Taiwan Travel Guide: Taipei, Tainan, Taroko Gorge & Where to Go 2026

Taiwan blends vibrant cities with stunning natural landscapes, from mountains to beaches. LocalsInsider’s travel guide offers unique tips on eco-friendly restaurants, boutique hotels, and serene spots to immerse yourself in Taiwanese culture and enjoy local flavors.

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Locals Insider · Asia

Taiwan is the island nation that quietly has the best food culture in the Chinese-speaking world. Taipei is the night-market capital — Shilin for first-timers, Raohe for locals, Yongkang Street for the original Din Tai Fung — plus André Chiang's two-Michelin-star RAW and the museum that holds the Forbidden City's evacuated treasure (the National Palace Museum). Beyond Taipei: Tainan's slower temple culture, Hualien's gateway to Taroko Gorge's marble cliffs, Sun Moon Lake's central mountain landscape.

Our Taiwan coverage focuses on Taipei neighborhoods, the night market crawls worth doing properly, and the east coast route via Hualien and Taroko Gorge that most travelers miss.

The travel personality: The Food-First Wanderer

Quick facts

CapitalTaipei
LanguageMandarin Chinese / Taiwanese
CurrencyTWD
Time zoneCST (UTC+8)
Plug typeType A/B (110V)

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via European Central Bank · updated daily

Best time to visit

SeasonWhy go
March-MayMild, blossom season, before the summer humidity arrives
October-DecemberCool, dry, fall colors in the mountains, perfect everything
June-SeptemberHot and humid, typhoon possible, but lush green and night markets thrive

Top cities to visit

Taipei Night markets, Taipei 101, Beitou hot springs, 24-hour Eslite bookstores
Tainan Taiwan's oldest city — temples, traditional food, slower southern pace
Hualien East coast gateway to Taroko Gorge
Sun Moon Lake Central mountain lake — Taiwan's most photographed inland landscape

Experiences you'll probably love

  • Shilin Night Market in Taipei — most famous night market for first-timers, but Raohe is the locals' pick
  • Beef noodle soup crawl in Taipei — Yongkang Street has the highest concentration
  • Taroko Gorge from Hualien — marble cliffs, river-cut canyon, half-day or two-day hike
  • Beitou hot springs in northern Taipei — Japanese-era public baths still operating
  • High-speed rail Taipei to Tainan in 90 minutes for completely different Taiwan

Not many tourists know about…

  • Stay near a metro station — Taipei's MRT is excellent and English-signed
  • Din Tai Fung's original Yongkang Street location is touristy now — try Hangzhou Xiaolongbao instead
  • Taiwanese breakfast (蛋餅, 豆漿) is a genuine experience — try Fuhang Soy Milk at 6am
  • Convenience stores (7-11, FamilyMart) are genuinely useful — Taiwanese 7-11s are world-class
  • Type the address into Google Maps, then show it to the taxi driver — English is limited outside Taipei

If you visit only once, make it this

Taroko Gorge marble cliffs
Hualien County, Eastern Taiwan

An 18-kilometer marble-walled canyon on Taiwan's east coast — the Liwu River cut through pure marble for millions of years. Suspension bridges over turquoise water, the Eternal Spring Shrine clinging to the cliff face, Swallow Grotto and Tunnel of Nine Turns trails. Half-day from Hualien, full-day if you hike.

Train from Taipei to Hualien (2 hours via Taroko Express), then shuttle bus #1133A into the park. Skip during typhoon season (June-September).

Where to walk & breathe

Yangmingshan National Park Volcanic mountain park

Forty minutes from Taipei by bus — active volcanic crater fields, sulfur vents, hot springs, calla lily season in March-April, and the highest concentration of dormant volcanoes in Taiwan. Locals' weekend escape.

Bus 260 from Taipei Main Station. Free park entry.

Museums worth your time

National Palace Museum Chinese imperial collection
221 Zhishan Rd Sec 2, Shilin, Taipei

The collection Chiang Kai-shek's Nationalists evacuated from Beijing's Forbidden City in 1949. 700,000 pieces of imperial Chinese art including the famous jadeite cabbage and meat-shaped stone.

Visit website →
Taipei Fine Arts Museum (TFAM) Contemporary Taiwanese art
181 Zhongshan N Rd Sec 3, Zhongshan, Taipei

Taiwan's first museum of modern art (1983) — strong rotating exhibitions of contemporary Asian art. The Taipei Biennial here every two years.

Visit website →
Songshan Cultural and Creative Park Creative district & galleries
133 Guangfu S Rd, Xinyi, Taipei

Former tobacco factory turned creative complex — design galleries, the original Eslite bookshop's flagship, indie cinema, weekend markets. Taipei's most photogenic adaptive reuse project.

Visit website →

The Insider's Edit

A few additions for travelers heading deeper into Taiwan:

Hotel Proverbs Taipei

Design-forward Da-an district boutique — one of Taipei's most refined small hotels.

Volando Urai Spring Spa & Resort

A hot-spring retreat in the hills outside Taipei in Wulai, beside the indigenous Atayal village.

JL Studio, Taichung

Singaporean-Taiwanese chef Jimmy Lim's modern Singaporean tasting menu now holds three Michelin stars in Taichung — Asia's 50 Best Restaurants #14 in 2026.

A tea-house day in Pinglin or Maokong

High-mountain oolong tasting with a master picker — the tea villages south of Taipei.

Where to eat

Michelin
RAW
301 Le Qun 3rd Rd, Zhongshan, Taipei

Chef André Chiang's two-Michelin-star contemporary Taiwanese — explores 24 micro-seasons in Taiwan's solar calendar. The wooden cloud sculpture from Camille Walala still defines the dining room. Reservations 3 months ahead.

$$$$ (NT$5,800+ tasting menu) Reserve →
Traditional
Mountain and Sea House
6F, 33 Section 4, Renai Rd, Da'an, Taipei

Taiwanese banquet cuisine in the Da'an district — the place locals book for the most important family meals. Crispy pork knuckle, abalone soup, the steamed grouper.

$$$ (NT$2,500-4,000 per person)
Seafood
Addiction Aquatic Development
18 Alley 2, Lane 410, Minzu E Rd, Zhongshan, Taipei

Taipei's Tsukiji-style seafood market with standing sushi bars, hotpot stations, and the sashimi counter. The freshness is the experience — same building hosts the markets locals shop at.

$$$ (NT$1,500-3,500 per person) Reserve →
Traditional
Din Tai Fung Yongkang Original
194 Xinyi Rd Sec 2, Da'an, Taipei

The 1972 original Din Tai Fung — the xiaolongbao has been pleated 18 times exactly since the start. Touristy, but the lunch queue moves and the dumplings are still the benchmark.

$$ (NT$600-1,200 per person) Reserve →

Where to stay

Luxury
Mandarin Oriental Taipei
158 Dunhua N Rd, Songshan, Taipei

The Taipei luxury benchmark — the largest standard rooms in the city (55 sqm), Bencotto (one Michelin star) and Ya Ge for Cantonese, the rooftop pool, in-house Macallan whisky cellar.

NT$15,000-32,000 / night Book →
Boutique
W Taipei
10 Zhongxiao E Rd Sec 5, Xinyi, Taipei

The Xinyi business district's social hub — WET rooftop pool with Taipei 101 views, the WOOBAR scene, the YEN rooftop Cantonese restaurant. Taiwan's loudest design hotel.

NT$8,500-18,000 / night Book →
Luxury
The Silks Place Taroko
18 Tianxiang Rd, Tianxiang Village, Hualien

The only luxury hotel inside Taroko Gorge — perched above the canyon at Tianxiang. Two pools, the marble walls of the gorge directly visible from the rooftop, hiking starts from the lobby.

NT$7,000-15,000 / night Book →
Boutique
Hotel ÉCLAT Taipei
370 Dunhua S Rd Sec 1, Da'an, Taipei

Small Luxury Hotels of the World member — only 65 rooms, contemporary European art (Dali, Picasso, Warhol originals) throughout. The intimate, design-led alternative to Taipei's larger luxury hotels.

NT$8,000-18,000 / night Book →

Realistic daily budget

Budget
€45-85
Mid-range
€100-180
Luxury
€350+

Per person, per day. Excludes flights. Peak season can run 20-40% higher.

Travel safety & inclusivity

Safety index
10/10
LGBTQ+ friendliness
9/10

Safety scores reflect UK FCDO & US State Department travel advisories. LGBTQ+ scores reflect Equaldex and ILGA-Europe rankings. Both refreshed quarterly.

Major festivals

February (Lunar New Year)
Pingxi Lantern Festival
Thousands of sky lanterns released over the Pingxi valley — Taiwan's most photographed event
May or June
Dragon Boat Festival
Dragon boat races on Tamsui River and Lukang, zongzi rice dumplings everywhere
October
Taipei Pride
East Asia's largest LGBTQ+ pride event — Taiwan was the first Asian country to legalize same-sex marriage

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Frequently asked questions about Taiwan

Do I need a visa to visit Taiwan?

Most Western travelers don't. Citizens of the EU (all Nordic countries), UK, US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, and around 60 other countries can enter Taiwan visa-free for up to 90 days. Singapore and Malaysian citizens get 30-day visa-free entry. Citizens of countries not on the visa-free list need a Taiwan visa or entry permit applied for through a Taiwanese consulate. Russian citizens currently need a visa or an entry permit through an authorized travel agency. Taiwan (Republic of China) is governed entirely separately from mainland China (PRC) — a Taiwan visa does NOT cover China, and vice versa. Passport must be valid for at least 6 months from entry. Have proof of onward travel ready.

Is Taroko Gorge open?

Taroko Gorge — Taiwan's most spectacular natural site — has been largely closed since the April 2024 Hualien earthquake, which caused major landslides and damaged infrastructure throughout the park. Some sections have reopened progressively, but trails and access remain limited and subject to further closures after rain or aftershocks. Always check the latest status through the Taroko National Park official site before planning a visit. In the meantime, Hualien still has worthwhile alternatives: Qixingtan Beach, Liyu Lake, and the Mugumuyu Tribal Trail. The east coast in general remains beautiful — the Highway 11 drive south from Hualien to Taitung is one of Taiwan's best road trips. If Taroko is the main reason you're visiting Taiwan, consider rerouting to Alishan (cloud-cloaked mountain forests and sunrise) or Sun Moon Lake until the gorge fully reopens.

What's the best 7-day itinerary for Taiwan?

A balanced first trip: Taipei (3 days) for the night markets (Shilin, Raohe, Ningxia), Taipei 101, the National Palace Museum (one of the world's greatest Chinese art collections), Longshan Temple, and an evening trip to Jiufen and Shifen lantern village. Sun Moon Lake (1 day) as a base for the central mountains — bike the lake, visit Wenwu Temple. Alishan (1 night) for the sunrise sea-of-clouds and the forest railway. Tainan (1–2 days) for Taiwan's oldest city, temples, and the country's best traditional food. Kaohsiung if you have an extra day for the harbor and Lotus Pond. The Taiwan High Speed Rail connects Taipei to Kaohsiung in 90 minutes — book through THSR's app, around NT$1,500 one way. Skip rental cars in cities; ride share via Uber and Taiwan Taxi works perfectly.

When is the best time to visit Taiwan?

March to May and October to November are the sweet spots — mild temperatures 18–26°C, low humidity, cherry blossoms in February–March in the mountains, fall colors in November. Summer (June–September) is hot (32°C+ in Taipei), humid, and typhoon season — flights and ferries to Kinmen, Penghu, and Green Island can be disrupted, and trains on the east coast occasionally suspend. Avoid traveling during Chinese New Year (late January/February — 2026 falls February 17) when the country shuts down for family festivities, prices spike, and intercity transport sells out. Winter (December–February) is mild in the south (Tainan, Kaohsiung) and ideal for hot-spring towns like Beitou and Wulai — Taipei stays cool and damp around 14–18°C.

What night market food should I try?

Taipei's night markets are the city's most-visited attraction collectively — the food is the whole point of going. The essentials: beef noodle soup (Taiwan's national dish; the spicy red-braised version is iconic), xiao long bao (soup dumplings — Din Tai Fung is the global chain but Mingyue Tangbao in Yongkang is the local-favorite hole in the wall), scallion pancakes, oyster omelette, stinky tofu (try it — divisive but worth knowing), bubble tea (invented in Taichung in the 1980s — Chen San Ding and Tiger Sugar are the local champions), and pineapple cake as a souvenir (SunnyHills or Chia Te). Best markets: Raohe (most compact and food-focused), Shilin (largest), Ningxia (locals' choice), and Tonghua/Linjiang (quieter neighborhood option).

Locals Insider's Articles About Taiwan

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