A Taipei Food Trip: 3 Days of Eating Well
Soup dumplings, beef noodles, night-market classics and shaved ice — how to eat your way through Taipei in three days, with real stops, Maps links and the dishes worth queueing for.
Few cities reward a food-first trip like Taipei. It's cheap, it's relentlessly good, and the night markets mean you can keep eating long after most cities have closed the kitchen. Three days is plenty to hit the icons — soup dumplings, beef noodle soup, a proper night market — without turning the trip into a death march of queues.
Below is the eating itinerary, dish by dish, woven through a sensible route so you're never doubling back hungry. Genuine MICHELIN and Bib Gourmand mentions are flagged with the year and a note to verify current status — lists change every year — and every stop links to Google Maps.
At a glance
What to eat in Taipei
Genuine MICHELIN and Bib Gourmand mentions carry the year and a reminder to verify current status — selections change every year. Every name links to Google Maps.
- Xiaolongbao (soup dumplings) Bib Gourmand · MICHELIN Guide Taipei (recent) — Din Tai Fung · verify current status
Steamed soup dumplings (xiaolongbao)
- Taiwanese beef noodle soup (niu rou mian) Bib Gourmand · MICHELIN Guide Taipei (recent) — several beef-noodle shops · verify current status
Braised beef shank and tendon in a rich soy broth with hand-pulled noodles
- Night-market street food Bib Gourmand · MICHELIN Guide Taipei (recent) — various night-market stalls · verify current status
Giant fried chicken cutlet
Clay-oven-baked bun stuffed with peppery pork and spring onion, sesame crust
Glistening minced-and-braised pork over rice
Hot or cold soy milk (sweet or savoury)
Brown-sugar boba milk
Fluffy steamed bun folded around braised pork belly, pickled mustard, peanut powder and coriander
Mountains of fluffy snow-ice piled with fresh mango, condensed milk and mango ice cream
Crispy, flaky griddled scallion pancake, often with a fried egg
Personal or shared hotpot — milky, herbal or spicy mala broths with meats, seafood, tofu and greens
Locally grown Tieguanyin and Baozhong oolong, brewed gongfu-style
- Fine dining (the splurge) ★ MICHELIN Star · MICHELIN Guide Taipei (recent) — Le Palais / RAW · verify current status
Refined Cantonese roast meats and dim sum
Silky thickened noodle soup with baby oysters (or braised intestine), coriander and black vinegar
Buttery shortcrust cakes filled with sweet-tart pineapple jam — Taiwan's signature gift box
Savoury rolled egg crepe (dan bing)
The eating route, day by day
A 3-day eating route
Old-town snacks and a night market, hot springs and tower-view dinners, then soup dumplings and tea — paced so you're hungry at the right times.
Old town, then hot springs and the tower, then a day of imperial art and creative Taipei — a complete first-timer's city.
Old town, temples & a night market
- Longshan TempleWanhua (Old Town)
- Bopiliao Historic BlockWanhua (Old Town)
- Taiwanese beef noodle soup (niu rou mian) Bib Gourmand · MICHELIN Guide Taipei (recent) — several beef-noodle shops · verify current statusCitywide
- Dadaocheng & Dihua Street (old town)Dadaocheng
- Night-market street food Bib Gourmand · MICHELIN Guide Taipei (recent) — various night-market stalls · verify current statusShilin / Raohe / Citywide
- XimendingXimending
If it rains: Dihua Street's arcades and Bopiliao are covered; the markets have sheltered stretches.
Add if you have time: Tea in a Dadaocheng heritage café.
Hot springs, the tower & a sunset
- Xiaolongbao (soup dumplings) Bib Gourmand · MICHELIN Guide Taipei (recent) — Din Tai Fung · verify current statusDa'an / Xinyi
- Chiang Kai-shek Memorial HallZhongzheng
- Taipei 101 & ObservatoryXinyi
- Taiwanese hotpotCitywide
If it rains: Beitou and the Taipei 101 observatory are fine in the rain; skip the Elephant Mountain climb.
Add if you have time: A private hot-spring tub in Beitou.
Imperial treasures & creative Taipei
- National Palace MuseumShilin
- Braised pork rice (lu rou fan)Citywide
- Huashan 1914 Creative ParkZhongzheng
- Songshan Cultural & Creative ParkXinyi
- Night-market street food Bib Gourmand · MICHELIN Guide Taipei (recent) — various night-market stalls · verify current statusShilin / Raohe / Citywide
- Raohe Street Night MarketSongshan
If it rains: The Palace Museum and the creative parks are all indoors — a perfect wet-day plan.
Add if you have time: A design-market browse or a film at Songshan.
Route last checked 2026-06-17 — verify hours and bookings before you go.
Want this as an interactive guide you can reshape by length, budget and pace — with the maps, food and a one-tap PDF?
Get the Taipei Destination Pass · S$16.90 Or build a free planWhere to stay in Taipei
Taipei is compact and the MRT is superb, so almost any central area works. Around Taipei Main Station puts the transport hub and old town on your doorstep; Ximending is buzzy and budget-friendly; Da'an/Yongkang is the best for food and cafés; Xinyi is modern and upscale by Taipei 101. Rooms are good value compared with most Asian capitals.
Zhongzheng / Taipei Main Station
First-timers — the transport hub, the old town and the memorial hall
Ximending
Buzzy shopping-and-street-food district; lots of budget hotels
Da'an / Yongkang Street
The best food street, cafés and Daan Park; central and pleasant
Xinyi
Taipei 101, malls and nightlife; modern and upscale
Zhongshan
Boutique hotels and department stores; stylish and quieter
By budget
- Budget — NT$700–1,800 · Hostels & guesthouses, Budget business hotels
- Mid-range — NT$2,500–5,000 · 3–4 star hotels, Boutique hotels
- Comfortable — NT$6,000–15,000+ · 5-star hotels, Xinyi towers with Taipei 101 views, Beitou hot-spring resorts
- Stay near an MRT station — it reaches almost everything, including the airport, hot springs and day-trip lines.
- Da'an/Yongkang gives the best food-and-café base; Xinyi suits a Taipei 101 view and shopping.
- A Beitou hot-spring hotel is a relaxing splurge night with a private thermal tub.
Rates and availability change constantly — confirm with the hotel or a booking site before paying.
What to budget for Taipei
Per person, per day, excluding flights. A rough guide only — your costs depend on season, area and pace.
Budget
- Accommodation: Hostel or budget hotel in Ximending or near the station (NT$700–1,800).
- Meals: Night markets, lu rou fan, beef noodles and soy-milk breakfasts — Bib Gourmand street food (NT$60–180/meal).
- Transport: MRT, buses and YouBike (tap an EasyCard); walk the old town.
- Attractions: Free icons — the temples, the memorial halls, Elephant Mountain, the old town and the night markets.
- Evening: A night-market feast, the free Elephant Mountain skyline view, and a Tamsui or riverside sunset.
Mid-range
- Accommodation: 3–4 star hotel in Da'an or Zhongshan (NT$2,500–5,000).
- Meals: Night-market eats plus xiaolongbao, hotpot or a sit-down Taiwanese dinner (NT$180–600/meal).
- Transport: MRT plus the odd cheap taxi for the hot springs and day trips.
- Attractions: Add the Taipei 101 observatory, the National Palace Museum, a Beitou hot-spring soak and the Maokong Gondola.
- Evening: A hot-spring soak in Beitou, the Taipei 101 observatory at dusk, or tea on a Maokong hill.
Comfortable
- Accommodation: 5-star Xinyi tower with a Taipei 101 view, or a private-tub Beitou hot-spring resort (NT$6,000–15,000+).
- Meals: A starred Cantonese or modern-Taiwanese tasting, plus the street classics by day.
- Transport: Taxis and private day-trip drivers (Jiufen, Yangmingshan); MRT when it's faster.
- Attractions: Add a private hot-spring suite, a guided tea ceremony, or a chauffeured Jiufen-and-coast day.
- Evening: A Michelin-starred dinner with a city view, or a private Beitou thermal suite.
When to visit Taipei
Weather and typhoon signals change. Taipei is rainy year-round; during a typhoon (mainly summer/autumn), transport and attractions can close — check the Central Weather Administration before travelling.
Autumn (the best season) Oct, Nov, Dec
Mild, drier and pleasant, 18–26°C — generally Taipei's most comfortable, clearest stretch.
The best season for Elephant Mountain, Yangmingshan and the day trips — prioritise the outdoor sights.
Look out for: Yangmingshan silvergrass season, Comfortable hot-spring weather
Winter (cool, damp & hot-spring season) Jan, Feb, Mar
Cool and often grey and drizzly, 12–20°C — chilly with the damp; perfect hot-spring weather.
Lean into Beitou's hot springs and indoor sights (museums, creative parks); around Lunar New Year, confirm small eateries are open.
Look out for: Beitou hot-spring season, Lunar New Year markets (Dihua Street), Cherry blossoms from late winter
Spring (warming & wet) Apr, May
Warming and humid, 20–28°C, with the 'plum rain' bringing long damp spells, especially in May.
On a wet day swap the mountains for the museums, creative parks and a Beitou soak; do outdoor sights between the rain.
Look out for: Cherry blossom on Yangmingshan (early spring), Spring tea harvest
Summer (hot, humid & typhoons) Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep
Hot and very humid, 28–35°C, with afternoon thunderstorms and the typhoon season (roughly July–October).
Keep indoor backups ready (the Palace Museum, creative parks, malls); do mountains and Elephant Mountain early, and watch the weather service for typhoons that shut things down.
Look out for: Mango season (shaved ice!), Liveliest night markets
Common Taipei mistakes to avoid
- Treating night markets as a snack — they're the main event; come hungry and graze across several.
- Only seeing Taipei 101 and Ximending — the old town, the hot springs and the day trips are the magic.
- Underestimating the rain — Taipei is one of the wetter capitals; carry an umbrella year-round.
- Skipping the hot springs — Beitou is a quick, cheap MRT ride for a thermal soak.
- Drinking the tap water unboiled — stick to bottled or the boiled water in hotels.
Good to know in Taipei
Getting around
- Taipei Metro (MRT): the fast, cheap, spotless and English-signed backbone — reaches almost everywhere, including the airport line, the zoo and the hot springs.
- Buses: dense network for the spots the MRT misses (Yangmingshan, the National Palace Museum) — tap your EasyCard.
- YouBike: cheap public bikes at stations citywide, great for the riverside paths.
- Taxis: plentiful, metered, cheap and honest — a screenshot of a Chinese address helps.
- Trains (TRA) & the Pingxi branch line: reach Jiufen/Ruifang and the lantern town of Shifen.
- High Speed Rail (HSR): from Taipei Main Station down the west coast to Taichung, Tainan and Kaohsiung.
Buy an EasyCard at any MRT station or convenience store and tap on the metro, buses, YouBike and at convenience stores. The MRT is fast, cheap and English-signed; buses and YouBike fill the gaps and…
Money & connectivity
- EasyCard pays for transport and most convenience stores; cards and LINE Pay are common in shops and restaurants. Carry cash for night markets, small eateries and temples.
- Excellent 4G/5G; very cheap unlimited tourist SIMs/eSIMs at the airport. Free public Wi-Fi (iTaiwan) and Wi-Fi in most cafés and the MRT.
- Not customary — there's no tipping at restaurants, taxis or hotels. Some upscale restaurants add a 10% service charge.
Local etiquette
- Taiwanese are famously warm and helpful — a little Mandarin (xiè xie = thank you) is appreciated.
- Queue patiently, keep right and don't eat or drink on the MRT (it's fined).
- Convenience stores (7-Eleven, FamilyMart) are a way of life — bill payments, snacks, tickets and clean toilets.
- Remove shoes where indicated (some guesthouses, hot springs) and dress modestly at temples.
Police: 110 · Fire & Ambulance: 119 · Taiwan is very safe with low crime and excellent, affordable healthcare. · Tap water is treated but most people drink it boiled or filtered; bottled water is cheap and everywhere.
Taipei — frequently asked questions
What food is Taipei famous for?
Taipei's highlights include Xiaolongbao (soup dumplings), Taiwanese beef noodle soup (niu rou mian), Night-market street food, Black-pepper bun (hujiao bing), Braised pork rice (lu rou fan) and more. Each is linked to Google Maps in the route above; famous spots queue at peak times, so go off-peak or pick a neighbouring stall.
Is Taipei good for a food trip?
3–5 days is the usual recommendation for Taipei. The plan here runs to 3 days, and the full guide builds routes from 1–5 days — so you can shorten or extend it to fit your trip.
Where should I stay in Taipei for the food?
Good bases include Zhongzheng / Taipei Main Station (First-timers — the transport hub, the old town and the memo…); Ximending (Buzzy shopping-and-street-food district; lots of budget hot…); Da'an / Yongkang Street (The best food street, cafés and Daan Park; central and plea…). See "Where to stay" above for the full breakdown by budget.
How much does eating in Taipei cost per day?
Roughly around NT$1,000–2,000 a day on a budget, NT$2,200–4,500 mid-range, NT$5,000–11,000+ comfortable per person, excluding flights and accommodation swings. See "Budget" above for what each tier covers.
When is the best time to visit Taipei?
Weather and typhoon signals change. Taipei is rainy year-round; during a typhoon (mainly summer/autumn), transport and attractions can close — check the Central Weather Administration before travelling. See "When to go" above for the month-by-month detail.
Do I need a visa for Taiwan?
Many nationalities enter Taiwan visa-free for short stays, but allowances vary by passport. Confirm your own requirements (and any online arrival card) on the official Taiwan Bureau of Consular Affairs website before booking.
Plan Taipei your way
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