Hong Kong to offer buy-outs for flats damaged in deadly fire

Hong Kong authorities announced on Saturday a buy-out offer for owners who lost their homes in last year's deadly housing complex fire, rather than rebuilding the charred apartment blocks as some residents had hoped for.

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Firemen get ready after a major fire swept through several apartment blocks at the Wang Fuk Court residential estate in Hong Kong's Tai Po district on November 27, 2025. Hong Kong firefighters were scouring a still-burning apartment complex for hundreds of missing people on November 27, a day after the blaze tore through the high-rises, killing at least 44. Dale DE LA REY / AFP

2026-02-21 17:50:55

Hong Kong authorities announced on Saturday a buy-out offer for owners who lost their homes in last year's deadly housing complex fire, rather than rebuilding the charred apartment blocks as some residents had hoped for. 

The blaze, the world's deadliest residential building fire since 1980, killed 168 people and left thousands homeless in November at Wang Fuk Court, a high-rise apartment complex in northern Hong Kong.

Displaced residents have urged the government to come up with resettlement options, with some expressing hopes for the estate to be rebuilt.

Deputy Financial Secretary Michael Wong said Hong Kong authorities will spend up to HK$6.8 billion ($870 million) to acquire property titles from flat owners, either in cash or as part of a flat swap.

"The scale of the disaster is unprecedented, and currently there is no effective market mechanism to assist affected households," Wong said at a press conference.

Just over 1,700 owners would receive an offer of between $441,000 to $650,000, depending on their flat's size.

Wong said the fire was a "special case of an exceptional nature" that warranted government intervention to avoid the flats becoming worthless.

Wong said it was "not appropriate" to rebuild the complex because it would take at least nine years and instead would be torn down to build a park or other community facilities on the site.

Seven of the estate's eight towers suffered "irreversible" internal damage in the fire, while one building was left largely unscathed.

Only nine percent of flat owners surveyed insisted on redevelopment on the same site as the only option, Wong added.

The buybacks will use an estimated $510 million in taxpayer money, with the rest coming from a relief fund.

© Agence France-Presse