Capella Taipei — The Most Exciting Hotel to Open in Taipei in a Decade
Have you ever checked into a “luxury” hotel and felt — somehow — underwhelmed? Capella Taipei, which opened in April 2025, is the antidote to exactly that feeling. This is the first truly new ultra-luxury property to debut in the Taiwanese capital in over ten years, and it lands with a quiet confidence that demands attention. A rooftop pool gazing directly at Taipei 101, a personal cultural butler called a Culturist, and five restaurant concepts ranging from Michelin-recommended Cantonese to ryokan-style omakase — Capella has reset the benchmark for what luxury hospitality looks like in Taiwan.
Calling Capella Taipei the most significant hotel opening in the city for a decade is not hyperbole — it is simply accurate. Launched officially in April 2025, Capella Hotels & Resorts chose the tree-lined boulevard of Dunhua North Road in Songshan District for their 86-room debut in Taiwan. The design was entrusted to André Fu Studio, whose “Modern Mansion” concept translates into warm travertine stone panelling, dark-bronze furniture frames, bespoke textile art, and a mural by French artist Elsa Jeandedieu in the arrival lobby that tells Taiwan’s story through mountain mist, blue magpies, and lush green valleys. Every detail was deliberate and every material selected for longevity, not trend.
“The room is so beautiful, guests say, that they genuinely do not want to leave — floating in the pool while looking at Taipei 101 is a moment, one guest recalls, they’ll remember for the rest of their life.”
Guest rooms start at 48 square metres — roughly 30 to 50 percent larger than comparably priced rooms at other five-star hotels in Taipei. The Superior King category features a king bed with genuinely cloud-soft bedding, a city-view reading chair, a full-width wardrobe, a 55-inch Netflix-enabled TV, and an AI voice speaker that controls lighting and blackout curtains on command. The bathroom is clad entirely in the hotel’s signature warm travertine: a deep soaking tub, a wall-hung Japanese smart toilet, twin vanity sinks with softly lit mirror panels, and plush robes from a brand you would not find in lesser properties. From the moment you open the door, the room communicates a single message: you are staying somewhere genuinely special.
The most distinctive feature of a Capella stay is the Capella Culturist — not a concierge, but a personal cultural curator assigned to each room who knows your preferences before you arrive. Your Culturist might arrange a neighbourhood breakfast walk through Raohe Street with a local food historian, a private aiyu jelly-making session with a third-generation artisan, or an afternoon at a Pinglin tea plantation during the harvest season. These experiences are woven into your stay not as expensive add-ons, but as part of the Capella philosophy that luxury travel should produce stories, not just comfort.
Floor 14 is the social heartbeat of the hotel. The outdoor pool stretches 25 metres under open sky, its turquoise water framed by greenery and the hotel’s signature red-fringed parasols, with Taipei 101 rising on the horizon in a way that no other hotel in this part of the city can replicate. The Living Room on the same floor operates all day as a free-access lounge with afternoon tea, fresh fruit, local pastries, and a rotating menu of non-alcoholic cocktails using Taiwanese botanicals. Of the 66 Trip.com reviews logged as of mid-2026, the pool and the Living Room are the two most cited highlights — often in the same sentence.
The five dining concepts at Capella Taipei have made the hotel a destination for Taipei residents, not merely hotel guests. Rong Ju serves contemporary Cantonese cuisine at a Michelin-recommended standard and is reportedly the hardest reservation in the Songshan neighbourhood right now. Mizue offers an intimate 10-to-15-course Japanese omakase in a space modelled on a ryokan engawa. Ember 28 is a warm, Americana-inflected grill restaurant. Plume — the all-day venue — delivers one of Taipei’s most indulgent breakfasts: oysters, champagne, scallion pancakes, beef noodle soup, eggs benedict, and handcrafted pastries, all à la carte, served by a barista who has apparently earned their own reputation in the city. The three-storey Glasshouse bar complex is still establishing its following but is already becoming a late-night landmark.
Honesty first: the price is real. Entry-level Superior rooms run approximately NT$20,000 (around USD 600-700) on a standard weeknight, and suites with private pool terraces can reach NT$80,000 or beyond. The Trip.com score of 9.5 across 66 reviews — with 47 consecutive stays receiving positive ratings and zero negative reviews in that run — and the Wallpaper* Design Awards 2026 Best New Hotel Opening recognition are genuine, verified data points, not marketing copy. If your budget is NT$5,000 to NT$10,000 per night, Capella is not the right fit; Taipei has excellent luxury options at that level. But if you are planning a milestone stay — an anniversary, a significant birthday, a once-in-a-lifetime trip — Capella Taipei is where you book and stop wondering whether you are spending too much.
Location notes: Capella sits on Dunhua North Road in Songshan, roughly a 5-minute walk from MRT Taipei Arena (Green Line), which connects you directly to Taipei Main Station in three stops. Songshan Airport (TSA) is just 1 kilometre away — ideal if you are flying direct to Tokyo Haneda, Osaka, or Seoul Gimpo without the Taoyuan detour. The Raohe Night Market is a pleasant 12-minute walk. Guest floors occupy levels 14 through 17 and are strictly private — the sense of exclusivity is absolute and intentional.
Summary from Booking & Agoda
- ✓ Extraordinary design — every room feels like an architectural photograph
- ✓ Culturist personal butler service: knows your name and preferences before arrival
- ✓ 25m rooftop pool with Taipei 101 view — the single most praised feature by guests
- ✓ Living Room complimentary lounge with afternoon tea and snacks all day
- ! Price is genuinely high — NT$20,000+ on weeknights, significantly more on holidays
- ! Some reviews note sound transmission from elevator shafts in certain rooms
- ! Breakfast quality is excellent but some Western guests expected a wider continental spread
- ✓ Rooms from 48 sqm — 30-50% larger than comparable five-star rooms in Taipei
- ✓ Capella Moments cultural activities daily at no additional charge
- ✓ Complimentary minibar with local snacks and drinks, replenished daily
- ✓ Spa with sensory deprivation tank — rare and distinctive in Taipei
- ! Only 66 reviews so far — small sample due to April 2025 opening
- ! Pool terrace suites reach NT$80,000-100,000+ per night
- ! Songshan location is slightly removed from Ximending and Xinyi shopping areas — MRT required
- 💡If your budget is under NT$12,000 per night — Taipei has superb five-star alternatives: Mandarin Oriental, W Taipei, and Grand Hyatt all deliver exceptional luxury at lower entry points. Capella is its own tier.
- 💡If you want to be walking distance from Ximending or Xinyi night markets — Songshan is central but not adjacent to the main tourist corridors; budget 10-15 minutes via MRT or taxi for most attractions.
- 💡If you are sensitive to elevator noise — request a room away from the elevator core at check-in; a small number of reviews mention low-frequency mechanical sounds on quieter nights.