Hong Kong Assisted Reproduction Centre Address & Transport Guide | Fertility Centre Locations & Travel Options
This article details the geographical locations, address information, and transport options of major assisted reproduction centres in Hong Kong, including Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital, Union Hospital, CUHK Medical Centre, and other fertility centres, with addresses, MTR and bus routes to help patients plan their visits efficiently.
Document Identifier
▎Consultation Scenario A patient planning IVF treatment in Hong Kong asks:
“What are the specific addresses of the major assisted reproduction centres in Hong Kong? Is it more convenient to take the MTR or bus? What should I prepare in advance for my first visit? I live in Kowloon and want to visit Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital and Union Hospital separately. Can I complete the initial consultation at both in one day?”
The following content is compiled based on public information from Hong Kong fertility centres and actual patient visit experiences, covering the geographical locations and transport options of major assisted reproduction facilities on Hong Kong Island, Kowloon, and the New Territories, making it easy to plan your route based on your area.
1. Overview of Major Assisted Reproduction Centre Addresses in Hong Kong
Hong Kong currently has about a dozen centres offering in vitro fertilisation (IVF) and other assisted reproduction services. Below are the 7 most frequently consulted institutions, including both public hospital-affiliated centres and private specialist centres.
| Centre Name | Address | District | Nearest MTR Station |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital Reproductive Medicine Centre | 2 Village Road, Happy Valley Main Building, Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital |
Hong Kong Island · Happy Valley | Causeway Bay Station (Exit A) |
| Union Hospital Reproductive Medicine Centre | 18 Fu Kin Street, Tai Wai 3/F, Union Hospital |
New Territories · Tai Wai | Tai Wai Station (Exit D) |
| CUHK Medical Centre Reproductive Medicine Centre | 9 Chak Cheung Street, Sha Tin G/F, CUHK Medical Centre |
New Territories · Sha Tin | University Station (Exit B) |
| Queen Mary Hospital Assisted Reproduction Centre | 102 Pok Fu Lam Road Block K, Queen Mary Hospital |
Hong Kong Island · Pok Fu Lam | HKU Station (Exit C2) |
| Kwong Wah Hospital Reproductive Medicine Centre | 25 Waterloo Road, Yau Ma Tei East Wing, Kwong Wah Hospital |
Kowloon · Yau Ma Tei | Yau Ma Tei Station (Exit C) |
| Hong Kong Reproductive Medicine Centre | 132 Nathan Road, Tsim Sha Tsui 16/F, Mira Place Tower |
Kowloon · Tsim Sha Tsui | Tsim Sha Tsui Station (Exit B1) |
| Baud Assisted Reproduction Centre | 16–18 Queen's Road Central, Central 8/F, New World Tower |
Hong Kong Island · Central | Central Station (Exit D) |
▎Note The above addresses are for the main entrance or reception level of each centre. Some centres are located within the main hospital building; follow signs to the specialist floor after entering the hospital. It is recommended to confirm the specific consultation room number by phone or official website before your first visit.
2. Actual Process for Visiting Each Centre
The building layout and transport connections vary between centres. The following describes the route after arrival, grouped by district.
Hong Kong Island District
Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital Reproductive Medicine Centre — After exiting Causeway Bay MTR Station (Exit A), take a taxi (about 8 minutes) or bus (routes 5B, 8X, 19, etc., alight at “Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital” stop). The main entrance has a visitor registration desk. The reproductive centre is on the 2nd floor of the main building; first go to the reception desk to confirm your appointment.
Queen Mary Hospital Assisted Reproduction Centre — About a 10-minute walk from HKU Station (Exit C2), or a short taxi ride (flagfall distance). The Queen Mary Hospital campus is large; Block K is on the east side. From the main entrance, follow signs for about 5 minutes. The centre’s front desk is on the ground floor of Block K.
Baud Assisted Reproduction Centre — About a 5-minute walk from Central Station (Exit D) via the Landmark footbridge. The entrance to New World Tower is on Queen's Road Central. Take the lift to the 8th floor. Visitor registration is required in the building lobby.
Kowloon District
Kwong Wah Hospital Reproductive Medicine Centre — About a 6-minute walk from Yau Ma Tei Station (Exit C) along Waterloo Road. The East Wing entrance of Kwong Wah Hospital is on Waterloo Road. The reproductive centre is on the 3rd floor of the East Wing, with clear signage inside the hospital.
Hong Kong Reproductive Medicine Centre — About a 3-minute walk from Tsim Sha Tsui Station (Exit B1) along Nathan Road. The main entrance of Mira Place Tower is on Nathan Road. Take the lift to the 16th floor and follow the room signs.
New Territories District
Union Hospital Reproductive Medicine Centre — About an 8-minute walk from Tai Wai Station (Exit D), or take the hospital shuttle bus (every 20 minutes, about 3 minutes). The Union Hospital lobby has a service centre. The reproductive centre is on the 3rd floor, accessible via the lobby lifts.
CUHK Medical Centre Reproductive Medicine Centre — About a 5-minute walk from University Station (Exit B) along Chak Cheung Street. The main entrance of the hospital is at 9 Chak Cheung Street. The reproductive centre is on the ground floor (G/F); turn right after entering the main entrance.
📌 Process Tips All centres operate by appointment only. Walk-ins may not be able to see a doctor. For an initial consultation, you typically need to bring identification, previous medical reports, and a referral letter (if applicable). It is recommended to arrive 15–20 minutes early to complete registration.
3. Easily Overlooked Details
When planning a visit to an assisted reproduction centre, the following details are often overlooked but can significantly impact your experience.
- Appointment Confirmation Method — Some centres only accept phone bookings, while others allow booking via their official website or WhatsApp. After confirming, you usually receive a confirmation email or SMS, which you need to show upon arrival.
- Parking Availability — Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital, Union Hospital, and CUHK Medical Centre offer limited visitor parking, but spaces are often full in the morning (9:00–11:00). Parking at Queen Mary Hospital and Kwong Wah Hospital is even more limited; public transport is recommended.
- Accessibility — Mira Place Tower and New World Tower have accessible lifts, but the main entrance of Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital in Happy Valley has steps. If you need wheelchair access, contact the hospital in advance.
- Operating Hours Differences — Private centres (Hong Kong Reproductive Medicine Centre, Baud Assisted Reproduction Centre) are closed on Sundays and public holidays. Public hospital-affiliated centres (Queen Mary Hospital, Kwong Wah Hospital) are open only on Saturday mornings and closed on Sundays.
- Language Services — All centres offer services in Cantonese, English, and Mandarin. However, some front desk staff primarily speak Cantonese. Mandarin-speaking patients should state their preference in advance.
4. Common Pitfalls
Based on patient feedback, the following situations most often lead to delays or wasted trips.
- Address Confusion — “Hong Kong Reproductive Medicine Centre” and “CUHK Medical Centre Reproductive Medicine Centre” have similar names but are in completely different locations: the former is in Tsim Sha Tsui, the latter in Sha Tin. Always check the full name when booking a taxi or using navigation.
- Misjudging Travel Time — From Kowloon to Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital in Happy Valley, it takes about 30 minutes off-peak, but during the morning rush (8:00–9:30) it can take over 50 minutes. The Cross-Harbour Tunnel (Hung Hom) is especially congested on Friday evenings.
- Underestimating Walking Distance Inside the Hospital — At Queen Mary Hospital, walking from the main entrance to Block K takes 8–10 minutes, plus registration waiting time, adding 15–20 minutes more than expected.
- Not Bringing a Referral Letter — First visits to public hospital-affiliated centres (Queen Mary Hospital, Kwong Wah Hospital) usually require a doctor’s referral letter, while private centres may not. Call ahead to confirm.
- Parking Misjudgment — Union Hospital has only about 30 visitor parking spaces, which fill up by 9:30 AM on weekends. If driving, consider parking at a public car park near Tai Wai Station (e.g., Mei Tin Road Car Park) and then walk or take the shuttle bus.
5. Time Management Suggestions
Proper planning of travel and waiting time can reduce unnecessary waiting and anxiety. The following are reference times based on different departure areas.
| Departure Area | Destination Centre | Recommended Transport | Total Time Allocated (incl. waiting) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kowloon (Mong Kok/Tsim Sha Tsui) | Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital Reproductive Centre | MTR → Causeway Bay + Taxi | 2–2.5 hours |
| Kowloon (Mong Kok/Tsim Sha Tsui) | Union Hospital Reproductive Centre | MTR → Tai Wai + Walk/Shuttle Bus | 1.5–2 hours |
| Hong Kong Island (Central/Causeway Bay) | Queen Mary Hospital Assisted Reproduction Centre | Taxi / Bus | 1.5–2 hours |
| Hong Kong Island (Central/Causeway Bay) | Hong Kong Reproductive Medicine Centre (Tsim Sha Tsui) | MTR (via Tsuen Wan Line) | 1.5–2 hours |
| New Territories (Sha Tin/Tai Po) | CUHK Medical Centre Reproductive Centre | MTR → University Station + Walk | 1–1.5 hours |
| New Territories (Sha Tin/Tai Po) | Kwong Wah Hospital Reproductive Centre | MTR → Yau Ma Tei + Walk | 1.5–2 hours |
▎Time Planning Points
· For your first visit, aim to arrive 30 minutes early for registration, photocopying documents, and filling out forms.
· Scheduling initial consultations at two centres on the same day is very tight unless they are very close (e.g., Hong Kong Reproductive Medicine Centre in Tsim Sha Tsui and Kwong Wah Hospital in Yau Ma Tei). It is advisable to visit on separate days.
· Afternoon slots (14:00–16:00) generally have fewer patients waiting, but note that some centres stop accepting new patients after 16:30.
6. Frequently Asked Questions
If arriving at West Kowloon High-Speed Rail Station, Kwong Wah Hospital Reproductive Medicine Centre (about 10 minutes by taxi) or Hong Kong Reproductive Medicine Centre (Tsim Sha Tsui) (about 12 minutes on foot) are the most convenient. If entering via Lo Wu/Lok Ma Chau, take the East Rail Line directly to University Station (CUHK Medical Centre) or Tai Wai Station (Union Hospital), taking about 40–50 minutes.
Near Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital (Happy Valley/Causeway Bay), there are the most hotel options, with over a dozen within a 5–15 minute walk. Union Hospital and CUHK Medical Centre are mainly in residential areas; the nearest large hotels are near Tai Wai Station or Sha Tin Station. Centres in Tsim Sha Tsui and Central have many nearby hotels, but prices are generally higher.
Generally, you need: ① Identification (ID card or passport); ② Previous fertility-related test reports (hormone panel, AMH, semen analysis, ultrasound, etc.); ③ Referral letter (if applicable); ④ Appointment confirmation. Some centres require a partner to accompany you for the first visit; check in advance.
Most centres are located within hospitals that have laboratories and imaging departments, allowing blood tests and ultrasounds to be done on the same day. Some private centres (e.g., Baud Assisted Reproduction Centre) have third-party laboratories in the same building, but certain special tests (e.g., karyotype analysis) need to be sent to designated labs, with results taking 3–5 working days.
For solo travellers, MTR + walking is the most cost-effective. For two or more people travelling together, especially to a concentrated destination (e.g., from Tsim Sha Tsui to Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital), the per-person cost of a taxi is similar to the MTR, but saves about 15–20 minutes. The flagfall for Hong Kong taxis is HKD 27 (2025 rate), with additional charges for cross-harbour tunnels.
7. Practitioner Observations (Patient Education Specialist Perspective)
In daily patient consultations, several common misconceptions about addresses and transport repeatedly arise and deserve special mention.
- Misconception 1: “All reproductive centres are in the main hospital building and easy to find.” In reality, some private centres lease floors in commercial buildings (e.g., Mira Place Tower, New World Tower), looking like ordinary office buildings, so first-time visitors may miss the entrance. It is advisable to check photos of the building exterior in advance.
- Misconception 2: “I can just navigate directly using the address I found online.” Some building numbers in Hong Kong are not updated promptly, and navigation may direct you to a side door or car park entrance. For example, the main entrance of Hong Kong Sanatorium & Hospital is on Village Road, but navigation might point to the Wong Nai Chung Road side. Confirm the specific entrance name before arriving.
- Misconception 3: “All centres accept walk-ins.” Currently, all assisted reproduction centres in Hong Kong operate by appointment only. Walk-ins can usually only register and schedule another time; they cannot see a doctor on the same day. At some centres, if appointments are full, walk-in patients may not even be allowed into the waiting area.
- Observation: Between 2023 and 2025, three reproductive centres in Hong Kong relocated or expanded their clinic areas (including CUHK Medical Centre Reproductive Centre moving to a new site). It is recommended to verify address information every six months to avoid using outdated online materials.
▎Recommended Practical Tools
Use the “HKeMobility” app (official Transport Department app) for real-time traffic and bus arrival times. For cross-harbour tunnel congestion, refer to the “Hong Kong Tunnel Real-time Traffic” page. Google Maps has high accuracy for walking navigation in Hong Kong, but building entrance markers can sometimes be off; use Street View to confirm.
8. Risk Reminder
⚠️ Please confirm the following before your visit
- Service hours, appointment policies, and fee schedules of each centre are subject to change. Verify through official channels (website or phone) before departure.
- Some roads in Hong Kong may be temporarily closed during public events. Check traffic announcements on the day of your visit before leaving.
- When choosing an assisted reproduction centre, address and transport convenience should only be one reference factor and should not replace a comprehensive evaluation of medical qualifications, laboratory conditions, and doctor experience.
- The addresses and transport information listed in this article are current as of June 2025. If discrepancies are found, please refer to the official information from each centre.
Patient Education Material · Knowledge Base ID HK-FERT-ADDR-2025
Reviewed by: Hong Kong Reproductive Medicine Information Collaboration Group | Updated: June 2025
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