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Shanghai Municipality

Shanghai

上海

Art Deco skylines, French Concession café culture, and China's most cosmopolitan energy.

Shanghai is China's window to the world — a dazzling fusion of 1930s colonial elegance and 21st-century ambition. The Bund's floodlit neoclassical facades face the futuristic Pudong skyline across the Huangpu River. World-class restaurants, boutique-lined lanes, and a metro system that goes everywhere make it the easiest Chinese city for first-timers.

🌆 Urban explorers🍽️ Fine dining lovers🛍️ Shoppers🎨 Art & design fans✈️ First-timers to China
📅Best time: Mar–May & Sep–Nov
🕐Recommended stay: 3–4 days

About Shanghai

What Makes Shanghai Special

Shanghai is unlike any other city in China — part Asian megacity, part reinvented colonial trading port, and entirely its own thing. The Bund's 1.5 km of Art Deco grandeur faces the Pudong skyline in one of the world's great architectural face-offs. But Shanghai's real magic is in its neighbourhoods: the French Concession's plane-tree-lined streets, the labyrinthine Tianzifang alleyways, and the buzzing local markets that operate below the radar of most tourists.

Who Is This City For?

Find Your Perfect Match

✈️

First-time visitors to China

Shanghai is China's most foreigner-friendly city — the most English is spoken here, the metro is world-class, and international food, shopping, and hotels are all easily available.

🌆

Urban explorers

The contrast between Art Deco Bund, the futuristic Pudong skyline, the historic French Concession, and the maze-like Old City makes Shanghai endlessly explorable on foot.

🍽️

Fine dining lovers

Shanghai has more Michelin-starred restaurants than almost any Asian city outside Tokyo and Hong Kong, alongside a vibrant street food scene anchored by xiao long bao soup dumplings.

🎨

Art and design fans

The M50 art district, Power Station of Art, West Bund Museum District, and dozens of independent galleries make Shanghai China's contemporary art capital.

🛍️

Shoppers

From Nanjing Road luxury flagships to the vintage boutiques of Tianzifang and the antique markets of Fuxing Road, Shanghai has China's most diverse shopping scene.

🌙

Night owls

Shanghai's nightlife is the best in China — world-class cocktail bars, live music, underground clubs, and rooftop terraces with Bund views stay alive until sunrise.

🏛️

Architecture lovers

The Bund alone contains 52 buildings in 11 different architectural styles. Add Art Deco apartments, shikumen lane houses, and Pudong's futuristic towers for a truly unique skyline.

🥟

Foodies

Xiao long bao, shengjianbao, scallion oil noodles, and seasonal hairy crab make Shanghai one of China's most rewarding food cities — with none of the Sichuan heat.

Trip Length Guide

How Long to Spend in Shanghai

1–2 days

The classic Shanghai

The Bund at dusk, a Pudong tower observation deck, and xiao long bao at a proper local spot. You'll see the city's face but not its soul.

Recommended

3–4 days

Ideal city break

Add the French Concession (a full morning wandering café to café), Tianzifang, Yuyuan Garden, and an evening along the Bund after dark. This is the sweet spot for most visitors.

5–6 days

Neighbourhood deep-dive

Explore M50 Art District, Hongkou Jewish Refugee Museum, Jing'an Temple, and take the ferry across the Huangpu at night. Start eating your way through local lane restaurants.

7+ days

Slow traveller

Day trips to Zhujiajiao water town, Tongli, or Suzhou. Time to find your local coffee shop, take a Shanghainese cooking class, and watch the city's rhythms slow down around you.

Eat Like a Local

Must-Try Food in Shanghai

🥟

Xiao Long Bao

小笼包

Shanghai's most famous export — delicate pork dumplings filled with scalding hot broth. The skill is biting a small hole to drink the soup before eating the wrapper.

Spice Level

Not spicy

easy for foreigners

🃏Jia Jia Tang Bao near People's Square is the local favourite — arrive before 11am to avoid the queue.

🦞

Hairy Crab

大闸蟹

A Shanghainese autumn obsession — steamed freshwater crab from Yangcheng Lake, eaten with rice vinegar and ginger tea. Available September to November only.

Spice Level

Not spicy

hard for foreigners

🃏Order female crabs (母蟹) in October — their roe is what the fuss is about. Ask staff to tie the legs for you after steaming.

🍜

Shengjianbao

生煎包

Pan-fried pork buns, crispy on the bottom and juicy inside with a thin skin. A Shanghai breakfast institution found at street stalls from 7am.

Spice Level

Not spicy

easy for foreigners

🃏Yang's Fried Dumplings (小杨生煎) has branches across the city — look for the queue.

🍡

Scallion Oil Noodles

葱油面

Deceptively simple — wheat noodles tossed in fragrant scallion-infused oil with soy sauce and optional dried shrimp. A Shanghainese everyday comfort dish.

Spice Level

Not spicy

easy for foreigners

🃏The best versions are at tiny neighbourhood joints — ask hotel staff for their local spot.

🍖

Red-Braised Pork Belly

红烧肉

Pork belly slow-braised in soy sauce, rice wine, and rock sugar until meltingly tender and lacquered with a sweet glaze — a Shanghai home cooking classic.

Spice Level

Not spicy

easy for foreigners

🃏Order at any Shanghainese home-cooking restaurant (本帮菜 — běn bāng cài) — this is the signature dish.

Can't-Miss Sights

Top Attractions

🌆

The Bund

外滩

Architecture / Waterfront

Shanghai's iconic 1.5 km riverfront promenade lined with 52 Art Deco and neoclassical buildings, facing the Pudong futuristic skyline across the Huangpu River.

Why go

The most famous view in China — jaw-dropping at any time of day, transcendent after dark when both banks illuminate. Visit twice: once in daylight, once at night.

1–2 hours✅ No passportNo booking neededeasy
View Full Guide →
🗼

Oriental Pearl Tower

东方明珠

Observation / Landmark

The retro-futuristic pink tower in Pudong with multiple observation decks including a glass floor sphere 263m up — quintessential Shanghai kitsch.

Why go

The view back across the Huangpu at the Bund's skyline from Pudong is one of Shanghai's great vistas. The glass floor sphere is a photo opportunity.

1.5–2 hours✅ No passportNo booking neededeasy
View Full Guide →
🌿

French Concession

法租界

Neighbourhood / Culture

Tree-lined streets of London plane trees, Art Deco villas, indie cafés, vintage boutiques, and stunning 1920s–30s architecture across a walkable neighbourhood.

Why go

The most atmospheric neighbourhood in Shanghai — a morning wandering from café to café through Wukang Road and Fuxing Road is one of the great pleasures of the city.

2–4 hours✅ No passportNo booking neededeasy
View Full Guide →
🕌

Yuyuan Garden

豫园

History / Classical Garden

A classical Ming-dynasty garden of rockeries, koi ponds, pavilions, and winding corridors in the heart of the Old City, surrounded by a lively bazaar.

Why go

The oldest intact classical garden in Shanghai — arrive at 8:30am when it opens to have the rockery paths to yourself.

1.5–2 hours✅ No passportNo booking neededeasy
View Full Guide →
🎨

M50 Art District

M50创意园

Contemporary Art

Shanghai's top contemporary art hub in a converted 1930s cotton mill along Suzhou Creek — over 100 galleries and studios, free to explore.

Why go

The best way to experience Shanghai's thriving contemporary art scene — independent galleries, international artists, and raw industrial architecture.

2–3 hours✅ No passportNo booking neededeasy
View Full Guide →
🛍️

Nanjing Road

南京路

Shopping / Culture

One of the world's busiest shopping streets — 5 km of flagship stores, malls, and street snack vendors stretching from the Bund to Jing'an.

Why go

The pulse of commercial Shanghai — more interesting for the street atmosphere and food vendors than the shopping itself.

1–2 hours✅ No passportNo booking neededeasy
View Full Guide →

Off the Beaten Path

Hidden Gems

🏠

Tianzifang

A warren of narrow Shikumen alleyways in the French Concession packed with independent boutiques, cafés, and artist studios — more intimate than the nearby Xintiandi and less commercial.

🕐Best time: Weekday mornings before noon
ShoppersPhotographersCoffee lovers

💡 Tip:Enter from Taikang Road off Ruijin Er Road — the inner alleys get quieter and more interesting the further in you go.

🌿

Jing'an Sculpture Park

A quiet green space in the middle of the city with rotating contemporary art installations — a local lunch-break secret that most tourists never find.

🕐Best time: Weekday lunch hours
Art loversWalkersFamilies

💡 Tip:Free entry. Located between Jing'an Temple and Changshu Road metro stations — a great stop between the French Concession and Nanjing Road.

🍷

The Shelter

Shanghai's most legendary underground club — literally underground, in a converted WWII bomb shelter. A pilgrimage site for serious music fans and night owls.

🕐Best time: Friday and Saturday nights from 11pm
Night owlsMusic fansYoung travellers

💡 Tip:Located on Yongfu Road in the French Concession. Entry is cheap by international standards. Arrive after midnight for the best energy.

🏘️

Hongkou Jewish Refugee District

A rarely-visited neighbourhood that sheltered 20,000 Jewish refugees during WWII — the Ohel Moshe Synagogue is now a moving museum, and the surrounding streets still show traces of the community.

🕐Best time: Weekday mornings
History loversCulture seekers

💡 Tip:The Ohel Moshe Synagogue (now Tilanqiao Holocaust Museum) is the centre of the district. Allow 2 hours. Take metro Line 12 to Tilanqiao station.

Getting Around

Transport in Shanghai

✈️ Getting There

Two airports: Pudong International (PVG) for most international flights, Hongqiao (SHA) for domestic. The Maglev train from Pudong reaches downtown in 8 minutes (¥50) — fastest airport transit in the world.

🚇 Getting Around

Shanghai's metro (地铁) is one of the world's largest and best — ¥3–¥9 per ride, fully English-signed, 20 lines covering the entire city. The Maglev from Pudong Airport reaches downtown in 8 minutes (¥50). DiDi works seamlessly. Walking is the best way to explore the French Concession and the Bund area.

Transport Tips

  • The Maglev from Pudong Airport is faster and cheaper than any taxi — buy the ticket before exiting the arrivals hall (¥50 to Longyang Road).
  • Metro Line 2 connects both airports to the city centre and runs through the main tourist corridor.
  • Buy a Shanghai Transit Card (交通卡) at the airport for ¥20 deposit — works across metro, buses, and ferries.
  • DiDi works in English — most drivers navigate using the app so language is not an issue.
  • Walking from the Bund to Tianzifang via the French Concession is one of Shanghai's great urban walks — allow 3 hours.

🤖 AI Action Help Cards

Tap to copy or show to locals

Book Before You Go

Reservation & Ticket Alerts

These fill up fast — don't leave it to the last minute.

Din Tai Fung (soup dumplings)

🔴 ESSENTIAL

Queues at all Shanghai locations run 45–90 minutes without a reservation. Book via their WeChat account or arrive right at 11am when they open.

🕐Book: 1–2 days ahead for weekends; same-day for weekday lunch
⚠️ Sells out during: Weekends, public holidays, lunch and dinner peaks

Shanghai Tower observation deck

🟡 RECOMMENDED

Buy tickets online (Jin Mao Tower or Shanghai Tower websites) to skip the entrance queue — especially busy on weekends and clear days.

🕐Book: Same day is fine, or 1 day ahead during holidays

Shanghai Museum

🟡 RECOMMENDED

Free entry but requires online reservation — slots go quickly during peak season, especially the main hall with bronze and ceramic collections.

🕐Book: 1–3 days ahead; earlier during Golden Week
📘 Passport required

Yuyuan Garden

🟢 OPTIONAL

No reservation needed but visit early morning (opens 8:30am) before tour groups arrive — crowds peak between 10am and 3pm.

🕐Book: No booking required — just go early

First-Time Visitor Guide

What to Know Before You Go

1

The Bund is best visited twice — once in daylight to appreciate the architectural details, and once after dark when both banks illuminate simultaneously.

2

The Maglev train from Pudong Airport is faster and more exciting than any taxi — buy the ticket before exiting the arrivals hall.

3

French Concession cafés are among the best in Asia — budget a slow morning just to wander Wukang Road and sit.

4

Shanghai's metro card (交通卡) works across metro, bus and some ferries — buy one at the airport on arrival.

5

Xiaolongbao (soup dumplings) are best at a proper restaurant, not a mall — Jia Jia Tang Bao near People's Square is the local benchmark.

Avoid These Mistakes

Common Tourist Mistakes

Taking a taxi from Pudong Airport

The Maglev is faster (8 minutes), cheaper (¥50), and infinitely more interesting than a taxi. Take it to Longyang Road and connect to the metro.

Only visiting the Bund at one time of day

Come in the afternoon to see the Art Deco buildings in detail, then again at night for the full illuminated effect. They are completely different experiences.

Eating near Yuyuan Garden

Restaurants within 200m of the garden are tourist-priced and mediocre. Walk 5 minutes towards the Old City streets for far better and cheaper food.

Skipping the French Concession in favour of malls

The neighbourhood streets of the French Concession — Wukang Road, Fuxing Road, Fumin Road — are the real Shanghai. No mall can compete.

Assuming everyone speaks English

Outside hotels and high-end restaurants, translation apps and pointing at menus are essential. Download Pleco (Chinese dictionary) and keep Google Translate ready.

Your AI Travel Companion

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Taxi Assistant

Show your destination in Chinese, share your phone number

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Food Ordering Cards

Point-and-order cards for any restaurant

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Payment Help

WeChat Pay setup, Alipay guide, payment failure fixes

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Reservation Reminders

Get notified when to book tickets and what to prepare

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Local Guide

AI explanations of historical sites, culture, and etiquette

🆘

Emergency Help

Medical cards, embassy contacts, police phrases — always ready

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