Caesar Park Hotel Taipei — step off the train and walk underground straight to your room
Caesar Park Hotel Taipei is the "most convenient hotel in Taipei" for frequent rail travellers. Since 1973 — when it opened as the Hilton Taipei — this hotel has been connected directly to Taipei Main Station via an underground passageway at Exit M6. No taxis. No rain. No wrong turns. Step off the platform, follow the signs, and you're in the lobby.
The name Caesar Park has been on the sign since 2003, but go back further and this is the Hilton Taipei — the premier luxury address in Taiwan during the 1970s. That half-century of history shows in the best possible way: staff who have been trained, retrained and refined across decades, a sense of service culture that brand-new hotels have to spend years building, and a building that — despite its age — remains one of the best-positioned properties in the entire city.
One guest recalls: "They stepped off the Taoyuan Express train, followed the underground mall signs, and were standing at the front desk in about four minutes. No taxi, no getting wet, no struggling with a suitcase on a crowded pavement. For a first-time visitor this is genuinely life-changing."
The single biggest differentiator is the direct underground link to Taipei Main Station via Exit M6. This station is the convergence point of nearly every rail line in Taiwan: the Taipei MRT (multiple lines), the Taiwan High Speed Rail (HSR), the Taiwan Railways (TRA intercity), and the Airport MRT Taoyuan Express. No matter where you're travelling from — or to — you don't need to fight a taxi queue or navigate a rainy pavement. It's a genuine logistical advantage that no other major hotel in central Taipei can match.
Checkers, the hotel's all-day dining restaurant, consistently earns praise from international guests — the breakfast buffet runs from Western classics to Taiwanese staples and occasional dim sum stations, and the spread-to-price ratio surprises most guests in a good way. Dynasty Restaurant serves Cantonese cuisine and fresh seafood in a traditional setting; the private dining rooms make it popular with business groups holding working lunches.
The Caesar Spa & Fitness Centre is the quietest corner of the hotel. After a long travel day there's real value in having a sauna, Jacuzzi, massage rooms and a properly equipped gym all under one roof — and the spa wing has clearly seen more recent refurbishment than some of the older corridors, making it the freshest-feeling part of the building. Regulars recommend booking a massage slot well in advance of the late-afternoon rush.
Rooms span Standard Single, Superior, Deluxe, Premier and Suite categories. Superior rooms start at a comfortable size and come in a clean Scandinavian palette with good work desks — popular with business travellers. Premier rooms on higher floors offer proper city views, some with a clear sightline to Shin Kong Life Tower and the main station plaza below. The honest note: the building is 1970s construction, and while renovations have touched most areas, the layout and proportions of some corridors feel of their era rather than a 2025 boutique makeover. If cutting-edge contemporary design is your priority, newer hotels in the Xinyi district will suit you better. But if you want the best railway connectivity in Taipei — nothing else comes close.
In short, Caesar Park Hotel Taipei earns its place for business travellers, itinerary-heavy tourists and anyone connecting across multiple rail lines. The location advantage — step off any train and walk indoors to the lobby — is irreplaceable, and the classic-hotel service culture makes every stay feel looked after rather than processed.
Summary from Booking & Agoda
- ✓ Direct underground link to Taipei Main Station — unbeatable for rail travellers
- ✓ Front desk staff are friendly and excellent English speakers
- ✓ Checkers breakfast buffet — good variety, good value
- ✓ Every rail and transit option in Taiwan reachable within minutes
- ! Rooms and furnishings feel dated in some areas — not as contemporary as newer hotels
- ! A slight damp smell in some lower-floor rooms — turn on the A/C early
- ! Prices are slightly higher than comparable 4-star options nearby
- ✓ Walk off the train and into the lobby through the underground mall — nothing more convenient in Taipei
- ✓ Dynasty Restaurant — genuinely good Cantonese food at fair prices
- ✓ Caesar Spa is clean and quiet — sauna recommended after a long travel day
- ✓ Staff know Taipei inside out and give great local recommendations
- ! The building is old; some areas haven't been fully renovated
- ! Wi-Fi can be weak on certain floors — use a personal hotspot as backup
- ! Parking is tight — if you're driving, call ahead to arrange it
- 💡If you want a sleek, contemporary-design hotel — the building dates to 1973, and while renovations have been done, some corridors and rooms retain a classic-era feel → request a recently renovated Premier room, or compare rates with newer hotels in the Xinyi district
- 💡If you're sensitive to musty smells — a few lower-floor rooms can carry a slight dampness → ask for a room on the 8th floor or above and request a recently refurbished room at check-in
- 💡If you're travelling with a large group and lots of luggage — lifts can get busy during peak check-in and checkout hours → aim for off-peak check-in or ask the bell desk in advance to assist with bags