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Temple Street Night Market vs Man Mo Temple

Both Temple Street Night Market and Man Mo Temple are rated very highly by those who travel for a living. Overall, Man Mo Temple is the choice of most professionals compared to Temple Street Night Market. Man Mo Temple is ranked #7 in Hong Kong with endorsements from 5 sources such as Lonely Planet, Frommer's and Michelin Guide.

Temple Street Night Market
Temple Street Night Market
8 / 10
Kansu Street and Jordan Road, Mongkok, Kowloon, Hong Kong
From $0 /night
Fodor's Fodor's
"Temple Street, in the heart of Yau Ma Tei, is home to Hong Kong's biggest night market." Full review
Lonely Planet Lonely Planet
Top Choice
"The liveliest night market in Hong Kong, Temple St extends from Man Ming Lane in the north to Nanking St in the south and is cut in two by the Tin Hau temple complex." Full review
Michelin Guide Michelin Guide
3 Stars
"The night market has no particular theme, but sells a wide range of goods amid an atmosphere of general chaos." Full review
Condé Nast Traveler Condé Nast Traveler
"Temple Street is a tourist-packed stretch in Kowloon that provides a unique and accessible microcosm of nightlife from a bygone era." Full review
Man Mo Temple
Man Mo Temple
8 / 10
Fu Shin Street, Hong Kong
From $0 /night
Fodor's Fodor's
"Adjacent to the Tai Po Market is the 100-year-old temple that was built to commemorate the establishment of the town of Tai Po." Full review
Lonely Planet Lonely Planet
Top Choice
"Towards the northern end of Fu Shin St, the double-hall Man Mo Temple from the late 19th century is a centre of worship for the Tai Po area." Full review
Condé Nast Traveler Condé Nast Traveler
"Dedicated to the gods of war and literature... historic Man Mo Temple is the jewel of antique-filled Hollywood Road." Full review
Michelin Guide Michelin Guide
3 Stars
"The popular sanctuary of Man Mo Temple has a highly charged spiritual atmosphere made all the more evocative by its clouds of fragrant incense smoke."
Frommer's Frommer's
"Hong Kong Island's oldest and most important temple (Taoist) was built in the 1840s as one of the new colony's first traditional-style temples." Full review