Taipei punches well above its weight for value among major Asian cities — but "cheap" or "expensive" depends entirely on how you plan. This guide breaks down real approximate costs across every spending category and builds three ready-to-use sample trip budgets so you can plan with confidence before you fly.
Among major Asian capitals, Taipei stands out as genuinely good value — not just in the "cheap street food" sense, but across the board. A MRT system that costs NT$20–65 per journey. Temple visits, mountain hikes and a world-class memorial hall that charge nothing at the gate. Night market meals of real quality for NT$50–150. The city rewards travellers who engage with it on local terms.
That said, Taipei can spend as fast as you let it. A room at the Grand Hyatt or W Taipei, dinner at a Michelin-starred restaurant, an evening of shopping in Xinyi — the bills look much the same as in Tokyo or Singapore. All prices on this page are approximate reference figures for early 2026. The exchange rate used throughout is approximately NT$1 = THB 1.1 (Thai baht). Use this page as a planning framework, not a price guarantee.
Backpacker: NT$1,200–1,800/day — hostel or capsule hotel, street food and night markets, MRT everywhere, free attractions as the backbone of each day.
Mid-range: NT$2,500–4,000/day — 3-star or boutique hotel in a good district, local restaurants plus one splurge meal, one or two day trips, a few paid attractions.
Comfort / Luxury: NT$6,000+/day — 4–5 star hotel, good restaurants and fine dining, Uber rather than MRT, spa, shopping in department stores.
Pick the tier that closest matches your travel style — each comes with an approximate daily budget excluding flights.
NT$1,200–1,800 / day / person
Hostel dorm or capsule hotel near Ximending or the Main Station. Eat at night markets, 7-Eleven and breakfast shops. MRT and EasyCard for all transport. Free attractions (temples, CKS, Elephant Mountain) as the backbone. Day trips by local train. Shopping at night markets only.
NT$2,500–4,000 / day / person
3-star or boutique hotel in Zhongshan, Da'an or Xinyi. MRT plus occasional Uber. Local restaurants and one nicer meal per day. Budget for one or two day trips — Jiufen–Shifen or Yehliu — and two or three paid attractions. Some shopping in local markets.
NT$6,000+ / day / person
4–5 star hotel in Xinyi, Zhongshan or Da'an. Uber as the default transport. Good restaurants daily and one fine-dining experience. Private day-trip driver or guide. Spa and massage. Shopping in SOGO, Breeze and Xinyi department stores. Budget for surprises.
All figures are approximate references for early 2026 and may shift with season, demand and exchange rates.
Direct flights from Bangkok (Suvarnabhumi or Don Mueang) to Taipei Taoyuan take around 3.5 hours. Low-cost carriers — Thai Lion Air, AirAsia X — occasionally run promotions from roughly THB 4,000–6,000 return during low season (November–March, excluding Chinese New Year). Full-service airlines such as China Airlines and EVA Air typically run THB 8,000–16,000 return. Cherry blossom season (late March–April) and Thai public holidays push prices up 50–100%. Book 2–3 months ahead for the best fares year-round.
Taipei has a full spectrum of lodging. Ximending and the area around Taipei Main Station offer the densest concentration of budget options. Xinyi, Da'an and Zhongshan host the luxury properties. Approximate nightly rates: Hostel dorm / capsule NT$400–800 per bed · 3-star hotel NT$1,500–2,800 per room · 4-star hotel NT$3,000–5,500 · 5-star (Grand Hyatt, W Taipei, Le Méridien) NT$6,000–15,000+. Peak periods — Chinese New Year, cherry blossom, Taiwanese public holidays — add 30–80% to these figures. Booking 4–6 weeks ahead captures most of the early-booking discount.
Food is where Taipei genuinely outperforms its peers. Representative prices: Night market meal NT$50–150 · Taiwanese breakfast set (soy milk + egg pancake) NT$50–100 · Lunch box / buffet NT$120–250 · Local restaurant, main course NT$200–500 · Din Tai Fung per person NT$600–1,200 · Fine dining / Michelin NT$2,000–5,000+ per person. A realistic three-meal day on a backpacker budget: NT$300–500. Mid-range three meals: NT$700–1,200. The gap between "cheap" and "expensive" in Taipei food is larger than in almost any other Asian city — and the cheap end is genuinely excellent.
Taipei's transport network is efficient and affordable. EasyCard (NT$100 refundable deposit) gives a 20% discount on every MRT journey — buy one at the airport or any MRT station on day one. MRT fares with EasyCard: approx. NT$20–65 per journey depending on distance. City bus: NT$15–30. Airport MRT (Taoyuan Airport to Taipei Main Station): NT$160–180, about 35 minutes. Taxi / Uber within the city: starting from NT$85–100 plus meter. Pingxi Line train (for Shifen/Jiufen day trips): NT$50–100 each way. A typical day of urban travel costs NT$100–200 per person.
Good news for every budget level: several of Taipei's best experiences are free. Approximate admission prices (subject to change): Taipei 101 observation deck NT$600 · National Palace Museum NT$350 · Maokong Gondola NT$120 return · Longshan Temple free · CKS Memorial Hall free · Elephant Mountain free · Beitou Hot Spring Museum NT$80 · Beitou public hot spring foot bath NT$40. Buying tickets through Klook in advance often gives a small saving over the gate price and skips the ticket queue at popular sites.
Mobile data is essential for Google Maps and MRT navigation. Buying before departure is cheaper than airport counters. Options: eSIM (e.g. Airalo) for 5–7 days of Taiwan data costs roughly THB 200–350 — activates immediately on arrival, no physical card needed. Physical SIM at Taoyuan Airport (Chunghwa Telecom, Taiwan Mobile, Far EasTone counters in Arrivals): NT$300–500 for 5–10 days with unlimited data and some call minutes. Pocket Wi-Fi rental: NT$150–200/day — useful for groups sharing one device. Free Wi-Fi is available throughout the MRT system and at most hotels, but it is not reliable enough for navigation.
Day trips form a major part of most Taipei itineraries. Approximate costs per person: Jiufen + Shifen by local train and bus (DIY) NT$300–500 transport + NT$200–400 food and sky lanterns = total NT$500–900. Yehliu + Jiufen group bus tour (Klook) NT$800–1,200 per person including transport. Private car/driver for a group NT$3,000–6,000+ for the vehicle. Small-group Klook tour NT$600–1,000 per person — the most convenient option for solo travellers and couples. The DIY train approach is cheaper and more flexible but requires an EasyCard and some planning for connections.
Taipei is a strong shopping destination, particularly for Taiwanese food gifts, cosmetics and local fashion. Approximate prices: Pineapple cake (Sunny Hills / Sun Cake Shop) NT$80–200 per box · High Mountain Oolong or Dong Ding tea NT$300–1,500 per box · Taiwanese sheet masks (My Scheming, Dr. Morita) NT$100–500 · Ximending streetwear NT$300–1,500 · 7-Eleven limited-edition items NT$50–300. Recommended budgets: backpacker NT$500–1,000 for the whole trip; mid-range NT$2,000–5,000; comfort NT$10,000+. Dihua Street is the best place for affordable food souvenirs (dried fruit, teas, traditional snacks) in bulk.
Three worked examples — per person, excluding flights — to use as planning benchmarks.
Accommodation: hostel dorm in Ximending NT$600/night × 3 = NT$1,800 · Food: NT$400/day × 4 = NT$1,600 · Transport MRT + bus: NT$150/day × 4 = NT$600 · Attraction tickets (Palace Museum + Taipei 101): NT$950 · Jiufen–Shifen day trip by local train: NT$600 · eSIM: NT$280 · Souvenirs: NT$800
Approximate total: NT$6,630 per person for 4 days excluding flights. This is a tight budget that rewards careful planning. Adding a 30% buffer brings it to roughly NT$8,600 and makes the trip comfortable.
Accommodation: 3-star boutique hotel Zhongshan NT$2,200/night × 3 = NT$6,600 · Food: NT$900/day × 4 = NT$3,600 (includes one Din Tai Fung meal) · Transport MRT + occasional Uber: NT$250/day × 4 = NT$1,000 · Tickets (Taipei 101 + Palace Museum + Maokong Gondola): NT$1,070 · Jiufen + Yehliu Klook group tour: NT$1,100 · SIM: NT$400 · Shopping: NT$2,500
Approximate total: NT$16,270 per person for 4 days excluding flights. A comfortable budget with room for small indulgences.
Accommodation: 4-star hotel Xinyi NT$4,500/night × 4 = NT$18,000 · Food: NT$1,800/day × 5 = NT$9,000 (includes 1–2 fine-dining meals) · Transport Uber primary: NT$400/day × 5 = NT$2,000 · Attraction tickets + private day-trip driver: NT$3,500 · SIM: NT$400 · Spa/massage 1–2 sessions: NT$2,000 · Shopping: NT$8,000
Approximate total: NT$42,900 per person for 5 days excluding flights. A relaxed, well-resourced trip with budget remaining for spontaneous experiences.
Turn your budget plan into a real itinerary — with day-by-day schedules, neighbourhood guides and practical info.
A detailed hour-by-hour plan covering Taipei 101, the Palace Museum, Jiufen, night markets and more — with a full budget breakdown.
Open 4-Day Itinerary →Six neighbourhoods compared side-by-side — Ximending, Zhongshan, Xinyi, Da'an and more — with hotel recommendations at every budget level.
Open Neighbourhood Guide →Visas, EasyCard, currency exchange, eSIM, tipping culture and everything else you need to know before you land in Taipei.
Open Practical Info →From NT$500 hostel dorms in Ximending to NT$5,000+ boutique hotels in Xinyi with Taipei 101 views — the full Taipei where-to-stay guide compares every neighbourhood so you pick the right base at the right price.