1 litre of alcoholic liquor with an alcoholic strength above 30% by volume measured at a temperature of 20oC; and
I'd be better able to you an answer next week when I actually get therebut Mal's already there
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I too have found HKG to not be overly competitive with alcohol prices duty free. SIN is generally much better. but with the A$ at over HK$7 it may be worthwhile.
Of course it depends on what you want. Departing Australia you can buy a litre of JW Black for $35.95 (5 x 200ml bottle at $6.99 each), which is considerably cheaper than buying a 1l bottle at the same shop ($49.99).
Not sure as I can't ever remember buying inbound at HKG. I am not there long enough to consume a full size bottle. I have been known to pick up a few 200ml bottles of various things ex Australia when heading over. But 5 is more than I would consume in the time I am there :shock:. I have not found 200ml bottles readily available in places outside Australia.NM, you're a much more frequent HKG visitor than I. Can you recall what is sold duty free at arrivals? I tend to move very quickly out of the airport - in fact today, it probably took no more than 10 mins from Gate-Airport Express (Bless automated immigration and apathy with customs controls).
Yes, spirits are available on arrival into HKG. But I have found the range available at HKG in general is poor compared with places like SIN.The last time I did visit Arrivals duty free was before a wedding I attended in March, and I found the range lacking (for what I was after, which was a bottle of champers). Do you know if the spirits mentioned are sold at arrivals?
Agree they may not be best as a gift. But very economical for personal consumption during a trip away. Lots of variety available, including most types of spirits and some liqueurs. So can take a few different things for variety.Oh - and the 5x200Ml bottles are practical from a financial sense, but maybe not from a cultural sense. A very "money sensitive" (others might call him a tightwad!) friend of mine asked me for a 1L bottle of a certain spirit. I advised him that 5x200Ml would save about $A15, but he wasn't interested. It came down to his culture and how the bigger the bottle, the better "show" he had for his friends and relatives. I ended up finding him a 2L bottle (I think in Singapore) and he was very happy.
Oh, and are you sure about the 1L rule? I'm sure I saw signs up this morning outside the arrivals Duty Free shop (I arrived into Honkers about 6 hours ago) which implied that there are no limits to what can be purchased.
I was very jetlagged and tired though...
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Just wasn't allowed to purchase anything (shop claimed this was Aust Govt regulation) :evil: What's that all about??
Just wasn't allowed to purchase anything (shop claimed this was Aust Govt regulation) :evil: What's that all about??
Qantas seems to think HKG duty free shops can seal+deliver bags to the gate (ala what happens in Singapore) Fly - Baggage - Carry-on Baggage - Country Specific
It could have been timing, or they just don't want to do it. I'm pretty sure I have seen signs up previously in Duty Free shops advising that they can't sell to people flying to Australia. Certainly there is secondary inspection at the gate on flights to Australia looking for liquids >100ml.
That was the argument I tried with the shop assistants, and I asked them to sell it to me and then seal the bag, but they refused and kept indicating to the signs in the shop.
Just sealing is not enough, they have to deliver it to the gate as well. I think they did you a favour if you were about to board a flight to Australia.
Would you have rather they sold it to you, sealed it up, waved you goodbye, then it was confiscated at the gate?