西安
The ancient capital of thirteen dynasties and home to the greatest archaeological discovery of the 20th century.
Xi'an was China's capital for over a thousand years, the eastern terminus of the Silk Road, and the city that gave the world the Terracotta Army. Today it wears its history lightly — the old city wall is intact and bikeable, the Muslim Quarter buzzes with street food every evening, and the Tang Dynasty culture that once drew merchants from Rome to Persia can be felt on every corner.
About Xi'an
Xi'an is China's ancient heartland made tangible. For over a millennium it was Chang'an — the most powerful city in Asia and the starting point of the Silk Road, where merchants from Persia, Rome, and India traded silk, spices, and ideas. Today its most visible legacy is the Terracotta Army, but Xi'an rewards far beyond that single site: the intact 14 km city wall is the most complete in China, the Muslim Quarter's labyrinthine streets are some of the most atmospheric in the country, and the Shaanxi History Museum holds Tang Dynasty treasures that rival any collection in the world.
Who Is This City For?
History lovers
Xi'an was China's imperial capital for over 1,000 years. The Terracotta Army, intact city wall, Big Wild Goose Pagoda, and Shaanxi History Museum together form an unrivalled concentration of Chinese historical heritage.
Street food fans
The Muslim Quarter is one of Asia's great street food destinations — roujiamo, biang biang noodles, yang rou pao mo, and lamb skewers served in a maze of Hui-Muslim architecture.
Active travellers
Cycling the full 14 km of Xi'an's ancient city wall is one of the great active travel experiences in China — flat, scenic, and achievable in under 2 hours by bike.
Families
The Terracotta Army is genuinely jaw-dropping for all ages, the wall cycling is fun for children, and the Muslim Quarter's sweet street food (honey cakes, pomegranate juice) is instantly crowd-pleasing.
Culture seekers
Xi'an's Tang Dynasty heritage — Silk Road artefacts, Buddhist pilgrimage sites, folk opera, and shadow puppet performances — gives cultural travellers more than 3 days of material.
Photographers
The Terracotta Army pits at opening light, the city wall at golden hour, and the Muslim Quarter's lantern-lit evening alleys are all extraordinary photographic subjects.
Silk Road history fans
Xi'an was the eastern terminus of the Silk Road — the Shaanxi History Museum's Silk Road gallery, Tang Paradise recreation, and Great Mosque all tell pieces of this story.
Day-trippers
Huashan Mountain — one of China's five sacred peaks — is just 2 hours from Xi'an and offers one of the most thrilling (and terrifying) mountain walks in Asia.
Trip Length Guide
1 day
Terracotta Army only
Leave early for the Terracotta Army (half day), return for a Muslim Quarter evening. You'll see the headline act but miss the city's atmosphere completely.
2–3 days
Ideal visit
Day 1: Terracotta Army + Huaqing Hot Springs. Day 2: city wall cycling + Shaanxi History Museum + Muslim Quarter evening. Day 3: Big Wild Goose Pagoda fountain show. This is the sweet spot.
4+ days
Deeper history + day trips
Add Huashan Mountain (full day), Tang Paradise evening show, Shuyuanmen calligraphy street, and a cooking class making roujiamo and biang biang noodles from scratch.
Eat Like a Local
Roujiamo
肉夹馍
Slow-braised spiced pork stuffed into a freshly baked crispy flatbread — often called China's original burger. The pork is braised for hours in a spiced broth until falling apart.
Spice Level
Mild
🃏Get it from a hole-in-the-wall stall with a queue of locals — tourist restaurant versions are far inferior. The Muslim Quarter has some of the best.
Biang Biang Noodles
油泼面
Hand-pulled belt-wide noodles topped with chilli oil, garlic, and vinegar — named after the sound they make when slapped against the counter. The character for 'biang' is the most complex in Chinese.
Spice Level
Medium
🃏Order them 干拌 (gān bàn — dry-tossed) rather than in soup for the full texture. Mix thoroughly before eating.
Yang Rou Pao Mo
羊肉泡馍
Mutton soup with hand-torn flatbread soaked in — you tear the bread yourself into small pieces, then the kitchen pours the broth over it. A Silk Road heritage dish eaten at Xi'an breakfast tables for centuries.
Spice Level
Not spicy
🃏Tear the bread into small pieces (the smaller the better, per local custom) before handing the bowl back to the kitchen. A ritual worth participating in.
Muslim Quarter Street Food
回民街小吃
Grilled lamb skewers, fresh pomegranate juice, honey-filled pastries, persimmon cakes (柿饼), and candied nuts — an evening ritual along Beiyuanmen Street.
Spice Level
Mild
🃏Come hungry between 5 and 9pm when every stall is fully operating. The pomegranate juice is pressed fresh — it is exceptional.
Persimmon Cake
黄桂柿子饼
A crispy fried flatbread made with persimmon paste — sweet, slightly chewy, and unique to Shaanxi. A Muslim Quarter staple most tourists walk past without realising.
Spice Level
Not spicy
🃏Look for the stalls with a crowd of locals and a frying pan — eat them hot, straight from the pan.
Can't-Miss Sights
兵马俑
8,000+ life-size clay soldiers buried to guard the first emperor Qin Shi Huang — the greatest archaeological find of the 20th century. Each face is individually sculpted.
Why go
One of the world's truly unmissable sites — standing at the edge of Pit 1 and looking out at the serried ranks of warriors is a genuinely overwhelming experience. Allow 3–4 hours.
西安城墙
The most complete ancient city wall in China — 14 km long, 12 m tall, fully walkable or rentable by bike. The moat and ramparts are perfectly preserved.
Why go
Cycling the full circuit at sunset with the old city below is one of the most enjoyable and accessible activities in Xi'an — achievable in under 2 hours.
回民街
A maze of Hui-Muslim architecture, ancient mosques, and street food stalls stretching north from the Drum Tower — one of China's most atmospheric neighbourhoods.
Why go
Xi'an's most vibrant evening destination — the Silk Road history is alive in the Hui Muslim culture, architecture, and food. Come hungry between 5 and 9pm.
大雁塔
A Tang Dynasty Buddhist pagoda where the monk Xuanzang stored scriptures brought back from India — the surrounding plaza has the largest musical fountain in Asia.
Why go
A landmark of Chinese Buddhist history and an essential part of the Tang Dynasty story. The fountain show (evenings, Wed–Sun) is spectacular.
陕西历史博物馆
One of China's finest history museums — free entry (book online), with extraordinary Tang Dynasty gold and silver artefacts, Silk Road treasures, and terracotta figurines.
Why go
Essential for understanding what you've seen at the Terracotta Army and throughout Xi'an. The Tang Dynasty gallery is world-class.
华清宫
The imperial hot springs resort where emperors brought their favourite concubines — and where the famous 1936 Xi'an Incident (Chiang Kai-shek's capture) unfolded.
Why go
A fascinating layered history site — Tang Dynasty romance, Republican-era drama, and natural hot springs all in one complex near the Terracotta Army.
Off the Beaten Path
A vast Tang Dynasty theme park that most tourists ignore — the illuminated evening shows recreate Chang'an at its imperial peak with water, light, and music. Genuinely spectacular.
💡 Tip:Buy tickets in advance online. The park itself is worth visiting in the day but the evening light show is the reason to go. Take metro Line 3 to Qujiang Pool station.
A quiet calligraphy and antique street near the South Gate where local artists sell ink paintings, seal carvings, and traditional crafts — a world away from the souvenir shops of the Muslim Quarter.
💡 Tip:Walk south from the Drum Tower along the old city wall. The street is easy to miss — it runs parallel to the wall between the South Gate and Beilin Museum.
A centuries-old courtyard where Shaanxi folk opera, shadow puppetry, and drum performances happen nightly — almost entirely attended by locals rather than tourists.
💡 Tip:Located on Huajue Lane inside the Muslim Quarter. Performances typically run from 7pm. The tea and snack service is part of the experience — arrive 20 minutes early.
One of China's Five Sacred Mountains — a vertigo-inducing granite peak with chain-assisted cliff walks, narrow plank paths bolted to sheer rock faces, and sunrise views that reward the 2-hour journey from Xi'an.
💡 Tip:Take the high-speed train from Xi'an North (30 min) then cable car for the fastest ascent. The South Peak trail plank walk is not for those with vertigo. Book tickets online.
Getting Around
Xi'an Xianyang International (XIY) has direct flights from most major Chinese cities and some international routes. High-speed rail from Beijing (4 hrs), Shanghai (6 hrs), or Chengdu (3.5 hrs).
Xi'an's metro has 4+ lines covering the main sights within the city. The wall area and Muslim Quarter are walkable from each other. The Terracotta Army is 1 hour east — take Tourist Bus 5 from the train station (¥8) rather than a taxi (¥120+). DiDi works well within the city.
Tap to copy or show to locals
Book Before You Go
These fill up fast — don't leave it to the last minute.
Buy online at sy-museum.com — no ticket-office sales during peak season. Bring your passport for verification at the entrance. Queues for the bus are long even with pre-bought tickets, so arrive early.
Free entry but requires online reservation — slots release weekly and fill quickly. The special Silk Road exhibition requires a separate paid ticket. Passport required.
Buy tickets in advance online — the light and water show runs limited nights per week and sells out in peak season.
No reservations needed — just walk up. Come between 5 and 8pm for the liveliest atmosphere and when all stalls are fully operating.
First-Time Visitor Guide
Take Tourist Bus 5 to the Terracotta Army — it costs ¥8 versus ¥120+ for a taxi and drops you right at the entrance. Catch it from Xi'an Railway Station east square.
The Shaanxi History Museum free tickets release online weekly and disappear fast — book as soon as you know your visit date.
Rent a bike on the city wall — it's 14 km around and one of the most enjoyable activities in Xi'an (¥45 for 90 minutes).
The Muslim Quarter is at its best between 5 and 9pm when all the street food stalls are fully operating.
Roujiamo (the 'Chinese burger') is best from a small street stall, not a restaurant — look for places with a queue of locals.
Avoid These Mistakes
❌Paying ¥120+ for a taxi to the Terracotta Army
✅Tourist Bus 5 costs ¥8 and goes directly to the museum entrance. Catch it from the east side of Xi'an Railway Station — it runs every 20 minutes.
❌Skipping the Shaanxi History Museum
✅It is one of China's finest museums and completely free (with advance booking). The Tang Dynasty gallery and Silk Road artefacts are world-class — allow 2–3 hours.
❌Only visiting the Muslim Quarter for photos
✅The food is the real reason to go. Try roujiamo, biang biang noodles, yang rou pao mo, and fresh pomegranate juice — this is living Silk Road culinary heritage.
❌Walking the city wall instead of cycling
✅Walking the full 14 km takes 3+ hours; cycling takes 1 hour and is far more enjoyable. Rent bikes at the South Gate (Yongning Men) for ¥45.
❌Arriving at the Terracotta Army after 10am in summer
✅Pit 1 becomes unbearably crowded and hot by mid-morning. Arrive at 8am when it opens for the best light, smallest crowds, and cooler temperatures.
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兵马俑
8,000 individually sculpted clay warriors buried 2,200 years ago to guard China's first emperor.
西安城墙
The most complete ancient city wall in China — 14km of Ming Dynasty ramparts, fully bikeable.
回民街
A maze of Hui-Muslim architecture and street food — Xi'an's most atmospheric evening destination.
大雁塔
A Tang Dynasty Buddhist pagoda — and the largest musical fountain in Asia surrounds it at night.
陕西历史博物馆
One of China's finest history museums — Tang Dynasty gold, Silk Road artefacts, and terracotta figures.
华清宫
Imperial hot springs, Tang Dynasty romance, and the site of a pivotal 1936 political drama.