

Tsui Po-ko ( 徐步高 1970–2006), Hong Kong police constable.Tsui Tsin-tong ( 徐展堂 1941–2010), Hong Kong businessman.Sam Tsui (born 1989), American singer-songwriter.Roy Tsui ( 徐家豪 born 1980), Hong Kong lyricist.Kate Tsui ( 徐子珊 born 1979), Hong Kong actress.Tsui Wing ( 徐榮 born 1974), Hong Kong actor.Elvis Tsui ( 徐錦江 born 1961), Hong Kong actor.Tsui Siu-ming ( 徐小明 born 1953), Hong Kong actor.Tsui Hark ( 徐克 born 1950), Hong Kong film director.Paula Tsui ( 徐小鳳 born 1949), Hong Kong singer.Tsui Ping ( 崔萍 born 1938), Harbin-born Mandarin-language pop singer in Hong Kong.Tsui Hsiao-ping ( 崔小萍 1923–2017), Jinan-born radio personality in Taiwan.Tsui Wang Kit ( 徐宏傑 born 1997), Hong Kong footballer.Tsui Chi Ho ( 徐志豪 born 1990), Hong Kong sprinter.Tsui Wan Yi (born 1984), Hong Kong fencer.Tsui Fang-hsuan (born 1984), Taiwanese taekwondo practitioner.Tsui Tin-Chau ( 徐天就 born 1958), Hong Kong-born Dutch teacher.Lap-Chee Tsui ( 徐立之 born 1950), Shanghai-born Canadian geneticist.Tsui ( 崔琦 born 1939), Henan-born American physicist This section is arranged by area of notability and year of birth, regardless of the Chinese character used to write the surname. In both censuses, more than nine-tenths of the bearers of the surname identified as Asian, and roughly two percent as White. This represented an increase from 2,725 (10,748th-most-common) in the 2000 Census. The 2010 United States Census found 3,168 people with the surname Tsui, making it the 10,180th-most-common name in the country. The spelling Tsui is based on its Cantonese pronunciation ( Jyutping: Ceoi4 Cantonese Yale: Chèuih) it is nearly homophonous with the above surname in Cantonese aside from the differing tone. Xú ( 徐), which originated as a toponymic surname from the ancient state of Xu, adopted by the descendants of Boyi after the state was annexed by the state of Chu.The spelling Tsui may also be based on the Cantonese pronunciation ( Jyutping: Ceoi1 Cantonese Yale: Chēui).

It is spelled Ts'ui 4 in the Wade–Giles system of transliterating Mandarin (which remains common in Taiwan and was used until the 20th century in other regions). Cuī ( 崔), which originated as a toponymic surname from a fief by that name in the state of Qi a grandson of Jiang Ziya renounced his claim to the throne and went to live in that fief, and his descendants took its name as their surname.Tsui may be an alternative transliteration of two separate Chinese surnames, listed below by their Hanyu Pinyin transliteration (which reflects the Mandarin pronunciation):
