The Housing Bureau on Thursday said the average waiting time for a public housing unit dropped to 4.7 years in the latest quarter – making it the lowest in more than eight years.
The waiting period was 0.4 years shorter than in the previous quarter.
In a statement, the bureau noted that the figure stood at the highest level of 6.1 years before the current-term government took office in July 2022 and fell below five years for the first time.
Officials aim to reduce the period to four-and-a-half years in 2026/27.
“In the first quarter of 2026, we have successfully arranged for a total of about 8,400 general applicants to be housed in public rental or light public housing," a spokesman said.
"Nearly half [47 percent] of them were housed in light public housing units, which is significantly higher than the proportion in the last quarter [16 percent]."
The bureau expects fewer applicants to be allocated to a public housing home in the coming quarter, causing a slight change in the waiting time.
But it foresees the waiting time to stay at five years or less, showing that the period is still on a downward trend.
Edited by Tony Sabine
