross‑border claims, enhanced signalling to claimants and arbitral parties |
The commercial exception to state immunity is the gateway through which most creditors, banks and trading counterparties will seek to sue a foreign state in Hong Kong. Understanding what the test requires, and how to plead and prove it, is the single most important tactical question in this type of litigation.
Under the restrictive‑immunity framework now applicable in Hong Kong, a foreign state will not enjoy immunity from jurisdiction where the proceedings relate to a commercial activity. The key factors courts will consider include:
The distinction between commercial and sovereign acts is the battleground where most immunity disputes are won or lost. The following classification, drawn from international practice and anticipated to guide Hong Kong courts, provides practical orientation:
| Likely Commercial (Exception Applies) | Likely Sovereign (Immunity Preserved) |
|---|---|
| Contracts for the supply of goods or services | Legislative or regulatory acts |
| Loan agreements, bond issuances and guarantees | Military operations and procurement for defence |
| Charterparties and shipping contracts | Diplomatic and consular functions |
| Joint‑venture and investment agreements | Immigration and border control decisions |
| Employment contracts for locally engaged staff | Nationalisation and expropriation decrees |
| Insurance and reinsurance policies | Tax assessment and collection |
| Construction and engineering contracts | Grant or refusal of sovereign concessions |
When framing a statement of claim, practitioners should include allegations that directly map onto each element of the commercial exception. A well‑pleaded case might include paragraphs along these lines:
Successfully suing a foreign state in Hong Kong requires not only a meritorious commercial claim but also careful procedural execution. Missteps in service, timing or evidence can hand the defendant a jurisdictional exit.
The affidavit opposing the state’s immunity application is the most tactically important document in the early stages. It should exhibit:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ronald Tong at Ronald Tong & Co, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Assembling the right evidence early is critical. The following checklist is designed for in‑house counsel and external solicitors preparing to sue a foreign state in Hong Kong or to resist an immunity motion.
Preservation tip: Issue litigation‑hold notices to all relevant custodians as soon as a dispute is contemplated. State entities may be slow to preserve documents, or may actively seek to relocate assets. Early engagement of forensic‑accounting and asset‑tracing specialists is strongly recommended.
Red flags to watch for: Sudden restructuring or transfer of assets out of the jurisdiction, changes in the corporate identity of the counterparty, attempts to reclassify the transaction as a sovereign act (e.g., characterising a commercial loan as “state development finance”), or assertions of diplomatic status by personnel of commercial SOEs.
Obtaining a judgment or award against a foreign state is only half the battle. The practical question that matters most to creditors is: can you enforce against state assets in Hong Kong? The answer depends on whether the assets are commercial in nature and on the enforcement route chosen.
Claimants seeking to enforce a judgment in Hong Kong should systematically investigate the following categories of state‑connected assets:
A crucial distinction that practitioners must keep in mind: even after a court has determined that it has jurisdiction over the foreign state (because the commercial exception applies), the state may still invoke execution immunity to protect certain categories of property from enforcement. Execution immunity is narrower in scope under the FSIL framework, but it remains a significant hurdle. Industry observers expect Hong Kong courts to follow international practice and permit execution only against assets used for, or allocated to, commercial purposes, not against central‑bank reserves, diplomatic property or military assets.
Claimants frequently face a choice: should they pursue their claim through arbitration (typically HKIAC, ICC or SIAC seated in Hong Kong) or through the Hong Kong courts directly? Where a foreign state is the counterparty, the decision carries additional enforcement implications. For a deeper discussion of arbitration hearing preparation and conduct, see our separate guide.
| Factor | Arbitration (HKIAC / ICC / SIAC) | Hong Kong Courts |
|---|---|---|
| Enforceability | Award enforceable in 170+ New York Convention states; strong cross‑border portability | Judgment enforceable domestically; cross‑border enforcement requires reciprocal arrangements or common‑law action |
| Speed | Typically 12–18 months; expedited procedures available | 18–36 months to trial; summary judgment may shorten timeline |
| Interim relief | Emergency arbitrator + court support under Arbitration Ordinance, s. 45 | Full range of court interim remedies (Mareva, Anton Piller, disclosure orders) |
| Confidentiality | Proceedings typically confidential | Proceedings generally public |
| Immunity risk | Arbitration agreement treated as waiver of jurisdictional immunity; execution immunity still applies to non‑commercial assets | Commercial exception must be positively pleaded and proved; broader judicial scrutiny of immunity arguments |
| Cost | Institutional fees plus party costs; comparable to court litigation for complex claims | Court fees plus party costs; potential recovery of costs if successful |
Practical recommendation: Where the contract includes an arbitration clause, commence arbitration, the arbitration agreement itself significantly reduces immunity risk. Where no arbitration clause exists, Hong Kong court proceedings may be the only option, but the claimant must be prepared for a contested immunity motion.
Claimants should be clear‑eyed about the obstacles that remain, even under the new restrictive‑immunity framework. Common defendant strategies and friction points include:
Before commencing proceedings, work through the following six‑point checklist to assess whether your claim is viable and enforceable:
The ability to sue a foreign state in Hong Kong is no longer theoretical. The FSIL’s commercial exception, reinforced by Hong Kong’s 2026 institutional reforms, gives creditors a credible and enforceable pathway, provided the claim is prepared with precision, the evidence is assembled early and the enforcement strategy is built into the litigation plan from the outset.
posted 21 minutes ago
posted 46 minutes ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
posted 8 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message