Taipei
City Guide

Taipei 台北

The capital of eating well. Taipei has more great food per square kilometer than almost anywhere on earth — and most of it costs less than a coffee back home.

Best for

Night markets, dumplings, bubble tea, beef noodle soup

Budget

NT$80–250 per meal at local spots; NT$800+ for sit-down dining

Don't miss

Shilin Night Market, Ningxia Night Market, Tonghua Street

What to eat

Taipei's essential dishes

🍜

Beef Noodle Soup

牛肉麵

Taipei's signature dish. Rich braised broth, hand-pulled noodles, melt-off-the-bone beef.

🥟

Xiao Long Bao

小籠包

Soup dumplings done right. Go beyond Din Tai Fung and explore the neighborhood specialists.

🧋

Bubble Tea

珍珠奶茶

Born in Taipei. Order it at the source — sweetness level 50%, ice level 30%.

🥞

Scallion Pancake

蔥抓餅

The best breakfast for NT$50. Crispy, flaky, egg optional but recommended.

🍱

Lu Rou Fan

滷肉飯

Braised pork rice — Taipei's ultimate comfort food, available around the clock.

🦪

Oyster Vermicelli

蚵仔麵線

Sticky, savory, and polarizing. A Taipei night market essential.

Where to go

Neighborhoods by food scene

Da'an 大安

Upscale cafes, Japanese-influenced restaurants, and the best ramen outside Japan.

Zhongshan 中山

Sleek bars, creative Taiwanese cuisine, and dense with rooftop dining options.

Wanhua 萬華

Old Taipei. Cheap, authentic, and the spiritual home of the pork belly rice bowl.

Xinyi 信義

High-end malls, rooftop restaurants, and the highest concentration of Michelin spots.

Where to actually go

Taipei food hot spots

These are the specific streets, markets, and pockets of the city that Taipei residents return to again and again — not because they're famous, but because the food is genuinely good.

Yongkang Street

永康街

Food Street

The single most rewarding street for food in Taipei. A two-block stretch packed with beef noodle soup shops, dumpling restaurants, cold noodles, shaved ice, and bubble tea — all within walking distance of each other. The famous Yongkang Beef Noodles (永康牛肉麵) has operated here for decades.

Eat here for

Beef noodle soup 牛肉麵Tang yuan 湯圓 (glutinous rice balls)Shaved ice 剉冰Cold sesame noodles 涼麵
MRT Dongmen (Red/Green) · Exit 5
Best time Lunch and early evening
Vibe Laid-back, tree-lined, locals and expats mixed

Ningxia Night Market

寧夏夜市

Night Market

If Shilin is the tourist-facing night market, Ningxia is where Taipei residents actually eat. Smaller, denser, and genuinely cheaper. The vendors have been cooking the same things for 20–30 years and it shows. No trendy fusion stalls — just the classics done right.

Eat here for

Oyster omelette 蚵仔煎Lu rou fan 滷肉飯Pork ribs soup 排骨酥湯Peanut ice cream wrap 花生捲冰淇淋
MRT Zhongshan (Red/Green) · 10 min walk
Best time 6pm – midnight
Vibe Local, no-frills, very little English

Dihua Street

迪化街

Historic Street

Taipei's oldest commercial street, dating to the Qing dynasty. Originally a trading hub for dried goods and Chinese medicine, it now mixes traditional ingredient shops with specialty tea houses, craft coffee roasters, and afternoon-snack spots. The architecture alone is worth the trip.

Eat here for

Dried seafood and mushrooms to take homeSpecialty teas 茶Traditional pastries 糕餅Sun cakes 太陽餅 at stall vendors
MRT Daqiaotou (Orange) · 15 min walk
Best time Morning to late afternoon
Vibe Old-school merchants, beautiful Baroque shophouses, slow pace

Ximending

西門町

Street Food Hub

Taipei's answer to Harajuku — a pedestrianised zone packed with street food vendors, bubble tea shops, and late-night restaurants. Not the most refined food scene in the city, but excellent for grazing: grab scallion pancake from one cart, move to the next for stinky tofu, finish with a cup of fresh-cut fruit.

Eat here for

Scallion pancake 蔥抓餅Oyster vermicelli 蚵仔麵線Stinky tofu 臭豆腐Bubble tea from the original Chun Shui Tang area shops
MRT Ximen (Blue/Green) · Exit 6
Best time Afternoon through late night
Vibe Youth culture, busy, loud, neon-lit

Tonghua Night Market

通化夜市

Night Market

Also known as Linjiang Night Market, this is the go-to for Taipei residents in the Xinyi and Da'an districts who want a night market without the tourist factor. Dense with good food — the grilled corn stalls here are exceptional, and the braised dishes (滷味) are among the best in the city.

Eat here for

Grilled corn 烤玉米Braised snacks 滷味Coffin bread 棺材板Fresh squeezed juice 現榨果汁
MRT Linan St off Tonghua St · Xinyi Anhe (Red)
Best time 7pm – 1am
Vibe Neighbourhood local, younger crowd, less crowded than Shilin

Gongguan

公館

Student Area

The area around National Taiwan University is Taipei's best-kept cheap-eat secret. The student economy keeps prices extremely low and competition high — which means quality stays up. Mix of traditional Taiwanese, Japanese-style, and Southeast Asian restaurants all within a short walk.

Eat here for

Pork chop rice 排骨飯 at local canteensDan bing 蛋餅 (egg crepe) at breakfast stallsShaved ice with taro 芋頭刨冰Hot pot (many affordable chains nearby)
MRT Gongguan (Green) · Exit 3
Best time Lunch and evening
Vibe Young, cheap, creative — NTU student crowd

Wanhua — Longshan Temple area

萬華 · 龍山寺

Old Taipei

Wanhua is the oldest part of Taipei and has the cheapest, most honest food in the city. The area around Longshan Temple and Huaxi Street is unglamorous but genuinely rewarding — beef offal soups, century-old congee stalls, and rooftop tea houses that haven't changed in 40 years.

Eat here for

Beef offal soup 牛雜湯Congee 粥 at old-school breakfast spotsSnake soup 蛇湯 (adventurous)Taiwanese-style sashimi at Huaxi St stalls
MRT Longshan Temple (Blue) · Exit 1
Best time Breakfast and lunch; avoid late night
Vibe Gritty, authentic, very local — the real old Taipei

Xinyi — Department store basements

信義區 · 百貨地下美食

Upscale

The basement food halls of Xinyi's department stores — ATT 4 Fun, Taipei 101, Breeze Centre, Eslite Spectrum — are some of the best places to eat in the city on a hot or rainy day. Quality is consistently high, the range covers everything from ramen to Cantonese dim sum, and you can sit down properly.

Eat here for

Din Tai Fung 鼎泰豐 (the original is in Da'an, but Xinyi has branches)Ramen at Japanese chains with Taipei-only menusPastries and bakery items unique to Taiwan chainsCold brew specialty coffee at roastery cafés
MRT Taipei City Hall (Blue) · Exit 2
Best time Lunch and dinner
Vibe Air-conditioned, refined, good for rainy days

Getting around

The Taipei MRT 捷運

Taipei's metro system is one of the cleanest, cheapest, and most reliable in the world. Five colour-coded lines cover virtually every neighbourhood and tourist spot in the city. Fares start at NT$20 and a single-day pass costs NT$180 — worth it if you're making more than 4 trips.

Red Line淡水信義線 · Tamsui–Xinyi

Tamsui → Taipei Main → Da'an → Xiangshan (Taipei 101)

Good for food: Yongkang St (Da'an), Shilin Night Market (Shilin stop)

Green Line松山新店線 · Songshan–Xindian

Songshan → Taipei Main → Zhongxiao Xinsheng → Xindian

Good for food: Raohe Night Market (Songshan), Gongguan student area (Gongguan)

Blue Line板南線 · Bannan

Yongning → Taipei Main → Zhongxiao Fuxing → City Hall → Nangang

Good for food: Tonghua Night Market (Linan St nearby), Breeze Centre food hall (Zhongxiao)

Orange Line中和新蘆線 · Zhonghe–Xinlu

Huannan Market → Zhongshan Junior High → Daqiaotou

Good for food: Daqiaotou 大橋頭 — the best lu rou fan neighbourhood in Taipei

Brown Line文湖線 · Wenhu (elevated)

Taipei City Hall → Zhongshan Junior High → Muzha (Zoo)

Good for food: Fuxing SOGO food basement (Zhongxiao Fuxing), Huashan Market area

Key stations for eating

Taipei Main Station台北車站
RedGreenBlue

Underground mall with dozens of cheap lunch spots. Best for a quick bowl before catching a train.

Dongmen東門站
RedGreen

Exit 5 leads straight to Yongkang Street — Taiwan's most famous beef noodle soup corridor.

Zhongshan中山站
RedGreen

10-minute walk to Ningxia Night Market (寧夏夜市), Taipei's most local night market.

Shilin士林站
Red

10-minute walk to Shilin Night Market. Exit 1 is the closest to the food stalls underground.

Songshan松山站
Green

5-minute walk to Raohe Night Market. One of the easiest night market commutes in the city.

Zhongxiao Fuxing忠孝復興站
BlueBrown

SOGO department store food basement, dense café scene, Tonghua Night Market nearby.

💳 EasyCard (悠遊卡)

Buy at any MRT station for NT$100 deposit. Tap in and out. You get a small discount on every ride vs single-journey tokens. Also works at convenience stores and buses.

🕐 Operating hours

Most lines run 6:00 AM – midnight daily. Last train times vary by station and direction — check the digital countdown on the platform. Trains every 3–6 minutes during peak hours.

🚫 No eating on trains

Eating and drinking on the MRT is prohibited and fined up to NT$7,500. Buy your street food, find a bench outside the paid zone, then board. Nobody is exempt — locals follow this rule strictly.

Getting around

YouBike 微笑單車

Taipei's public bike-share system is one of the best in Asia — over 1,400 docking stations, available 24/7, and cheap enough that you'll use it without thinking about the cost. The current version, YouBike 2.0, launched in 2021 with lighter bikes and smaller stations that fit into tighter spots around the city.

Pricing

  • First 30 minNT$10
  • 30–60 minNT$20
  • Each extra 30 minNT$40
  • Most rides between MRT stations are well under 30 minutes — effectively NT$10 a trip.

How to rent

  1. 1. Download the YouBike app (iOS/Android) and register with a credit card — fastest option for visitors.
  2. 2. Or tap your EasyCard at any docking station dock to unlock a bike directly.
  3. 3. Return to any YouBike station — not just the one you borrowed from.

Good to know

  • Return before 30 minutes whenever possible — the cost jumps quickly after that.
  • Stations near MRT exits fill up fast on weekday mornings — return slots may also be full.
  • Helmets are not provided. Not legally required for adults, but advisable on busier roads.
  • Bikes have a basket and 3-speed gear. Fine for flat city riding; some hills will make you sweat.

Best food routes by bike

🚲

Dongmen → Yongkang Street loop · ~5 min

Ride from Dongmen MRT station straight into the Yongkang Street food corridor. Park at the station on Jinhua St and browse at your own pace.

🚲

Riverside cycling paths · As long as you like

Taipei has 100+ km of dedicated riverside bike paths along the Danshui and Xindian rivers. Flat, car-free, and dotted with food stalls on weekends.

🚲

Zhongshan → Ningxia Night Market · ~8 min

From Zhongshan MRT, ride north to Ningxia Night Market. Much faster than walking and there's a YouBike station right at the market entrance.

🚲

Xinyi district food hall crawl · ~10 min loop

Ride between the Breeze, Bellavita, and Taipei 101 basement food halls. Faster than walking between them, and you look like a local doing it.

Before you go

Things locals know that visitors don't

Taiwan is one of the most foreigner-friendly countries in Asia — but a few unwritten rules will save you from standing out in the wrong way.

Stand right on escalators

Transport

The left lane is for walking, the right is for standing. This is strictly observed everywhere — MRT stations, department stores, Costco. Stand on the left and you will get a death stare. Or a polite tap on the shoulder, which is somehow worse.

No eating or drinking on the MRT

Transport

This includes water and gum. The fine is NT$7,500 (around US$230). Enforcement is real — inspectors ride the trains. Buy your night market food, step outside the fare gates, eat, then board. Everyone does this without thinking.

Night markets are cash only

Food

Street vendors, market stalls, and most small restaurants don't accept cards. Bring cash — NT$500–1000 is plenty for a full night market evening. ATMs are everywhere (7-Eleven ATMs accept foreign Visa and Mastercard reliably).

Don't tip

Food

Tipping is not customary in Taiwan and can create awkwardness at local restaurants. High-end hotel restaurants may add a 10% service charge automatically — that's it. Leaving money on the table at a local spot will often result in staff chasing you down to return it.

7-Eleven and FamilyMart are life

Practical

Taiwan has one of the highest convenience store densities in the world. Open 24/7, they sell hot food, fresh coffee, SIM cards, train tickets, umbrellas, phone chargers, and let you pay utility bills. If you need something and don't know where to find it, start at 7-Eleven.

Watch for scooters — everywhere

Practical

Taipei has millions of scooters. They park on pavements, filter through traffic, and sometimes run red lights at junctions. Always look right and left before stepping off a kerb, even on one-way streets. Scooter lanes exist at many intersections — don't stand in them.

Lunch spots open at 11am and sell out

Food

The best local lunch spots (便當店 biàndāng diàn) open around 11am, serve a fixed daily menu, and close when they run out — often by 1:30pm. If you see a handwritten sign and a queue forming at 11am, join it. You will not regret it.

Never stick chopsticks upright in rice

Food

Chopsticks standing vertically in a rice bowl resemble incense sticks used in funeral offerings — it's considered deeply inauspicious. Rest them on the bowl rim or on the chopstick stand if one is provided. This matters to locals of all ages.

Always carry an umbrella

Practical

Taipei rain arrives without warning and can be heavy. Most locals carry a compact umbrella year-round. Typhoon season runs July–September — check the Central Weather Bureau app if you're visiting then. Flights and transport can be cancelled with 12–24 hours' notice.

Temples: enter respectfully

Culture

Taipei's temples are active places of worship, not tourist attractions. Don't point at deities or altars, keep your voice low, and avoid walking directly through the centre of the main entrance (a path reserved for the gods). Photography is usually fine as long as you're not disruptive.

Two hands for giving and receiving

Culture

Presenting something — a business card, a gift, a payment — with both hands is a sign of respect. Receiving the same way is equally polite. At restaurants, accepting your bill or change with two hands costs nothing and reads very well to local staff.

Point, don't worry about Mandarin

Food

Many market vendors and small restaurant owners speak little English — and that's fine. Pointing at a menu item, holding up fingers for quantity, and showing a translation on your phone all work perfectly. Vendors deal with non-Mandarin speakers every day. Nobody expects you to speak the language.

Insider tip

Skip the tourist-facing restaurants around Taipei 101. Walk 3 blocks in any direction and you'll find the same quality food at half the price. Local lunch spots (便當店) that open at 11am and close when they sell out are almost always your best bet.

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Taipei Food Guide — Where to Eat in Taiwan's Capital | Taiwan Trip Advice