NoSelf Defence Weapons

Is it legal to possess brass knuckles in Hong Kong?

This rebuilt rule page keeps the answer, scope, and future source links in one obvious place, without pretending the row is fully researched before official sources are attached.

Short answer: NoRow state: verifiedSelf Defence Weapons

Quick answer

No
No
Last verified: 2026-04-03Sources verified

Legal position

Current starter summary

Possessing brass knuckles is not lawful in Hong Kong because knuckledusters are prohibited weapons.

Conditions

What would need to be true

Possessing a knuckleduster is itself an offence under the Weapons Ordinance for an ordinary member of the public.

Exceptions

Known carve-outs or edge cases

Licensed official exemptions are outside this ordinary public row.

Penalties

Penalty snapshot

Hong Kong Customs says possessing a prohibited weapon can lead to a maximum fine of HK$10000 and imprisonment for 3 years.

Enforcement

How this may be enforced

Police list knuckledusters as prohibited weapons and say any person who has possession of a prohibited weapon commits an offence.

More rules in Hong Kong

Use the reset build to keep country pages useful even before every row is fully sourced.

download pirated movies

Official Hong Kong sources clearly criminalise some copyright piracy, especially trade or business possession, import or export, and large-scale online communication, but I did not find a clean official statement that directly answers ordinary private end-user downloading of a pirated movie.

UnclearDigital Laws

stream pirated content

Official Hong Kong sources say the 2022 communication offence mainly targets large-scale online piracy such as illegal streaming of a film for public viewing, but the official material reviewed does not cleanly answer ordinary private end-user viewing of pirated streams.

UnclearDigital Laws

buy a brass knuckles

Ordinary public purchase of brass knuckles is not lawful in Hong Kong because knuckledusters are prohibited weapons.

NoSelf Defence Weapons

buy a pepper spray

Ordinary public purchase of pepper spray is not lawful in Hong Kong because tear gas is treated as arms and possession requires a licence.

NoSelf Defence Weapons

Compare this activity in other countries

This makes the rule page useful for comparison without creating a second data source.

Australia

Australia does not have one uniform civilian brass-knuckles rule. Victoria Police classifies a knuckle-duster as a prohibited weapon, and Victoria Police approval material says prohibited weapons generally require Chief Commissioner approval or an applicable exemption for purchase, possession, carriage or transport. Australian Border Force treats knuckle-dusters as weapons subject to border controls.

DependsSelf Defence Weapons

Austria

Austria classifies brass knuckles as prohibited weapons in category A. The official weapons overview says acquisition, possession and carrying of category A weapons are fundamentally prohibited.

NoSelf Defence Weapons

Belgium

Belgian Justice lists American brass knuckles as prohibited weapons. Prohibited weapons cannot lawfully be possessed, bought, transported or carried by civilians.

NoSelf Defence Weapons

Canada

Brass knuckles are prohibited weapons in Canada and ordinary possession is not lawful.

NoSelf Defence Weapons

About this row

Canonical dataset status

Country hubHong Kong
Row stateverified

Reset rule

Why the page is intentionally light

The new site should show a stable layout, a stable route, and clear source slots before the dataset is scaled up again. That keeps management simple and makes later official-source population safer.

Structure firstOfficial sources secondScale third