Rewards
Asian Television Awards
- 2018, Best Actor in a Leading Role, My Very Short Marriage (2017)
Chinese Film Media Awards
- 2005, Best Actor, Ai Zuo zhan (2004)
Golden Bauhinia Awards
- 2006, Best Actor, Sun gaing hup nui (2005)
Golden Horse Film Festival
- 2018, Best Original Film Song, Hou lai de wo men (2018) For the song "Us".
- 2017, Best Original Film Song,Bai du ren (2016) For the song "Keep Me By Your Side".
- 2015, Best Original Film Song, Hua li shang ban zu (2015) For the song "He Bi Ne".
- 2008, Best Supporting Actor, Por see yee (2007)
- 2002, Best Original Film Song, Youling renjian II: Gui wei ren jian (2002) For the song "Only In Dream".
- 2000, Best Original Film Song, Shap yee yeh (2000) For the song "Nights Does Not Return".
HongKong Film Awards
- 2017, Best Original Film Song,Bai du ren (2016) For the song "Keep Me By Your Side".
- 2015, Best Original Film Song, Bo fung yu (2014) For the song "The Quiet Storm".
- 2008, Best Original Film Song, Hing dai (2007)
- 2003, Best Original Film Song, Youling renjian II: Gui wei ren jian (2002) For the song "Visibile Secret".
- 2001, Best Original Film Song, Shap yee yeh (2000) For the song "Nights Does Not Return".
HongKong Film Critics Society Awards
- 2008, Best Actor, Mui dong bin wan si (2007)
- 2005, Best Actor, Ai Zuo Zhan (2004)
Huading Awards
- 2019, Best Song, Hou lai de wo men (2018)For the song "Us"
- 2016, Male Vocalist of the Year
King of Chinese Pop ✨
Twenty years after hitting the big time, Eason Chan reigns unchallenged. In the 1980s and 1990s Hong Kong held huge sway over the music markets of the mainland, Taiwan and other parts of Asia with its Cantopop, four of its best-known exponents being Aaron Kwok, Jacky Cheung, Leon Lai and Andy Lau, who came to be known as the Four Heavenly Kings. But these days the volume has well and truly been turned down on Cantopop as music tastes worldwide continue to diversify, and the four kings have given way to a sole sovereign, Eason Chan, dubbed the King of Cantopop. In fact, Chan is just about the only Cantopop singer these days who might be considered anything like a global phenomenon. Every year, Chan, who has more than 15 million followers on his Sina Weibo account, releases one Cantonese album, one Mandarin album and begins a world tour. His latest Cantonese album, Getting Ready, was released a fortnight ago, and Chan, 40, came to Beijing to promote it. At a news conference, wearing a white T-shirt emblazoned with the declaration "I give up wasting paper" and a pair of loose blue pants, he said that putting out a Cantonese album once a year has become a tradition for him, even as the Cantopop market continues to shrink, and many Hong Kong singers do a voice change, singing in Mandarin to add to their appeal in the mainland market. "To the listener the sound of Cantonese lyrics is unique," Chan says. "You can easily identify a Coldplay song in the same way you can identify an Eason Chan Cantonese song."By Chen Nan,China Daily