The Technology Voucher Programme (TVP) — the most popular government IT funding scheme in Hong Kong — ceased accepting applications in December 2024. The Digital Transformation Support Pilot Programme (DTSPP) is fully subscribed and closed. If you are a Hong Kong SME looking for government subsidies to fund your technology projects, the landscape has fundamentally changed in 2026.

The good news: the government has not stopped funding technology adoption. It has shifted focus. The 2026 Budget explicitly targets AI adoption, market expansion, and smart manufacturing as funding priorities. The BUD Fund received a HK$200 million injection. A HK$3 billion AI Subsidy Scheme is operational. New pilot programmes for manufacturing upgrades and AI-specific digital transformation are being rolled out.

This guide is your complete map of what is available right now — every active scheme, how much you can get, who qualifies, and how to apply. We update this page as programmes change.

Scam Warning Some intermediaries are still advertising TVP and DTSPP as available programmes. Both are permanently closed. If anyone tells you they can help you apply for TVP or DTSPP in 2026, exercise extreme caution — they are either misinformed or dishonest.
HK$7.9B
Total BUD Fund approved (12,800 applications as of Jan 2026)
HK$3B
AI Subsidy Scheme budget (3-year programme)
HK$1.4B
ITF approved for AI-related projects to date
8,799
SMEs funded under DTSPP before closure

What's Closed: TVP and DTSPP Are Gone

Programme What It Covered Status Replacement
Technology Voucher Programme (TVP) Up to HK$600,000 (3:1 matching) for IT systems, software, hardware, consultancy Closed Dec 2024 BUD Fund (for overseas market projects); ITSP (for R&D)
Digital Transformation Support Pilot (DTSPP) Up to HK$50,000 (1:1 matching) for basic digital solutions in F&B, retail, tourism Fully subscribed, closed May 2025 New round being planned with AI and cybersecurity focus (details TBC)
EMF (Export Marketing Fund) Up to HK$1,000,000 for export marketing activities Merging into BUD Fund by June 2026 BUD Fund (consolidated)

The closure of TVP is the biggest change. TVP was exceptionally popular because it had broad eligibility — any Hong Kong business could apply to fund IT system upgrades. Its closure means that general-purpose IT funding from the government is now largely unavailable. The remaining schemes are more targeted: market expansion (BUD), R&D (ITSP), AI specifically (AI Subsidy Scheme), or sector-specific programmes.

2026 Active Funding Schemes: Complete Comparison

Here is every active scheme relevant to technology projects, in one table. Scroll right on mobile for the full view.

Scheme Max Amount Matching Ratio Who Qualifies Best For Status
BUD Fund HK$7M cumulative 50% Non-listed HK enterprises Overseas market expansion, branding, AI for cross-border Active
Easy BUD HK$150,000/project 50% Post-revenue HK SMEs Quick market expansion projects, website/app for overseas Active (fast-track)
AI Subsidy Scheme 70% off AISC pricing 70% subsidy HK-registered enterprises, universities, R&D centres AI model training, R&D requiring GPU computing power Active
ITSP (under ITF) HK$10M per project 50% (platform) / 100% (seed) Companies with R&D projects partnering HK institutions Technology R&D, innovation projects Active
Cyberport Incubation HK$500K over 24 months Grant Digital tech startups Early-stage tech startups (fintech, AI, blockchain) Active
HKSTP Incubation HK$1.29M Grant Tech startups (hardware, biotech, AI, greentech) Deep tech startups needing lab space and mentorship Active
Manufacturing Upgrade Pilot HK$250K per enterprise 1:2 matching HK manufacturers Production line upgrades, smart manufacturing New in 2026
HKTDC-Microsoft AI Programme Free workshops + discounts N/A HKTDC T-box SMEs AI adoption workshops, tool selection, implementation planning Active

Detailed Guide: Each Scheme Explained

BUD Fund (Dedicated Fund on Branding, Upgrading and Domestic Sales)

Most Recommended

The BUD Fund is now the most versatile and well-funded scheme available to Hong Kong SMEs. With HK$7.9 billion already approved across 12,800 applications and a fresh HK$200 million injection in the 2026 Budget, it is the de facto replacement for TVP — with a twist. BUD requires your project to focus on expanding business into overseas or mainland markets, not purely internal IT upgrades.

How to use BUD for technology: Build a multilingual website or mobile app targeting overseas customers. Develop an AI-powered customer service system for cross-border operations. Create an e-commerce platform for mainland China (via E-commerce Easy BUD). Implement a CRM that supports your overseas sales team. The key: frame your technology project as a tool for market expansion, not internal efficiency.

Max FundingHK$7,000,000 (cumulative)
Matching50% of project cost
EligibilityNon-listed HK enterprises with substantive operations
Fast TrackEasy BUD: up to HK$150,000, faster approval
Apply Atbud.hkpc.org
Approval Time2-3 months (standard) / 4-6 weeks (Easy BUD)

AI Subsidy Scheme (AISS)

New — HK$3 Billion

The headline programme of Hong Kong's AI push. The government allocated HK$3 billion for a three-year scheme that subsidises up to 70% of the cost of using Cyberport's AI Supercomputing Centre (AISC). The AISC was ramped up to 3,000 petaFLOPS of computing power in 2025 and has achieved nearly 80% utilisation, with projects from 20+ universities and enterprises already approved.

Who this is for: This is not a general SME scheme. It is aimed at organisations that need serious GPU computing power — training proprietary AI models, processing large datasets, running AI research. If you are building a custom LLM for your industry, training computer vision models, or doing AI-driven drug discovery, this is your scheme. If you just want to deploy an off-the-shelf chatbot, look at BUD Fund instead.

SubsidyUp to 70% off AISC list price
ComputingNVIDIA DGX H800 nodes
List PriceHK$320,000/node/month
After Subsidy~HK$96,000/node/month
Duration3-12 months per project
Apply Atcyberport.hk (AISS portal)

Cyberport Programmes

Active

Cyberport operates multiple programmes for digital tech startups. The Incubation Programme provides up to HK$500,000 over 24 months, plus office space, technical support, and access to investors. The Creative Micro Fund (CCMF) offers HK$100,000 grants for very early-stage ideas. The Accelerator Support Programme provides up to HK$300,000 for incubatees joining approved accelerators. For blockchain/Web3 projects, the dedicated subsidy scheme offers up to HK$500,000 per project covering 80% of costs.

IncubationHK$500,000 / 24 months
CCMFHK$100,000 grant
AcceleratorHK$300,000
Blockchain/Web3HK$500,000 (80% subsidy)
Macro FundHK$1M–20M investment
Apply Atcyberport.hk

HKSTP Programmes

Active

Hong Kong Science and Technology Parks offers a progression from idea to scale. The Ideation Programme provides HK$100,000 seed funding. The Incubation Programme covers up to HK$1.29 million for tech and business development. The LEAP Acceleration Programme provides up to HK$4.8 million for scaling. The Elite Programme offers up to HK$21.5 million for high-growth enterprises targeting global markets. HKSTP is particularly strong for hardware, biotech, AI, and greentech startups that benefit from lab space and physical infrastructure.

IdeationHK$100,000
IncubationUp to HK$1.29M
LEAPUp to HK$4.8M
EliteUp to HK$21.5M
Apply Athkstp.org

HKTDC-Microsoft AI Adoption Programme

Free

A practical, no-cost starting point. HKTDC partnered with Microsoft Hong Kong to offer three structured workshops: AI solutions for the modern workplace, intelligent data analysis, and automation with predictive analytics. The programme also offers AI solution packages at discounted rates for participating SMEs. It builds on the 2022 "Go Beyond Your Limits" programme and is designed for SMEs with no AI experience.

CostFree to attend
Format3 workshops + solution discounts
ForHKTDC T-box member SMEs
Registerhktdc.com

How to Maximise Your Chances of Approval

Government funding committees reject applications for predictable reasons. Avoid these common mistakes:

Typical Application Timeline: From Planning to Disbursement

Week 1-2: Project Scoping

Define the project scope, deliverables, timeline, and budget. Identify which scheme(s) align with your project. Gather required company documents (BR, CR, financial statements).

Week 3-4: Vendor Selection & Quotes

Obtain 2-3 vendor quotations for the technology components. Select your preferred vendor. Finalise the project proposal with specific costs and milestones.

Week 5-6: Application Submission

Complete the online application form. Attach all supporting documents. Submit and receive confirmation number.

Week 7-14: Vetting & Approval

Committee reviews your application. You may be asked clarifying questions. Easy BUD: 4-6 weeks. Standard BUD: 2-3 months. ITSP: 3-6 months.

Week 15+: Project Execution & Claims

Execute your project according to the approved plan. Submit progress reports and expense claims. Most schemes disburse on a reimbursement basis — you pay first, then claim back the subsidised portion.

Important: Reimbursement Model Most government funding schemes operate on a reimbursement basis — you fund the project upfront and claim back the subsidised portion upon completion of milestones. Plan your cash flow accordingly. Do not assume the subsidy arrives before the vendor invoice is due.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is TVP still available?

No. TVP ceased accepting new applications after December 31, 2024. All applications received before the cut-off were processed in 2025. The programme is permanently closed. The BUD Fund and AI Subsidy Scheme are the primary active alternatives for technology projects.

What's the best scheme for adopting AI?

For most SMEs: BUD Fund. It covers up to 50% of project costs with a cumulative cap of HK$7 million, and Easy BUD supports up to HK$150,000 with fast-track approval. Frame your AI project as enabling overseas market expansion. For companies needing GPU computing for model training: the AI Subsidy Scheme offers 70% off Cyberport's AI Supercomputing Centre. For free education: the HKTDC-Microsoft AI Adoption Programme offers structured workshops at no cost.

Can I combine multiple schemes?

You cannot use two schemes to fund the same project scope. However, you can strategically use different schemes for different aspects: BUD for overseas expansion technology, AI Subsidy Scheme for computing resources, and ITSP for R&D. Careful project scoping with distinct deliverables and budgets is essential to avoid overlap.

How long does BUD Fund approval take?

Standard BUD applications: 2-3 months from submission to approval. Easy BUD (up to HK$150,000): 4-6 weeks with fast-track processing. The key to fast approval is a clear project proposal with specific deliverables, realistic timelines, and measurable business outcomes. Having vendor quotations ready when you apply speeds things up considerably.

Do I need to be a tech company to apply?

No. Most schemes are designed for non-tech SMEs adopting technology. BUD Fund, DTSPP (new round), and the Manufacturing Upgrade Pilot specifically target traditional businesses upgrading through technology. You need to be a Hong Kong-registered business with substantive operations — but you do not need to be in the technology sector. A restaurant adopting AI for inventory management qualifies just as much as a software company.

Need Help Scoping a Fundable Project?

The difference between a funded project and a rejected application often comes down to how the project is scoped and presented. At Astera Technology, we help Hong Kong businesses design technology projects that align with funding scheme objectives — from defining deliverables and timelines to preparing vendor quotations and technical proposals.

Whether you need a custom software system, an AI agent, or a system integration project, we can help you structure it for maximum funding eligibility. Book a free consultation to discuss your project and funding options.