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Hong Kong travel bubble: all you need to know about flights, tests, costs

Hong Kong travel bubble: all you need to know about flights, tests, costs

From November 22, Singapore and Hong Kong will launch quarantine-free travel on Singapore Airlines and Cathay Pacific.
When will the travel bubble start?


Flight numbers for the designated travel bubble flights will be SQ890 and CX734 for the Singapore-Hong Kong route and SQ891 and CX759 for the Hong Kong-Singapore route.

Quarantine-free travel on designated flights between both air hubs begins on Sunday, November 22, with Singapore Airlines operating one flight (SQ890) to Hong Kong and Cathay Pacific operating one flight (CX759) to Singapore that day.

From November 23 to 29, Singapore Airlines will operate SQ890 and SQ891 on Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Sunday, and Cathay Pacific will do so for CX734 and CX759 on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday.

For the week of November 30 to December 6, Singapore Airlines will have flights on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, while Cathay will have flights on Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday.

From December 7 onwards, there will be daily flights by both airlines.

The daily quota of passengers travelling each way will be 200 from November 22 to December 6. From December 7 onwards, this will be doubled to 400 passengers.



Who is eligible?


Any person who has remained in Singapore or Hong Kong two weeks before their departure is eligible to travel under the arrangement. They will need to test negative for Covid-19 once using a PCR test in Singapore and twice in Hong Kong. They should expect to spend about HK$1,889 (S$328) in total per person on testing.

Tests in Singapore cost about HK$1,150 (S$200), while in Hong Kong, it costs HK$240 at testing centres, and HK$499 at the airport for post-arrival tests.

As per Hong Kong’s request, those who are work permit or S-pass holders in Singapore working in the construction, marine shipyard or process sectors are not eligible for the travel bubble. Transport minister Ong Ye Kung had earlier said that Hong Kong authorities were particularly concerned with this group of workers. Many live in dormitories and make up about 94 per cent of Singapore’s total infections.

Travellers departing Hong Kong (except Singapore citizens, permanent residents and long-term pass holders) need to apply for an air travel pass between seven and 30 calendar days before entering Singapore. Applications would start on November 12, 8am, and can be accessed here. Long-term pass holders still need to apply for an approval letter for entry.


Hong Kong-based travellers aged 12 or younger are exempted from a PCR test.


Travellers are also expected to download Singapore’s contact tracing app TraceTogether before arrival and to keep it activated during the trip.

Travellers departing Singapore need to submit a health declaration form in advance and book their PCR test to be done at Hong Kong International Airport.

How can travellers take the three Covid-19 tests?


Hong Kong-based travellers

Travellers must take a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test within 72 hours before their departure. They can take their test at one of the government-recognised clinics, testing centres, or testing institutions in Hong Kong. The list can be found here. They can also do the test at four community testing services for HK$240; an online booking service is available for Hong Kong residents, while non-residents can walk-in to take the test.

Children aged 12 or younger do not need to take this test to enter Singapore.

Upon arrival in Singapore, travellers do not have to take another test.

Before leaving Singapore for home, the traveller would have to take a second PCR test, again within 72 hours of the flight, at one of the 400 or so clinics or testing centres listed here.

However, if the duration of the Singapore trip is less than 72 hours from the time of the first test done in Hong Kong, travellers are exempted from this second test.

Upon arrival in Hong Kong, the traveller would have to take a third test at the airport and wait for about four hours for the result. The test can be booked here.


Singapore-based travellers must submit a health declaration to Hong Kong authorities and take their first PCR test within 72 hours before their flight.


Singapore-based travellers


Travellers must submit a health declaration to Hong Kong authorities and take their first PCR test within 72 hours before their flight.

Travellers departing Singapore before December 1 would need to apply for approval to take a PCR test at least seven days before their flight. They would need a confirmed flight ticket to Hong Kong in order to apply, and can make the application here.

Those departing after November 30 can take the test at one of these 400 or so clinics or testing centres.

They must take their second PCR test at the Hong Kong International Airport and wait for negative results. The test can be booked here.

Then, they have to take their third test within 72 hours before their return to Singapore at one of Hong Kong’s recognised clinics or testing centres, a list of which can be found here. They can also go to four community testing centres, where the test will cost HK$240.

Children aged 12 or younger are exempted from this test.

Travellers do not need to take another test upon their return to Singapore.


Quarantine-free travel on designated flights between both air hubs begins on November 22, 2020.


What does the quota mean for travellers?


Singapore Airlines already operates daily flights to and from Hong Kong. Flights on the days the airline is operating bubble flights will be redesignated as a bubble flight while the rest will operate as non-bubble flights. Bookings can be made on the airline’s website. Those not eligible to be part of the travel bubble, such as transit passengers, will be assigned to a flight operated by Singapore Airlines subsidiary Scoot.

Cathay Pacific has automatically rebooked travellers with existing reservations onto designated bubble flights. Customers on other flights have the option to move to the quarantine-free service if they are eligible.

Singapore Airlines customers with existing bookings will be notified by the airline if their flight has been designated as a bubble flight. The airline said its customer service representatives will reach out to travellers to provide the necessary assistance.

A check on Singapore Airlines website on Wednesday morning found that round-trip bubble flights were selling between S$557.80 (HK$3,210) to S$1,204. Cathay Pacific website shows flights selling from HK$2,951 (S$513) to HK$3,391.


If Covid-19 cases rise, the Singapore-Hong Kong travel bubble will be suspended for two weeks.

What could ‘burst’ the bubble?


Singapore and Hong Kong’s coronavirus cases are low, right now, averaging single digits in recent days and mostly from returning residents.

If Covid-19 cases rise, the travel bubble will be suspended for two weeks.

The marker for suspension would be if the seven-day average of the daily number of unlinked Covid-19 cases is more than five in either Singapore or Hong Kong. The suspension will be lifted if, on the last day of suspension, the seven-day moving average of the daily number of unlinked cases is five or below.

Singapore’s transport minister Ong Ye Kung said that both sides are working “really hard” to make sure that the travel bubble would not be suspended. But if there is a need to due to clusters of infections, there would be procedures for travellers who have booked their flights to defer their travel until infections are under control and when the bubble is restarted again.

Cathay Pacific has said it will rebook passengers on non-travel bubble flights where regular quarantine procedures will apply. Singapore Airlines said it would “adhere to the guidance of the regulators” and notify customers accordingly.

Travellers will need to wear masks and comply with health regulations in both cities. Singapore authorities say those who fall ill will need to bear the full cost of medical treatment.

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