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Beijing

Beijing

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Gate8 Global Team

Beijing deserves 3–4 days minimum — it's not a city you skim. Spend one full day at the Forbidden City and Tiananmen Square, one day at the Great Wall (Mutianyu is the best first-timer section, about 1.5 hours from downtown), and the rest wandering hutong alleyways, the Temple of Heaven, and the Summer Palace. The subway is excellent, cheap, and English-signed. Budget roughly $30–55/day per person before accommodation.

Beijing is China's political and historical center of gravity — eight centuries of imperial capital squeezed between wide Soviet-style boulevards, ring roads, and pockets of narrow hutong alleys that somehow survived it all. It rewards patience: rushing Beijing in a day and a half means missing most of what makes it worth the flight.

How many days do you need in Beijing?

Three to four full days is the sweet spot. Day one: the Forbidden City and Tiananmen Square (start early — it's genuinely huge and the crowds build fast). Day two: the Great Wall as a full-day trip. Day three: the Temple of Heaven, a hutong neighborhood, and Beijing roast duck for dinner. A fourth day covers the Summer Palace or the 798 Art District if you want a change of pace from imperial history.

Which Great Wall section should you visit from Beijing?

SectionDistance from BeijingVibe
Mutianyu~1.5 hoursRestored, scenic, cable car + toboggan down — the best first-timer choice
Jinshanling~2.5–3 hoursWilder, less crowded, more hiking, better for a full-day adventure
Badaling~1 hourMost famous, most restored, also the most crowded — skip if you can
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Book Great Wall tickets and, if you're going independently, your transport in advance — a private car or an organized small-group tour saves real hassle versus figuring out public buses. Go on a weekday if your schedule allows; weekends bring heavy domestic tourist crowds.

What's actually worth seeing

  1. The Forbidden City — the imperial palace complex at the heart of Beijing, genuinely vast (budget 3–4 hours). Enter from the south (Tiananmen side), exit north toward Jingshan Park for a rooftop view over the whole complex.
  2. The Great Wall (Mutianyu or Jinshanling) — the reason half the world puts China on a bucket list, and it delivers.
  3. A hutong neighborhood — Nanluoguxiang or the quieter alleys around the Drum and Bell Towers, for a feel of Beijing before the ring roads.
  4. The Temple of Heaven — a huge public park built around a stunning circular temple complex, where locals do tai chi, ballroom dance, and cards every morning.

Getting around

Beijing's subway is modern, cheap (most rides $0.30–0.70), and has English signage throughout — genuinely one of the easier big-city metro systems in the world for a first-time visitor. Use the Didi app (China's Uber-equivalent) for anything the subway doesn't reach directly; street-hailed taxis are fine too, but Didi avoids any language barrier.

Mistakes worth avoiding

  • Trying to see the Forbidden City and the Great Wall on the same day — both deserve a full day on their own, and combining them means rushing both.
  • Skipping advance tickets for the Forbidden City — it's a timed-entry, online-booking system, and walk-up tickets are not guaranteed, especially in peak season.
  • Accepting an unsolicited 'tea ceremony' invitation from a friendly stranger near Tiananmen Square or Wangfujing — this is a well-known scam that ends with an enormous bill.

Where to stay in Beijing — hotels

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Questions people actually ask

How many days should I spend in Beijing?
Three to four days is the right amount — one for the Forbidden City, one for the Great Wall, and one or two more for the Temple of Heaven, hutongs, and food. Less than three and you'll be rushing the two headline sights.
What's the best way to get around Beijing?
The subway — modern, cheap, and signed in English throughout. Use the Didi app (the local Uber-equivalent) for anywhere the metro doesn't reach conveniently.
Is Beijing safe for tourists?
Yes, very much so — violent crime against visitors is rare. The real things to watch for are tourist-targeted scams (fake 'tea ceremony' invitations, overpriced 'art student' exhibitions) rather than any genuine danger.

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