Skip to content

Innovation and Technology Fund (ITF): Hong Kong’s R&D Funding Ecosystem

Hong Kong’s innovation and technology sector is underpinned by one of Asia’s most comprehensive public funding structures. At the centre of this structure sits the Innovation and Technology Fund (ITF) — a multi-programme grant mechanism managed by the Innovation and Technology Commission (ITC) under the Innovation, Technology and Industry Bureau (ITIB). Since its establishment in 1999, the ITF has disbursed billions of Hong Kong dollars to support research, development, and technology adoption across the private sector, universities, and public bodies.

This article explains what the ITF is, how its sub-programmes differ from one another, which organisations are eligible for each, what funding levels look like, and how the ITF relates to parallel schemes such as the Technology Voucher Programme (TVP) and the Re-industrialisation Funding Scheme (RFS).


What Is the Innovation and Technology Fund?

The ITF is not a single grant — it is a funding umbrella comprising more than a dozen distinct programmes and schemes. Each programme targets a different stage of the innovation pipeline, a different type of organisation, or a different collaborative arrangement (for example, cross-boundary projects with Mainland China).

The ITC administers the ITF centrally, but different programmes have different vetting bodies. Some are evaluated by the Research Grants Council (RGC) or the Hong Kong Research Institute of Textiles and Apparel (HKRITA); others are assessed by ITC staff directly or by university panels. Understanding which body handles which programme is relevant when assessing timelines and appeal procedures.

The ITF’s stated objectives are to:


Core Sub-Programmes Under the ITF

1. Enterprise Support Scheme (ESS)

The Enterprise Support Scheme is the ITF’s flagship programme for the private sector. It enables companies incorporated in Hong Kong to conduct R&D projects — either independently or in collaboration with local universities, research institutes, or other companies.

Key features:

Eligible R&D areas span virtually all industries — electronics, biomedical, fintech, green technology, advanced manufacturing, logistics technology, and more. The ITC does not publish a restricted-sector list; what matters is whether the project involves systematic investigation aimed at new knowledge or clearly improved products/processes.

What ESS does not fund: market research, commercialisation activities, general software maintenance, regulatory compliance exercises, or standard engineering work that does not advance technical knowledge.


2. Innovation and Technology Support Programme (ITSP)

The ITSP targets applied research carried out by designated local public research institutions — primarily the eight University Grants Committee (UGC)-funded universities and a small number of approved research institutes. It is not directly accessible by private companies as a primary applicant, but companies frequently participate as industry partners.

Under ITSP, universities or institutes propose projects that address identifiable industry needs. The programme has two tiers:

Industry co-funding or in-kind contributions are strongly encouraged but not always mandatory. A project with genuine industry buy-in — demonstrated through a cash contribution or an offtake commitment — tends to receive higher scores during vetting.

ITSP funding cannot be used for pure basic research (which falls under the Research Grants Council’s General Research Fund or similar schemes) or for commercial production activities.


3. Guangdong-Hong Kong Technology Cooperation Funding Scheme (TCFS)

Hong Kong’s manufacturing and supply-chain links to Guangdong Province create demand for cross-boundary technology projects. The TCFS funds joint R&D between Hong Kong entities and Guangdong-based partners.

Structure:

This scheme is particularly relevant for companies operating across both sides of the border — for example, a Hong Kong-headquartered firm with Guangdong production facilities, or a Guangdong tech company seeking to establish an R&D presence in Hong Kong.

The TCFS has been expanded under GBA policy priorities, and the ITC periodically adjusts eligible thematic areas to align with Guangdong provincial technology plans.


4. Partnership Research Programme (PRP)

The PRP supports collaborative R&D between local universities/research institutes and private companies, with an emphasis on longer-term, higher-value partnerships. It differs from ESS in that:

PRP is designed for situations where the research challenge requires sustained academic expertise that a company cannot maintain in-house — for instance, novel materials testing, clinical-grade algorithm validation, or complex environmental modelling.

Because the university holds the grant, intellectual property arrangements must be negotiated and documented before submission. Typical IP arrangements share rights between the university and the industry partner, with commercialisation licences negotiated separately.


5. Technology Voucher Programme (TVP)

The TVP is technically an ITF sub-scheme, though it is frequently discussed separately because its purpose and target audience differ substantially from the R&D-focused programmes above.

TVP targets small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) that want to adopt existing, proven technologies to improve operational efficiency — not to develop new technology. Examples include deploying enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems, implementing cybersecurity solutions, adopting e-payment platforms, or installing IoT sensors for inventory management.

Key parameters:

TVP is the most accessible ITF entry point for most SMEs. The application process is lighter than ESS or ITSP, vetting timelines are shorter, and the matching requirement (25%) is lower. However, TVP does not fund R&D; it funds technology adoption.

For a detailed breakdown of TVP including eligibility criteria, approved service categories, and programme mechanics, see the dedicated TVP guide in this series.


6. Re-industrialisation Funding Scheme (RFS)

While not always listed alongside the ITF programmes, the RFS is administered by the ITC and shares conceptual DNA with the ITF ecosystem. It targets companies setting up smart production lines in Hong Kong using advanced manufacturing technologies — robotics, automation, additive manufacturing, AI-integrated quality control, and so on.

Key parameters:

RFS reflects Hong Kong’s policy goal of developing high-value-added manufacturing capacity domestically, particularly in sectors such as biotechnology, microelectronics, new energy, and advanced materials.


Comparing the Programmes: A Framework

Programme Lead Applicant Focus Max ITF Funding Key Condition
ESS Private company R&D HK$10M 50% company match
ITSP University / research institute Applied research Varies by tier Industry partnership encouraged
TCFS HK company + GD partner Cross-boundary R&D HK$6M (HK side) Dual HK + GD approval
PRP University / research institute Collaborative R&D HK$10M 33% industry cash
TVP SME Technology adoption HK$600K cumulative 25% SME contribution
RFS Manufacturer Smart production HK$15M Production line in HK

The programmes are not mutually exclusive. A company could hold an active ESS project for its R&D pipeline, use TVP simultaneously to upgrade its office systems, and subsequently apply for RFS when it is ready to build a smart production facility. The ITC assesses each application on its own merits and does not prohibit concurrent participation across schemes.


Who Manages the ITF, and How Are Decisions Made?

The Innovation and Technology Commission sits within the Innovation, Technology and Industry Bureau and acts as the administrative hub for the ITF. For most programmes, initial processing is done by ITC staff, followed by assessment panels that include academics, industry experts, and occasionally government officials.

For ESS and PRP, a multi-stage vetting process is typical: administrative screening, technical assessment by an expert panel, site visits for larger grants, and final approval by the ITC Commissioner or a delegated committee. For TVP, the process is streamlined: ITC staff review applications against published criteria, and turnaround times are generally faster.

The ITC publishes annual statistics on approval rates, total disbursements, and sectoral distribution. These figures show that electronics, biomedical/healthcare, and information and communications technology (ICT) consistently account for the largest share of ESS and ITSP approvals.


Relationship to Hong Kong’s Broader Innovation Policy

The ITF does not operate in isolation. It is part of a layered policy architecture that also includes:

Understanding where the ITF fits within this broader ecosystem helps organisations identify which funding mechanism is most appropriate for their current stage — early-stage basic research (RGC), applied R&D with commercial intent (ESS/PRP), technology adoption (TVP), or manufacturing scale-up (RFS).


Common Eligibility Considerations

Across ITF programmes, several eligibility principles recur:

Incorporation requirement: Most programmes require the Hong Kong entity to be incorporated under Hong Kong law. Branches of overseas companies, partnerships, and sole proprietorships face varying restrictions depending on the specific programme.

Genuine R&D / technology nexus: For the R&D programmes, the ITC expects projects to advance technical knowledge or capability — not simply to deploy known solutions. Applications that cannot clearly articulate the technical uncertainty being addressed tend to be rejected at the technical assessment stage.

Financial viability: Applicants must demonstrate financial capacity to meet their matching contribution and sustain the project to completion. Startups with limited operating history sometimes face additional scrutiny here.

No retrospective funding: ITF grants do not cover costs already incurred before the approval date. Organisations should not commence project activities — including procurement, hiring, or R&D work — before receiving a formal approval letter.

Reporting obligations: Approved projects are subject to progress reporting, financial auditing, and in some cases, technology transfer reporting. Grant holders who fail to comply with reporting requirements face potential clawback of disbursed funds.


The Greater Bay Area Dimension

Since 2019, Hong Kong’s innovation policy has been increasingly framed within the GBA context. The TCFS is the most direct expression of this, but GBA priorities also influence which thematic areas receive priority consideration in ESS and ITSP rounds.

Key GBA-relevant sectors in current ITF policy include: biotechnology and healthcare, artificial intelligence and data analytics, smart city infrastructure, green energy and environmental technology, and financial technology. Organisations whose R&D addresses cross-boundary supply chains, Mainland market access, or GBA infrastructure are well-positioned to articulate policy relevance in their applications.

The government has also introduced specific arrangements to allow Hong Kong-funded R&D results to be used or commercialised in Mainland China — removing a previous constraint that limited the territorial application of ITF-funded intellectual property.


Key Takeaways