City Guide

Beijing City Guide 2026:
The Complete Travel Guide for Foreign Tourists

📅 Updated: June 4, 2026 ⏱ 18 min read 🌏 Beijing, China

📑 Table of Contents

  1. Best Time to Visit Beijing
  2. Getting to Beijing (Flights & Trains)
  3. Getting Around Beijing
  4. Top 12 Must-See Attractions
  5. Where to Stay: Best Neighborhoods
  6. Beijing Food Guide: What to Eat
  7. Payment & Apps: How to Pay in Beijing
  8. Cultural Tips & Etiquette
  9. Sample Itineraries (3/5/7 Days)
  10. Practical Information

Beijing — China's 3,000-year-old capital — is a city where ancient imperial palaces sit in the shadow of futuristic skyscrapers. For foreign tourists in 2026, Beijing is more accessible than ever: new visa-free policies cover 55+ countries, Alipay now accepts foreign cards seamlessly, and the world's largest subway system makes navigation surprisingly easy.

This guide covers everything a foreign tourist needs to know — from booking Forbidden City tickets (tricky!) to ordering Peking duck like a local. Let's dive in.

💡 Quick Facts

Population: 21.8 million | Language: Mandarin Chinese | Currency: RMB (¥ / CNY)

Timezone: UTC+8 (CST) | Airports: PEK (Capital) & PKX (Daxing) | Subway lines: 27

Visa-free: 55+ countries eligible for 144h/240h transit visa exemption | Check our visa guide

1. Best Time to Visit Beijing

Beijing has four distinct seasons. The sweet spot is spring (April-May) and autumn (September-October) — comfortable temperatures, blue skies, and minimal rain.

💰 Budget Tip

Winter (excluding CNY week) offers the best value: 30-50% off hotels and zero queues at major attractions. If you can handle -5°C, it's the most peaceful time to visit.

2. Getting to Beijing

By Air

Beijing has two international airports:

From airport to city center: Subway (¥25-35, fastest), taxi/Didi (¥100-180, 40-60 min), airport shuttle bus (¥25, 60-90 min).

By High-Speed Train

China's high-speed rail network is spectacular. Direct trains to Beijing from:

Book on Trip.com (English interface, foreign cards accepted) or 12306.cn (Chinese only, but cheapest).

3. Getting Around Beijing

Subway — Your Best Friend

Beijing's subway is the world's largest metro system by route length (837 km, 27 lines). It's incredibly efficient, English-signed, and costs ¥3-9 per trip. Trains run 5:00 AM to ~11:00 PM.

Didi (Ride-Hailing)

Didi is China's Uber. Download the app (English version available), link a foreign card, and you're good. Fares are cheap: ¥25-50 for most trips within the city. The English Didi app now accepts Visa/Mastercard directly — no Chinese bank account needed.

⚠️ Taxi Warning

Street taxis exist but drivers rarely speak English. Always have your destination written in Chinese characters. Avoid unlicensed taxis at tourist spots — they're notorious for overcharging. Didi is safer and cheaper.

Bikes & Walking

Beijing is incredibly flat — great for cycling. Shared bikes (Mobike/Meituan, Hello Bike) are everywhere. Scan with Alipay to unlock (¥1.5 per 30 min). The city center (within 2nd Ring Road) is walkable, though distances between attractions can be large.

4. Top 12 Must-See Attractions

🏰 The Forbidden City (Palace Museum)
📍 Dongcheng District⏱ 3-5 hours💰 ¥60 (Apr-Oct) / ¥40 (Nov-Mar)
The world's largest palace complex — 980 buildings, 8,700+ rooms. Home to 24 emperors over 500 years. Must book online in advance (tickets sell out days ahead). Open Tue-Sun, closed Mondays. Morning slots (8:30 AM) have the best light and fewer crowds. Audio guide highly recommended (¥40).
🧱 The Great Wall — Mutianyu Section
📍 70km north of Beijing⏱ 4-6 hours💰 ¥45 + cable car ¥120 round-trip
Skip Badaling — it's a tourist zoo. Go to Mutianyu: beautifully restored, far fewer crowds, and a toboggan slide down (an absolute highlight). Book a private driver (¥500-700 round-trip) or take the 916 Express bus. Go early (arrive by 8 AM) and you'll have sections of the wall almost to yourself.
🏛️ Tiananmen Square
📍 City Center⏱ 1-2 hours💰 Free
The world's largest public square (440,000 m²). Flag-raising at sunrise is a spectacle, but you'll need to arrive by 4-5 AM. Security checks mandatory — bring your passport. The square is flanked by the Great Hall of the People, National Museum (also free, worth a visit), and Mao's Mausoleum.
🌸 Summer Palace (Yiheyuan)
📍 Haidian District⏱ 3-4 hours💰 ¥30 (Apr-Oct) / ¥20 (Nov-Mar)
The imperial garden retreat — a massive park built around Kunming Lake. Walk the Long Corridor (728m of painted ceilings), climb Longevity Hill for panoramic lake views, and take a dragon boat ride (¥20). The Marble Boat is the most iconic photo spot. Best visited on a clear morning.
🛕 Temple of Heaven (Tiantan)
📍 Dongcheng District⏱ 2-3 hours💰 ¥15 (park) + ¥20 (inner halls)
Famous for its circular Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests — the iconic blue-tiled triple-eaved tower you've seen in every Beijing postcard. Go early morning (6-8 AM) to see locals practicing tai chi, calligraphy with water brushes, and singing in the surrounding park. A truly authentic Beijing experience.
🛍️ Nanluoguxiang & Hutongs
📍 Dongcheng District⏱ 2-3 hours💰 Free
Beijing's most famous hutong (traditional alleyway) area. The main street is touristy but the side alleys are authentic — you'll see locals playing chess, drying laundry, and cooking in courtyard homes. Rent a rickshaw (¥100-150/hour) for a guided tour, or just wander. Best at sunset when the lanterns come on.
🏟️ 798 Art District
📍 Chaoyang District⏱ 2-4 hours💰 Free (galleries free, special exhibits may charge)
Beijing's answer to SoHo — a former factory complex turned contemporary art hub. 200+ galleries, design shops, and cafes in Bauhaus-style industrial buildings. Great for a break from imperial history. UCCA (Ullens Center) and Pace Gallery are the star institutions. Best on weekends when there's a buzz.
🦆 Wangfujing Street & Night Market
📍 Dongcheng District⏱ 1-2 hours💰 Free
Beijing's premier shopping street. The Snack Street is famous for exotic eats (scorpions on a stick, anyone?), but the real gem is the side alleys with local restaurants. Between Wangfujing and the Forbidden City lies a network of hutongs with some of the best Peking duck in town.
🏗️ Olympic Park — Bird's Nest & Water Cube
📍 Chaoyang District⏱ 1-2 hours💰 Free (park) / ¥50 (Bird's Nest interior)
The 2008 Olympic venues are architectural marvels. The Bird's Nest (National Stadium) and Water Cube (Aquatics Center) are stunning at night when fully lit. Adjacent Olympic Forest Park is a nice green escape. Subway Line 8 gets you right there.
🏯 Lama Temple (Yonghe Temple)
📍 Dongcheng District⏱ 1-2 hours💰 ¥25
Beijing's most active Tibetan Buddhist temple — and it's spectacular. Incense fills the air as worshippers pray. The 18-meter Maitreya Buddha carved from a single sandalwood tree (Guinness World Record) is jaw-dropping. Respectful dress required (covered shoulders/knees).
🌿 Jingshan Park (Coal Hill)
📍 North of Forbidden City⏱ 45-60 min💰 ¥2
The best panoramic view of the Forbidden City — from the hilltop pavilion, you see the entire golden-roofed palace complex stretching south. Go at sunset. At ¥2, it's the best value view in Beijing. Climb takes 10 minutes. Directly north of the Forbidden City exit — combine them.
🗿 Ming Tombs (Shisanling)
📍 50km north of Beijing⏱ 3-4 hours💰 ¥30-60 depending on tomb
The burial complex of 13 Ming Dynasty emperors. Only three tombs are open to the public. Dingling (the underground palace) is the most impressive — you descend into the actual burial chamber. Often combined with a Mutianyu Great Wall day trip.

5. Where to Stay: Best Neighborhoods

Booking platforms: Trip.com (best English interface for China hotels), Booking.com, Agoda. Always book online — walk-in rates are higher, and many budget hotels can't legally accept foreigners unless pre-registered.

⚠️ Hotel Registration Rule

All hotels in China must register foreign guests with the police within 24 hours. This is automatic at proper hotels, but Airbnb hosts and small guesthouses may not do it — and you could face issues at departure. Always confirm: "Can you register foreigners?" before booking small accommodations.

6. Beijing Food Guide: What to Eat

Must-Try Dishes

🍜 How to Order Without Chinese

Most mid-range restaurants have picture menus or English translations. For street food, use Google Translate's camera mode (with VPN) or Pleco's OCR reader. Pointing and smiling works remarkably well. Numbers: hold up fingers or show on your phone.

7. Payment & Apps: How to Pay in Beijing

Beijing is almost entirely cashless. You'll need Alipay or WeChat Pay for 95% of transactions. Good news: both now accept foreign credit cards directly.

Setup Before You Fly

  1. Download Alipay (international version) and register with your phone number.
  2. Link your foreign Visa/Mastercard — Alipay 2026 makes this seamless. No Chinese bank account needed.
  3. Verify your identity with passport scan (required for payments over ¥2,000 cumulative).
  4. Get a VPN installed and tested before you land. See our eSIM guide and VPN guide.
  5. Download Didi (ride-hailing), Pleco (dictionary), and Amap/Gaode Maps (Google Maps doesn't work well in China).

Cash: Bring some emergency RMB (¥1,000-2,000). ATMs at the airport accept foreign cards, but exchange rates are better from your home bank. Many small vendors genuinely cannot make change for ¥100 bills.

8. Cultural Tips & Etiquette

9. Sample Itineraries

🗓 3-Day Beijing Express

Day 1 — Imperial Beijing

Tiananmen Square → Forbidden City → Jingshan Park (sunset)

  • Start 7:30 AM at Tiananmen (beat the flag-raising crowds)
  • Walk north through Forbidden City (pre-booked tickets!) — 3-4 hours
  • Lunch at Siji Minfu for Peking duck near the north gate
  • Jingshan Park for panoramic sunset — ¥2, best value in Beijing
  • Evening: Walk Nanluoguxiang hutongs, dinner + craft beer
Day 2 — The Great Wall

Mutianyu Great Wall (full day)

  • 6:30 AM departure with private driver (pre-booked)
  • Arrive 8 AM — take cable car up, walk east for the best views and fewer crowds
  • Toboggan slide down (unforgettable!)
  • Return to city by 3 PM, rest
  • Evening: Wangfujing Night Market + snack street
Day 3 — Temples & Culture

Temple of Heaven → Summer Palace → 798 Art District

  • 6 AM Temple of Heaven (catch morning tai chi in the park)
  • Subway to Summer Palace — 2 hours exploring gardens and lake
  • Afternoon: 798 Art District — galleries, coffee, photos
  • Farewell dinner: Hotpot at Donglaishun or Haidilao

🗓 5-Day Beijing Deep Dive

Days 1-3: Same as above, but more relaxed pacing.

Day 4 — Culture & Hutongs

Lama Temple → Confucius Temple → Hutong Walk → Drum Tower → Houhai Lake

  • Morning: Lama Temple (Buddhist temple) + adjacent Confucius Temple
  • Walk south through the hutong maze — Wudaoying Hutong for indie shops and cafes
  • Drum Tower & Bell Tower (¥30 combo ticket)
  • Afternoon: Houhai Lake area — rent a paddle boat, walk the lakeside
  • Evening: Ghost Street (Guijie) — Beijing's 24-hour food street, famous for spicy crayfish
Day 5 — Hidden Gems

Old Summer Palace → Olympic Park → Sanlitun

  • Morning: Old Summer Palace (Yuanmingyuan) — the haunting ruins of the imperial gardens destroyed in 1860
  • Midday: Olympic Park — Bird's Nest and Water Cube (exterior visit is free and impressive)
  • Afternoon: Panjiayuan Antique Market (weekend best) — browse everything from Mao memorabilia to fake Ming vases. Bargain hard.
  • Evening: Sanlitun bar street — expat central for a well-deserved cocktail

🗓 7-Day Beijing Complete

Days 1-5: Same as above. Days 6-7:

10. Practical Information

Safety

Internet & Connectivity

Emergency Numbers

Budget Planning (per person per day)

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