{"id":136298,"date":"2026-04-06T14:02:50","date_gmt":"2026-04-06T14:02:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/my.legal500.com\/guides\/?post_type=hot_topics&#038;p=136298"},"modified":"2026-04-07T14:11:25","modified_gmt":"2026-04-07T14:11:25","slug":"the-gig-economy-and-remote-work-in-hong-kong-what-employers-need-to-know-in-2026","status":"publish","type":"hot_topics","link":"https:\/\/my.legal500.com\/guides\/hot-topic\/the-gig-economy-and-remote-work-in-hong-kong-what-employers-need-to-know-in-2026\/","title":{"rendered":"The Gig Economy and Remote Work in Hong Kong: What Employers Need to Know in 2026"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>Introduction: A Structural Shift in How Hong Kong Works<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Hong Kong\u2019s labour market has been transformed in the past decade by two mutually reinforcing forces: the rise of digital platforms and the normalisation of remote work.<\/p>\n<p>Platform-based \u201cgigs,\u201d especially in food delivery, logistics, domestic services and ride-hailing, have created new pathways into work. Digital platforms have enabled on-demand, task-based work that is highly flexible and algorithmically managed. Although there is no established definition of a \u201cgig worker\u201d in Hong Kong employment law, a clear pattern has emerged: short-term, episodic tasks mediated by apps, often priced by the job, with workers able to toggle \u201con\u201d and \u201coff\u201d as they choose (or as platform incentives encourage).<\/p>\n<p>Remote work has untethered knowledge workers and certain professionals from traditional offices and, in many cases, from the city itself. Such arrangements were once atypical; however, remote or hybrid models are now widely considered by employers, employees and job applicants. As a result, employers may now find themselves managing staff both in Hong Kong and overseas, with data, devices and workflows spanning borders.<\/p>\n<p>Whether engaging riders via an app or allowing staff to work from a beach resort in Phuket, several issues recur:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Employment status classification drives rights and liabilities. In Hong Kong, employee status triggers core protections under the Employment Ordinance, the Mandatory Provident Fund Schemes Ordinance, the Minimum Wage Ordinance and compulsory employees\u2019 compensation insurance. Independent contractors do not receive these protections &#8211; unless a court finds the arrangement is, in substance, employment;<\/li>\n<li>Workers in non-standard arrangements, while enjoying flexibility, often lack statutorily mandated pay floors, paid leave, injury compensation and retirement benefits, the costs and risks of which were traditionally borne by employers;<\/li>\n<li>How platforms allocate tasks and price work, and how employers monitor productivity remotely (including whether company resources and benefits are being abused), raise fairness, transparency and privacy questions;<\/li>\n<li>Remote work undertaken in a different jurisdiction can raise tax residence, payroll withholding, MPF and social security obligations, and even create permanent establishment risks. Immigration and work authorisation may be implicated if services are physically rendered outside Hong Kong.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>This article discusses the key legal issues in Hong Kong employment law for two groups at the heart of this transition \u2014 gig workers and remote employees \u2014 and sets out pragmatic steps for employers to remain compliant while maintaining operational flexibility. The growth of these models challenges assumptions embedded in the legal framework, which was designed for standard, continuous employment in a fixed workplace.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Part One \u2013 Gig Workers<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Who Are \u201cGig Workers\u201d in Hong Kong?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>There is no statutory definition in Hong Kong law, although the commonly recognised features include:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>On-demand, short-duration tasks, paid by output (for example, per order or ride);<\/li>\n<li>Matching and payment mediated by a digital platform;<\/li>\n<li>High scheduling flexibility; zero hour arrangements may be used, under which principals are under no obligation to offer work and individuals are under no obligation to accept it;<\/li>\n<li>Individuals typically supply their own tools (e.g., vehicle and phone) and may \u201cmulti app\u201d (work for several platforms simultaneously).<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Publicly reported statistics in recent years have estimated that there may be as many as 700,000 gig workers in the city. Food delivery and passenger transport are the most visible segments, with government sources estimating about 114,000 riders and drivers in 2023. Participation is growing and diversifying, extending to private tutors, hourly staff at exhibitions, events and restaurants, and content creators on social media.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Employee or Independent Contractor? The Test in Hong Kong<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Classification is fundamental because employee status brings statutory rights. Labels in standard form contracts (e.g., \u201cindependent contractor\u201d) are relevant but not conclusive. Hong Kong courts apply an \u201coverall impression\u201d approach, considering multiple factors and how the relationship operates in practice. The leading authority is the Court of Final Appeal\u2019s decision in Poon Chau Nam v Yim Siu Cheung (2007) 10 HKCFAR 156. Factors typically weighed include:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Control: Who sets rates, work methods, schedules and performance standards?<\/li>\n<li>Provision of tools and equipment: Who provides essential gear?<\/li>\n<li>Delegation\/substitution: Can the individual send a substitute?<\/li>\n<li>Financial risk and opportunity for profit: Who bears operating expenses and business risk? Can the individual profit from effective management of their work?<\/li>\n<li>Integration: Is the individual part and parcel of the putative employer\u2019s business?<\/li>\n<li>Tax, employees\u2019 compensation insurance and MPF responsibilities;<\/li>\n<li>How the parties characterise the relationship;<\/li>\n<li>The traditional structure of the trade and the arrangements within it.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Applying these factors to platform work can be complex. Flexibility and self supplied equipment point toward independent contractor status. Conversely, platform imposed standards, algorithmic performance management, uniform requirements and restrictions on client contact point the other way. The allocation of tasks, ratings based discipline and incentives to accept or cancel orders can function as \u201ccontrol,\u201d even if effected algorithmically and without a human supervisor.<\/p>\n<p>Each case turns on its facts. In recent years, both workers and platforms have prevailed in different cases:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Zeek case: In Cheung Ka Yan &amp; Ors v Kin Shun Information Technology (Hong Kong) Ltd &amp; Ors (unreported, LBTC 3170\/2022, 29 May 2023), six couriers successfully claimed in the Labour Tribunal for outstanding wages and benefits. The Tribunal found they were employees because the platform set specific delivery routes and locations, penalised riders for refusing orders, and prohibited them from working for competitors. In summary the control exercised meant the claimants were employees. This was reported as the first ruling to classify gig couriers as employees due to the platform\u2019s high degree of control over routes and pay<\/li>\n<li>\u00a0Deliveroo case: In Gurung, Sanjayaman v Deliveroo Hong Kong Ltd [2024] HKDC 1932, a rider injured in a traffic accident sought statutory employees\u2019 compensation. The claim was struck out because the court ruled he was a contractor. Unlike in Zeek, this rider was at liberty to accept or decline any order, could appoint a substitute to perform the work, was free to take whatever routes he wanted and provided his own equipment (motorcycle and phone). Therefore there was insufficient control exercised over him to make the relationship one of employment.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Comparative developments such as the UK Supreme Court\u2019s recognition of Uber drivers as \u201cworkers\u201d (entitling them to basic labour rights), Spain\u2019s presumption of employment for riders, and EU proposals for a rebuttable presumption where platforms meet defined control indicators show a global trend toward rebalancing control and responsibility. While Hong Kong continues to apply the Poon Chau Nam framework, no appellate court has yet addressed platform classification head on in a platform case. In the meantime, some voices in the community have urged statutory clarity, either by introducing a third type of status with partial rights or by otherwise modernising the rules, while being mindful of compliance costs for businesses.<\/p>\n<p><strong>What Rights Do Gig Workers Have (and Not Have) Today?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Rights turn on whether an individual is an \u201cemployee\u201d or an \u201cindependent contractor.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Employees are covered by, among others:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Employment Ordinance: wages, restrictions on wage deductions and statutory holidays; additional entitlements (paid leave, sickness allowance, severance\/long service, rest days) require a \u201ccontinuous contract\u201d;<\/li>\n<li>Minimum Wage Ordinance;<\/li>\n<li>Employees\u2019 Compensation Ordinance: compulsory insurance and compensation for injuries arising out of and in the course of employment;<\/li>\n<li>Mandatory Provident Fund Schemes Ordinance;<\/li>\n<li>Occupational Safety and Health Ordinance;<\/li>\n<li>Factories and Industrial Undertakings Ordinance.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Independent contractors do not enjoy these protections. In practice, most platforms in Hong Kong engage riders and drivers on contractor terms. Companies may offer limited accident insurance and other support as a matter of policy, but compared with the Employees\u2019 Compensation Ordinance requirements, there remain significant gaps in coverage and compensation levels.<\/p>\n<p>Contracted platform workers commonly face:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Unpredictable incomes, downward pressure on piece rates, and incentives that reward high acceptance rates and speed;<\/li>\n<li>Absorption of business costs (fuel, maintenance, device\/data plans), fines, and downtime risks (e.g., vehicle repair or account suspension);<\/li>\n<li>Lack of paid leave, sickness pay and retirement benefits;<\/li>\n<li>Little visibility into how algorithms allocate work or evaluate performance.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p><strong>Key Risks to Employers Engaging Gig Workers<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Even where a platform model appears suitable for a particular business, employers should not lose sight of potential legal and reputational risks, including:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Misclassification: If a court finds a contract for services is, in substance, a contract of service, the company could face back pay for minimum wage shortfalls and unpaid statutory entitlements, MPF contribution arrears with surcharges and penalties, and liabilities and penalties under the Employees\u2019 Compensation Ordinance so there are significant civil and criminal repercussions;<\/li>\n<li>Vicarious liability and negligence: If individuals are held to be employees, employers may owe a common law duty to provide a safe system and place of work, competent staff and adequate equipment, with exposure for accidents;<\/li>\n<li>Immigration compliance: If riders or drivers are on visas with restricted work conditions, platforms risk sanctions if they knowingly engage ineligible workers and employing illegal workers is a particularly serious criminal offence in Hong Kong punished with custodial sentences;<\/li>\n<li>Industrial action and reputational harm: Hong Kong has seen incidents of rider protests around pay, order allocation and waiting time compensation policies. The 2021 Foodpanda strike drew public attention and led to negotiated concessions, while exposing how quickly industrial action can disrupt services;<\/li>\n<li>Stability of services: Imposing overly restrictive constraints to deter contractors from serving multiple apps can reduce the overall supply of riders, harming service stability and quality and drawing criticism from competitors, riders and customers alike;<\/li>\n<li>Algorithmic management and fairness: Opaque app behaviours and the absence of a human in the loop for significant automated decisions can trigger complaints and disputes.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p><strong>Practical Steps and the Way Forward for Employers<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Pending any legislative reform to formalise protections for gig workers, employers can manage risk by:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Aligning contracts and operations with the intended legal model. Preserve genuine flexibility to accept or refuse work and, where feasible, permit multi platform work. Focus on service outcomes rather than methods. Clarify that individuals are responsible for supplying their own equipment and bearing operating costs;<\/li>\n<li>Ensuring performance metrics and automated actions are necessary, proportionate and appealable, and providing clear information to help individuals understand, in principle, how ratings and allocations work;<\/li>\n<li>Providing accident insurance cover with suitable limits even for contractors and considering mechanisms to stabilise income;<\/li>\n<li>Establishing accessible and effective channels for feedback and grievance resolution;<\/li>\n<li>Monitoring local and global trends and planning for potential legislative changes on workers\u2019 rights and protections, platform responsibilities and algorithmic transparency.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>The Hong Kong government has signalled an intention to address the welfare and protection of gig workers. For instance, as announced in the Chief Executive\u2019s 2025 Policy Address, the administration plans to improve the work injury compensation mechanism for digital platform workers through legislation to protect those providing food and goods delivery services. For platforms, business flexibility and manageable costs and risks remain key concerns. Employers should continue to monitor legal and industry trends and plan for any changes required to their operations.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Part Two \u2013 Remote Employees<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Who Are \u201cRemote Employees\u201d in the Hong Kong Context?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Remote employees in the Hong Kong context include:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Hybrid staff dividing time between home and office;<\/li>\n<li>Fully remote employees living in Hong Kong but never attending a workplace;<\/li>\n<li>Colleagues who \u201cwork from anywhere\u201d and may be temporarily or permanently working outside Hong Kong for a Hong Kong employer;<\/li>\n<li>Overseas hires working permanently in their home country for a Hong Kong entity. Or coming into Hong Kong from time to time to work.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Each model raises distinct issues in employment, privacy, tax, immigration and benefits.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Privacy vs Monitoring: Managing a Distributed Workplace Lawfully<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Hong Kong\u2019s Personal Data (Privacy) Ordinance (PDPO) governs how employers collect, use, store and transfer employees\u2019 personal data, regardless of where employees perform their tasks. When monitoring moves from the office to home networks and personal devices, boundaries can blur.<\/p>\n<p>Employers should regularly review systems and policies to ensure they collect and monitor only what is necessary for legitimate purposes (e.g., information security, attendance verification, compliance) and use the least intrusive means reasonably available. Monitoring data should be segregated from general HR files and access restricted. Clear, accessible monitoring notices covering the types of monitoring (e.g., device management, log ins, screen capture tools, GPS), purposes, data retention periods and access rights should be provided and brought to employees\u2019 attention.<\/p>\n<p>Where personal devices are allowed, adopt a clear Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) policy that limits employer access to personal content on the employee\u2019s device. For company devices used at home, mandate encryption, up to date patches and safe use protocols.<\/p>\n<p>If employers use automated tools to monitor productivity that could affect employment outcomes (e.g., performance ratings or bonus determinations), there should always be human review and an appeal mechanism. The use of monitoring software should be disclosed to employees.<\/p>\n<p>If remote employees work outside Hong Kong, personal data is likely to flow across borders. Although section 33 of the PDPO (on cross border transfers) is not yet in operation, it is prudent to obtain contractual safeguards ensuring comparable protection and to inform employees of overseas processing.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Tax: Where Is the Work Performed?<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Hong Kong salaries tax is territorial. For employees, the Inland Revenue Department focuses on the locality of employment and, in many cases, the location where services are rendered.<\/p>\n<p>Where an employee performs services outside Hong Kong, the corresponding portion of income may be offshore sourced and not chargeable to Hong Kong salaries tax. However, the IRD looks at the totality of facts. It is important to keep contemporaneous records of days in and out of Hong Kong, and of where services are performed.<\/p>\n<p>The host jurisdiction in which the employee performs services may also assert taxing rights, regardless of where the employer is based. Many countries have payroll withholding and social security obligations for locally performed work or require labour law compliance if any staff work there \u2013 even from home.<\/p>\n<p>From an employer\u2019s perspective, a remote employee who habitually concludes contracts, or who plays a principal role in doing so, may create a permanent establishment risk for the Hong Kong employer in the host jurisdiction, triggering corporate tax exposure.<\/p>\n<p>The consequences of approving remote work abroad can be far reaching. Employers should obtain local advice on tax, social security, labour law and immigration in the host jurisdiction, and put in place approval processes that consider these factors on a case by case basis. Unauthorised overseas remote work should be strictly prohibited.<\/p>\n<p><strong>MPF, Benefits and Policy Alignment<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Mandatory Provident Fund (MPF) contributions generally apply to Hong Kong employment. For staff working outside Hong Kong, they may still be covered by MPF if they are employed in or from Hong Kong, unless exemptions apply. The key question is whether there is sufficient connection between Hong Kong and the employment, assessed case by case.<\/p>\n<p>Under section 40 of the Employees\u2019 Compensation Ordinance, an employer must maintain a policy of insurance to cover its liabilities (including under the common law) for injuries at work in respect of all employees, irrespective of contract length, working hours, or full time\/part time status. Hong Kong employees working from home are still \u201cat work\u201d when performing duties and must be covered. Employers should review policy wording for territorial scope and home working coverage. For overseas remote work, local workers\u2019 compensation or employer\u2019s liability insurance may be needed.<\/p>\n<p>The duty to provide a safe system of work remains, even where employees work from home or a location of their choice. Employers should issue home working guidelines, conduct virtual risk assessments where appropriate, and support ergonomic setups.<\/p>\n<p>For remote staff working outside Hong Kong, employers should adopt a clear policy on benefit entitlements (such as medical cover and leave) and obtain local legal advice to ensure compliance with mandatory minimums.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Managing Risks for Employers with Remote Staff<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Summarizing the matters discussed above, we identify the following core areas of risks in relation to remote staff, and suggest the following measures to be taken to reduce the employers\u2019 exposure:<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>Unintended tax and regulatory footprints abroad: A single remote worker can trigger corporate registration, tax and employment law obligations in a host jurisdiction. Conditions and restrictions should be imposed to ensure overseas employees do not undertake client negotiation, contract execution or local advertising, to mitigate permanent establishment risk.<\/li>\n<li>Immigration breaches: Working while on holiday abroad can breach visitor visa conditions or lack work authorisation, exposing the employee and employer to penalties. Where possible, limit overseas work to short periods in permitted jurisdictions, with pre approval requirements.<\/li>\n<li>Employment law mismatch: Applying Hong Kong policies to a worker physically performing services elsewhere may run afoul of mandatory local rules (e.g., working time, leave, termination protections). Long term overseas work should require case by case assessment (tax, social security, employment law, immigration, insurance) and local counsel input.<\/li>\n<li>Data security and confidentiality: Home environments and mixed use devices are often vulnerable to security threats. Implement enhanced IT controls for access to and use of personal or sensitive data, customer information and trade secrets.<\/li>\n<li>Other labour disputes: Excessive or overreaching monitoring can generate mistrust and privacy complaints. Different performance criteria and benefits can also give rise to disputes. Employers should adopt clear, upfront remote work policies on expectations, hours, availability and expense reimbursement, aligned with PDPO and health and safety duties. Contracts and handbooks should include location of work clauses, monitoring notices, confidentiality and data protection obligations, and a right to require a return to the office.<\/li>\n<li>Remotely employed staff will come into Hong Kong from time to time for meetings and work. Rudimentary business related activities like concluding contracts or submitting tenders, attending short-term seminars or business meetings, participating in product orientation, and so on are permitted on entering Hong Kong as a visitor. Anything else will require the remotely employed staff to have an employment visa to come into the jurisdiction and work here and breaching the foregoing can lead to the criminal offence known as breaching their conditions of stay which is punishable with up to 2 years imprisonment for the employee and the employer committing the offence of employing illegal workers. Where this has been a significant issue in recent times concerns cryptocurrency businesses which Hong Kong is embracing while in the People\u2019s Republic of China there are bans with crypto activity. Many people come across the border daily or weekly in the sector but do have the requisite employment visas allowing them to legally do so.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p><strong>Conclusion \u2013 The Way Forward: The \u201c4\u201368\u201d Reform and What\u2019s Next<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Both gig and remote models are becoming increasingly prevalent in today\u2019s economy. The common aim for all stakeholders is to preserve flexibility while ensuring work remains fair, safe and sustainable.<\/p>\n<p>The Employment (Amendment) Ordinance 2025 came into force on 18 January 2026. It introduced the new \u201c4\u201368\u201d rule, under which an employee who is employed under a contract of employment for a period of four or more weeks and has worked either (i) at least 17 hours in each week; or (ii) where they have worked fewer than 17 hours in any week, a total of 68 hours over the four week period, is regarded as being employed under a continuous contract for the purpose of qualifying for certain benefits and protections under the Employment Ordinance.<\/p>\n<p>This legislative change is expected to extend statutory Employment Ordinance benefits (e.g., paid leave, sickness allowance, rest days) to more workers who have a genuine attachment to an employer but uneven week to week work patterns. Employers are reminded of their wage and employment record retention obligations which will be key to determining who is and who is not within the \u201c4-68\u201d rule.<\/p>\n<p>Beyond the \u201c4\u201368\u201d reform, employers and practitioners should continue to monitor proposed amendments to the statute as well as regulatory and industry developments. By auditing classifications, strengthening benefits and safety nets, and instituting clear remote work and data governance frameworks, employers can stay compliant amid change and turn flexibility into a durable competitive advantage.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"featured_media":0,"template":"","class_list":["post-136298","hot_topics","type-hot_topics","status-publish","hentry"],"acf":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/my.legal500.com\/guides\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/hot_topics\/136298","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/my.legal500.com\/guides\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/hot_topics"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/my.legal500.com\/guides\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/hot_topics"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/my.legal500.com\/guides\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=136298"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}