Bond & Fixed Income Tax Specialist

Hong Kong Bond & Fixed Income Tax — Interest Income & Bond Trading Guide

Fixed income investing in Hong Kong spans Exchange Fund Bills, Government bonds, corporate bonds, and international debt securities. Understanding whether interest income is taxable, whether bond trading gains are capital or income, and how green bond incentives apply is essential for efficient fixed income portfolio management.

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S.26A(1A) IRO — Interest exemption on qualifying debt instruments
0% Tax on qualifying debt instrument interest
100% Green bond profits tax concession for qualifying issuers

Bond & Fixed Income Tax Specialist

Fixed income investing in Hong Kong spans Exchange Fund Bills, Government bonds, corporate bonds, and international debt securities. Understanding whether interest income is taxable, whether bond trading gains are capital or income, and how green bond incentives apply is essential for efficient fixed income portfolio management.

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⚠ Interest Exemption Has Specific Conditions — Not All Bonds Qualify

The profits tax exemption on interest from "qualifying debt instruments" (QDIs) under s.26A(1A) IRO requires the instrument to be registered with the HKMA. Not all bonds qualify — unregistered corporate bonds, foreign bonds, and certain structured notes are fully taxable on interest income. Verify QDI status before assuming exemption.

Common Challenges

Are you facing these tax issues?

Taxable vs Exempt Interest Income

Interest on Exchange Fund Bills/Notes and HKMA-registered QDIs is exempt. Interest on non-qualifying bonds is fully taxable profits. Many investors combine qualifying and non-qualifying bonds without separating the tax treatment.

⚠ Risk: Combining exempt and taxable interest → inaccurate tax return

Bond Trading Gains

Active bond traders (buying and selling before maturity) are likely treated as carrying on a business — making all gains taxable. Long-term bond investors holding to maturity are more likely to be treated as capital investors.

⚠ Risk: Trading classification → price gains on bond disposals become taxable

Green Bond Tax Incentives

Hong Kong has introduced specific tax concessions to attract green, social, and sustainability-linked bond issuance. Issuers and investors may benefit from specific incentives not available for conventional bonds.

⚠ Risk: Missing green bond incentives → failing to apply available concessions

Withholding Tax on Offshore Bonds

Interest received from bonds issued by non-HK entities may be subject to withholding tax in the issuer's country. HK's DTT network can reduce these costs but requires proactive planning.

⚠ Risk: Unplanned withholding tax → net yield significantly lower than expected
Who It's For

Who This Service Is For

Retail bond investors

Individual investors holding HK government retail bonds, corporate bonds, and exchange-traded bonds.

Fixed income fund managers

HK-based managers running bond funds or credit strategies.

Corporate bond issuers

Companies issuing green or conventional bonds seeking tax certainty on issuance costs.

Family office fixed income allocations

Family offices with substantial fixed income portfolios requiring consolidated tax reporting.

Our Services

What We Cover

QDI Status Review

Confirm which bonds in your portfolio qualify as QDIs under s.26A(1A) for interest exemption.

HKMA register search and eligibility analysis

Green Bond Tax Incentive Advisory

Advise on the application of green, social, and sustainability-linked bond tax concessions for issuers and investors.

Including profits tax concession and stamp duty exemption

Fixed Income Tax Return Preparation

Prepare profits tax or individual return with correct treatment of all fixed income income streams.

Exempt vs taxable interest, bond trading gains, accrued interest

Withholding Tax Recovery

Assist in recovering foreign withholding tax on bond interest via double tax treaty applications.

DTT reduced rate applications in relevant jurisdictions
How It Works

Simple, efficient, professional

1

Portfolio Review

Catalogue all bond holdings with QDI status, issuer domicile, and trading activity.

1-2 days
2

Income Classification

Separate exempt and taxable interest, determine capital vs trading treatment for bond gains.

1-2 days
3

Return Preparation

Prepare tax return with correctly classified fixed income income streams.

2-5 days
4

Annual Review

Annual filing plus portfolio review for changes in QDI status or trading pattern.

Annually
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Client Success Stories

Real results for real clients

Case Study

Family office — bond portfolio QDI review

HKD 260,000 Saved
  • HKD 80M fixed income portfolio
  • Mix of QDI and non-QDI bonds
  • Previously all interest reported as taxable
  • QDI portfolio identified: HKD 52M exempt
"The QDI segregation reduced our reportable interest income by two-thirds."
C
Verified Client Case Study
Case Study

Green bond issuer — profits tax concession

HKD 420,000 Saved
  • HKD 1.2B green bond issuance
  • Issuance costs: HKD 8.5M
  • Green bond profits tax concession applied
  • Additional deduction vs conventional bond treatment
"The green bond concession turned issuance costs into a tax advantage."
C
Verified Client Case Study
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FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

Quick answers to your questions

It depends on the bond. Interest from "qualifying debt instruments" (QDIs) registered with the HKMA under s.26A(1A) IRO is exempt from profits tax. This exemption covers Exchange Fund Bills and Notes, HKMA-registered corporate bonds, and most listed debt securities meeting the QDI criteria. Interest from non-qualifying bonds (many foreign bonds, unregistered corporate bonds) is fully taxable as business income if received in the course of a trade or business, or as other income for individuals.
If you hold bonds as a capital investment (long-term, held to maturity, passive investor), gains on disposal are generally not subject to HK profits tax (no CGT). If you actively trade bonds — buying and selling before maturity as a business — gains are likely taxable as trading profits. The distinction depends on your holding period, frequency of trading, and investment intent. Professional bond traders and active fixed income managers are almost always treated as trading.
Hong Kong has introduced specific incentives to attract green and sustainable bond issuance: (a) a profits tax concession for bond issuers on qualifying green bond issuance costs; (b) stamp duty concession on certain green bond transactions; and (c) government guarantees for green bond programmes. These incentives have been progressively expanded under successive budgets. The conditions and applicable incentive depend on whether the bond is certified under recognised green bond frameworks (e.g., HKQAA, ICMA Green Bond Principles).
HK Government retail bonds (e.g., Silver Bonds, iBonds) issued by the government are QDIs — interest received is exempt from profits tax. For individual investors, this interest is also not subject to salaries tax. These bonds are designed to be fully tax-free for retail investors. However, if you trade them before maturity and make a capital gain, the normal capital vs trading analysis applies.
When you buy a bond between coupon dates, you pay accrued interest (the portion of the next coupon accrued since the last payment). When you receive the full coupon, the accrued interest portion you paid is a cost that offsets the coupon income — you are only taxed on the net coupon accruing during your holding period. When you sell a bond, accrued interest received from the buyer is treated as coupon income, not as part of the capital gain. This accrued interest treatment is important for accurate tax reporting on fixed income portfolios.
Yes — if you are carrying on a business and receive interest from foreign bonds in the course of that business, the interest is taxable in Hong Kong (territorial basis — the source rules for interest are complex). Even for QDI bonds, if the interest arises from a business activity (as opposed to a passive investment), it may be treated as business income. Offshore bond interest received by a passive individual investor is generally not subject to HK tax — but the passive vs business distinction matters.

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This page provides general information only. For advice specific to your situation, please consult a qualified Hong Kong tax professional.