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🌸 Taipei Cherry Blossom Guide · Updated 2026

Fly for the Bloom —
8 Cherry Blossom Spots & Photo Routes in Taipei

Taipei has its own spectacular sakura season — from Yangmingshan's volcanic hillsides to Tamsui's riverside temple and a hidden Kyoto-like alley in the city centre. Taiwan Cherry blooms deep pink from late January; the season runs through mid-March.

Taipei's Cherry Blossom Season — What Most People Don't Know

Taipei Has Cherry Blossoms — and They're Easier to Reach Than Tokyo's

Most people think of Japan when they think of sakura. But Taipei has its own cherry blossom season that is genuinely spectacular — and dramatically more accessible. There are no bullet train tickets to book months ahead, no sold-out ryokan scrambles. Take the MRT to Jiantan Station, board bus 260, and within 40 minutes you are standing among thousands of blooming trees on the slopes of a dormant volcano, above the city in cool mountain air.

Taipei's cherry blossoms divide into two main groups that bloom at different times. Taiwan Cherry (緋寒櫻, Formosan Cherry) — deep pink-red, with pendant blossoms — opens first, from late January through February. Yoshino and Showa varieties, with their softer pink colouring more familiar from Japan, follow from late February through March. The result is a longer effective season than most visitors expect. The key caveat: the bloom window shifts every year based on winter temperatures — always check current status close to your travel date, never rely on fixed calendar dates.

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Taiwan Cherry (緋寒櫻) — deeper pink-red than Japanese varieties, blooming earlier and most abundant at Yangmingshan and Tamsui Tian Yuan Temple.

Taiwan Cherry 緋寒櫻: Deep pink-red, pendant blossoms. Blooms late January–February. Most abundant at Yangmingshan and Tamsui.

Yoshino (吉野櫻): Soft pink, the classic Japanese variety. Blooms February–March. Found at CKS Memorial Hall and Pingjing Lane.

Showa (昭和櫻): Mid-pink, larger petals. Blooms late February–early March. Common in public parks and along riverside paths.

Combined season: Mid-January to late March — varies 1–2 weeks per year. Follow Yangmingshan NP social media for live updates.

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Taiwan Cherry
緋寒櫻 deep pink, blooms early. Late Jan–Feb. Yangmingshan, Tamsui.
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Bloom window
Mid-Jan to late March · shifts yearly · always check before travelling
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Mostly free entry
Yangmingshan, CKS Hall grounds, riverside parks — no admission charge
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MRT + bus
Easy access from central Taipei — no car rental needed
The Taipei Cherry Blossom Season at a Glance

Three Things to Know Before You Book Your Sakura Trip

Bloom window, varieties and weather — the three variables that determine whether your cherry blossom trip succeeds or misses the peak entirely.

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The Bloom Window — It Shifts Every Year, Never Trust a Fixed Date

In a typical year, cherry blossoms in Taipei begin opening around mid-January and the season runs through late March — but peak bloom at any single spot lasts only 7–14 days, and the timing shifts by 1–2 weeks depending on how cold the winter was. A warm El Niño year can push blooms forward noticeably; a late cold front delays everything. The only reliable method is to follow Yangmingshan National Park's Facebook and Instagram, which post near-daily status updates throughout the season. No website — including this one — can give you a certain date in advance.

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Cherry Varieties — Taiwan Has Its Own That Looks Nothing Like Japan's

The star of Taipei's season is 緋寒櫻 (Formosan Cherry / Taiwan Cherry) — deep pink-red pendant blossoms that open first, from late January, and look strikingly different from the pale pink of Japanese varieties. Yoshino and Showa varieties bloom later in February–March with the softer, more familiar pink tones and larger flowers seen across Japanese parks. The diversity of varieties is what gives Taipei's season its unusual length — multiple waves of bloom rather than a single peak.

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Weather and Crowds — Plan Carefully for the Best Experience

Blossom season brings cool, comfortable temperatures — 14–22°C in the city during the day — ideal for walking. On Yangmingshan it can drop to 8–12°C, especially in the morning mist. Pack a light jacket even on warm city days. Rain is possible at any time; a compact folding umbrella is essential. On weekends, Yangmingshan becomes genuinely crowded — bus 260 queues can be long. Visit on a weekday or arrive before 08:00 on weekends to secure the best spots and the calmest atmosphere.

8 Cherry Blossom Spots in Taipei and Greater Taipei

The Best Places to See Cherry Blossoms — From Volcanic Hillsides to City Laneways

Each spot has a distinct character — some tranquil and misty, some convenient by MRT, some best for photography. Choose by mood and travel time.

⛰️🌸 Yangmingshan · Top Pick1
Yangmingshan National Park — Sea of Blossoms on a Volcano
Yangmingshan National Park — Taipei's Premier Cherry Blossom Destination

Yangmingshan is Taipei's undisputed number-one cherry blossom destination — thousands of trees scattered across volcanic hillsides, with the areas around Zhuzihu (Bamboo Lake) and Xiaoyoukeng the most spectacular. Taiwan Cherry 緋寒櫻 in deep pink-red blooms among the morning mist, creating an atmosphere unlike anything in the city below. The park usually hosts a cherry blossom festival in February–March with food stalls and events. Full details: Complete Yangmingshan Guide

🚆Getting there: MRT to Jiantan Station → Bus 260 or S15 (Red 5) to the park · ~40 min total
🌸Main variety: 緋寒櫻 (deep pink, early bloomer, late Jan–Feb) + Yoshino (Feb–Mar)
💡Photography tip: Arrive before 08:00 on weekdays — morning mist adds depth and weekend buses are severely overcrowded
⛩️🌸 Tamsui · Riverside2
Tamsui Tian Yuan Temple — Deep-Pink Blossoms by the River
Tamsui Tian Yuan Temple — One of Taipei's Most Striking Blossom Scenes

Tian Yuan Temple (天元宮) in Tamsui produces one of the most photographed blossom scenes in the Taipei area — hundreds of Taiwan Cherry 緋寒櫻 trees covering the temple steps and forecourt in a deep, vivid pink that looks dramatically different from the pale Japanese varieties. The sunset window (17:30–18:30), when golden light plays against the deep pink blossoms, delivers the most memorable shots of the season. Full transport details at Tamsui Guide

🚆Getting there: MRT Red Line to Tamsui → taxi or Uber ~15 min (Bus F11 exists but infrequent)
🌸Main variety: 緋寒櫻 · bloom window late January–mid-February
💡Photography tip: Shoot from the base of the steps looking upward — framing blossoms against open sky
🏔️🌸 Sanzhi · Uncrowded3
Wuji Tianyuan Temple, Sanzhi — Valley Blossoms Without the Crowds
Wuji Tianyuan Temple, Sanzhi — A Hidden Blossom Valley in New Taipei

Wuji Tianyuan Temple in Sanzhi township, northwest New Taipei City, is a genuinely uncrowded alternative to Yangmingshan or Tamsui. Hundreds of 緋寒櫻 trees grow across the hillside surrounding the temple, set in a green valley with no tour buses pulling up every ten minutes. The atmosphere is peaceful and natural — ideal for visitors who want blossom photos without competing for space with crowds. A moderate uphill walk from the temple rewards with valley views behind the blossoms.

🚆Getting there: From Tamsui Station take Bus 862 or call Uber/taxi · ~30 min
🌸Main variety: 緋寒櫻 · bloom window late January–mid-February
💡Photography tip: Walk the viewing path behind the temple — green valley backdrop contrasts beautifully with the deep pink
🏛️🌸 City Centre · MRT Direct4
Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall — City-Centre Cherry Blossoms
CKS Memorial Hall — The Most Convenient Blossom Spot in Taipei

The Liberty Square grounds surrounding CKS Memorial Hall host dozens of Yoshino and Showa cherry trees that bloom from February through March — soft pink flowers against the white marble architecture and blue sky create a classically beautiful composition. The decisive advantage of this spot is effortless access: exit MRT Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall Station and the trees are in front of you. No bus transfers, no mountain roads. Perfect for visitors short on time or those who want blossoms as part of a broader sightseeing day. Full guide: CKS Memorial Guide

🚆Getting there: MRT Tamsui-Xinyi or Zhonghe-Xinlu Line · CKS Memorial Hall Station Exit 2
🌸Main variety: Yoshino + Showa (soft pink) · bloom window February–March
💡Photography tip: Wide-angle frames including the main hall building and blossoms together; upper floors offer a bird's-eye view
🏠🌸 Hidden Alley · Low Crowds5
Pingjing Street Lane 42 — Hidden Cherry-Blossom Alley
Pingjing St. Lane 42 — A Kyoto-Like Tunnel of Blossoms in Central Taipei

This narrow lane in the Zhongzheng district is one of those spots well-known among photography enthusiasts but still relatively quiet — Yoshino cherry trees line both sides of the alley, forming a soft-pink canopy that looks more like a Kyoto backstreet than central Taipei. The atmosphere is intimate and unhurried. Early morning before the neighbourhood wakes up is ideal. Find it on Google Maps by searching "平靖街42巷" — it does not appear on most tourist maps.

🚆Getting there: MRT Guting Station Exit 6 · ~10 min walk
🌸Main variety: Yoshino (soft pink) · bloom window February–March
💡Photography tip: Shoot from the far end of the lane toward the light — the tunnel effect deepens the perspective
🌊🌸 Neihu · Wild Nature6
Neihu Bilingbilin — Blossoms Against Cliffs and Waterfalls
Neihu Bilingbilin Trail — Cherry Blossoms in a Setting No Other Spot Offers

The Bilingbilin trail in Neihu is well-known among Taipei locals but almost unknown to foreign visitors — 緋寒櫻 trees grow along cliff faces and beside small streams, producing blossom photographs unlike anything else on this list. The setting feels more like a mountain forest than a public park. Suitable for those who enjoy a light hike (1.5–2 hours, moderate grade) and want distinctly unusual blossom compositions. An under-the-radar gem that rarely appears in tourist itineraries.

🚆Getting there: MRT Neihu Station → Bus 247 or 267 to Biling Bilin stop
🌸Main variety: 緋寒櫻 · bloom window late January–mid-February
💡Photography tip: Frame blossoms against the waterfall or cliff face — a composition impossible to find at any other blossom spot
🌄🌸 Elephant Mountain · 101 Views7
Elephant Mountain (Xiangshan) — Blossoms With Taipei 101 as the Backdrop
Xiangshan — Cherry Blossoms and Taipei's Skyline in a Single Frame

Xiangshan is famous for its Taipei 101 viewpoint — but during blossom season, cherry trees along the steps and ridge trail bloom alongside the city skyline, giving a composition unavailable anywhere else on earth. The climb is not strenuous: 20–30 minutes from the entrance to the main boulder viewpoint at level 3–4. The combination of blossoms and Taipei 101 in a single frame is one of the season's most-shared images. Full trail details: Elephant Mountain Guide

🚆Getting there: MRT Xiangshan Station Exit 2 · ~10 min walk to trailhead
🌸Main variety: Yoshino (soft pink) · bloom window February–March
💡Photography tip: Blue hour (18:30–19:00) — pink blossoms against Taipei 101's lit-up spire is the shot of the season
🏞️🌸 Riverside · Free Entry8
Keelung River Riverside Parks — Free-Entry Picnic-Style Blossoms
Keelung River Riverside Parks — Relaxed, Free and Family-Friendly

The Keelung River parks in Neihu and Songshan districts have Yoshino and Showa cherry trees lining cycling paths and lakeside promenades — all with free entry and a laid-back, local atmosphere. Families spread out on picnic blankets, cyclists coast slowly past the blossoms, and nobody is rushing. Early weekday mornings are particularly calm and photogenic. Dahu Park in Neihu is especially notable for its lakeside cherry trees whose reflections appear on still-water mornings.

🚆Getting there: MRT Dahu Park Station (Brown Line) · ~5 min walk to the park
🌸Main variety: Yoshino + Showa · bloom window February–March · free entry throughout
💡Photography tip: Shoot blossoms reflected in Dahu Lake on a calm morning — the symmetry is exceptionally clean
Photography Timing and Technique

How to Photograph Taipei Cherry Blossoms — Light, Timing and Angles

Light, timing and angle are what separate a memorable blossom photo from a forgettable snapshot. Here is how to read each window.

Morning
07:00–09:00 — Soft Golden Light and the Fewest Crowds
Golden Hour Morning — Soft Light, Empty Paths

Early morning is the best window for every spot on this list. East-facing soft light creates gentle shadows on petals without the harsh contrast of midday sun. At Yangmingshan, morning mist drifts between the trees and adds an atmospheric depth that simply cannot be replicated later in the day. Weekday mornings you may have entire sections of the park to yourself for extended periods. Bring a small tripod if you want long exposures or self-portraits without relying on passers-by.

🌸 Morning mist at Yangmingshan 📷 Soft light · minimal shadows · vivid colour
Afternoon
16:00–17:30 — Warm Golden Tones and Long Shadows
Afternoon Gold — Warm Tones, Long Shadows

Late afternoon sun sits low and warm, creating golden tones that make the deep pink of 緋寒櫻 appear particularly saturated and rich. Long shadows from cherry trunks across temple courtyards or stone steps add compositional interest. This window is especially effective at spots with architectural backdrops — CKS Memorial Hall's white marble and Tian Yuan Temple's red-and-gold structure both absorb afternoon light beautifully. The crowd situation is typically better than midday but busier than early morning.

🌸 Tian Yuan Temple · CKS Memorial Hall 📷 Golden tones · long shadows · vivid blossoms
Evening
17:30–19:00 — Sunset and Blue Hour
Sunset & Blue Hour — The Most Dramatic Light of the Day

For Tamsui Tian Yuan Temple, the sunset window (17:30–18:30) is when deep-pink blossoms set against an orange-and-purple sky produce the single most dramatic blossom image of the season. For Elephant Mountain (Xiangshan), blue hour (18:30–19:00) — when Taipei 101's lights come on and the blossoms are still visible in the fading sky — is genuinely unmissable. A practical note: confirm your descent route is lit and safe before lingering at Xiangshan after dark. Yangmingshan should be visited before sunset; leave before dark.

🌸 Tamsui + Xiangshan best at this hour 📷 Purple sky · city lights · deep-pink foreground
Pair It With — Cherry Blossoms and What Else

Blossom Season Overlaps With Onsen Season — Make the Most of One Trip

February–March is cool and ideal for hot-spring bathing. Combine your blossom itinerary with these experiences for a complete trip.

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Yangmingshan Blossoms + Beitou Onsen — Two Highlights, One Day
Yangmingshan Blossoms + Beitou Onsen — The Best Single-Day Combination

This is the classic pairing of the cherry blossom season — morning on Yangmingshan among the 緋寒櫻 in the mist, then an afternoon descent to Beitou for a natural hot-spring soak to recover tired legs. Beitou sits directly on the same MRT Red Line corridor as Yangmingshan's bus connections — the journey between the two takes around 20 minutes. Full hot-spring details at Beitou Complete Guide and Top 8 Beitou Onsen Hotels

🌸 Yangmingshan — morning to midday ♨️ Beitou onsen — afternoon to evening 🚆 MRT Red Line — no line change needed
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Full Day on Yangmingshan — Blossoms, Silver Grass and Fumaroles
Full Day Yangmingshan — Blossoms, Grasslands & Volcanic Landscape

If you have an entire day, Yangmingshan repays it generously. Morning at Zhuzihu for the cherry blossoms; midday walk through Xiaoyoukeng for the volcanic fumarole landscape; afternoon exploring the park's food stalls and viewpoints. During blossom season the park authority often runs a special festival with additional programming. Full logistics at Complete Yangmingshan Guide

🌸 Zhuzihu blossoms + Xiaoyoukeng fumaroles ⏰ Full day 07:00–17:00 🚆 Bus 260 from Jiantan Station
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Cherry Blossoms + Taiwan's Full Seasonal Guide
Taipei Blossoms + Taiwan-Wide Cherry Blossom Season

Taipei's cherry season is one peak of a much broader Taiwan blossom calendar. The Taiwan Cherry Blossom Guide covers spots outside Taipei — Alishan, Wuling Farm and others — which bloom at different elevations and different times. If you are planning a longer Taiwan trip during this window, combining multiple spots across different bloom windows extends your chances of hitting peak bloom considerably. Also see Best Time to Visit Taipei for month-by-month conditions.

🌸 Cherry blossoms across all Taiwan 🗺️ Plan a multi-destination blossom trip 📅 Jan–April Taiwan blossom season
Plan Your Complete Trip

Essential Guides for Your Taipei Cherry Blossom Trip

From the mountain park to the riverside temple — everything you need to read before the season opens.

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Yangmingshan Complete Guide

How to get there, which trails to walk, the best viewpoints and specific tips for the cherry blossom and silver grass seasons — everything you need for Taiwan's most celebrated national park.

Yangmingshan Guide →
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Beitou Hot Spring Guide

Soak in natural hot springs after your blossom morning — the complete Beitou guide covers public baths, hotel onsen suites, transport and which spring water type to look for.

Beitou Guide →
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All Taipei Attractions

Ten top sights in Taipei with transport, hours, tickets and expert tips — plan your blossom trip alongside the city's other highlights in a single reference page.

Taipei Attractions →
Related Guides

Extend Your Cherry Blossom Trip — Destinations That Connect Naturally

Taipei's cherry season is the starting point — these destinations pair naturally in a single itinerary.

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Cherry Blossoms Across Taiwan

Alishan, Wuling Farm, Fushoushan — cherry blossom spots outside Taipei that bloom at different elevations and different weeks. Plan a full Taiwan blossom itinerary here.

Taiwan Cherry Blossom Guide →
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Taipei City Guide

Everything you need to know about Taipei — accommodation, food, sights, itineraries and practical preparation — in one comprehensive hub page.

Taipei City Guide →
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Best Time to Visit Taipei

Cherry blossoms, typhoon season, summer heat, winter cool — this guide tells you what each month in Taipei is actually like and which season suits your travel style.

Best Time to Visit →
Practical Tips From Experience

Six Tips That Make a Taipei Cherry Blossom Trip Work Better

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Check blossom status before every outing — never rely on fixed dates
Follow Facebook and Instagram of Yangmingshan National Park (陽明山國家公園) and New Taipei City Tourism — both post near-daily blossom status updates during the season. Do not trust dates published on travel websites from previous years. Nature decides, and the timing shifts by weeks depending on annual temperatures.
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Go early, go on weekdays — weekends at Yangmingshan are genuinely crowded
On peak blossom weekends, Bus 260 queues at Jiantan can stretch long enough to miss multiple buses. Weekday mornings are dramatically calmer — you may have entire sections of the park nearly to yourself. If you must visit on a Saturday or Sunday, leave your accommodation by 07:30 to beat the main wave.
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Dress in layers — the mountain is significantly colder than the city
Yangmingshan runs 4–8°C cooler than central Taipei on average. A city day of 18°C can mean 10–12°C on the upper slopes. Bring a wind-resistant jacket, a warm hat and proper walking shoes. Do not visit the mountain in sandals or dress shoes — the paths are uneven and can be damp.
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Pack a compact umbrella — February–March rain is common and unannounced
Light rain and mountain mist are frequent during blossom season. A small folding umbrella adds almost nothing to your bag weight and prevents a ruined outing. Mist and light rain on Yangmingshan can actually produce more atmospheric photographs than clear days — the soft diffused light suits blossom photography well.
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Use Portrait mode — it focuses on blossoms and softens the background
Smartphone Portrait (bokeh) mode separates foreground blossoms sharply from a softened background — far more effective than standard photo mode for flowers. Try shooting upward from below a branch, with sky or light behind the blossoms. Backlit 緋寒櫻 petals glow translucent pink in a way that is genuinely striking. Also take wide shots to capture scale and atmosphere alongside the detail shots.
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Load an EasyCard before you arrive — it covers MRT, bus and the Yangmingshan service
The EasyCard (悠遊卡) works on all MRT lines, city buses and the Yangmingshan shuttle services. Buy one at Taoyuan Airport on arrival (NT$100 deposit, top up as needed) or at any MRT station. Having it loaded before you start saves time at every turnstile and bus door throughout the trip.
Frequently Asked Questions

Taipei Cherry Blossoms — Questions Answered Directly

When do cherry blossoms bloom in Taipei?
Cherry blossoms in Taipei and greater Taipei generally bloom from mid-February to mid-March. Taiwan Cherry (緋寒櫻 / Formosan Cherry) blooms first — around late January to February — while Yoshino and Showa varieties follow in late February through March. The exact window shifts every year depending on how cold the preceding winter was. A warm year can push blooms 1–2 weeks earlier; a late cold snap delays them. Always check current status close to your travel dates rather than relying on fixed dates from any website.
Where is the best place to see cherry blossoms in Taipei?
Yangmingshan National Park is the top destination — thousands of cherry trees across the volcanic hillside, particularly around Zhuzihu and Xiaoyoukeng, with misty mountain atmosphere that makes the experience feel completely different from a city park. Tamsui Tian Yuan Temple is another favourite, with hundreds of deep-pink Taiwan Cherry trees covering the temple steps and courtyard. For the easiest city-centre access, the CKS Memorial Hall grounds have Yoshino and Showa trees a short walk from the MRT station.
Is there an entry fee to see cherry blossoms in Taipei?
Most spots are free — Yangmingshan National Park, CKS Memorial Hall grounds, riverside parks, Pingjing Street Lane 42 and the area around Tamsui Tian Yuan Temple all have no entry charge. The main costs are transport: an EasyCard bus ride to Yangmingshan via bus 260 or S15 from Jiantan Station costs only a few NT dollars each way. A taxi or Uber from Tamsui MRT to Tian Yuan Temple runs around NT$150–200.
How do I check the real-time blossom status before visiting?
The most reliable method is to follow the Facebook and Instagram accounts of Yangmingshan National Park (陽明山國家公園), which post blossom status updates almost daily during the season. Taiwan Tourism Administration also publishes updates, and the hashtags #陽明山 and #台北櫻花 on Instagram carry near-real-time photos from visitors. Check close to your travel date — peak bloom at any single spot typically lasts only 7–14 days.
What is the best time of day to photograph cherry blossoms in Taipei?
Early morning (07:00–09:00) gives the softest light and fewest crowds — ideal for every spot, and especially Yangmingshan where the morning mist adds depth and atmosphere. Late afternoon (16:00–17:30) delivers warm golden tones and long shadows. For Tamsui Tian Yuan Temple, the sunset window (17:30–18:30) — deep-pink blossoms set against an orange and purple sky — produces the single most dramatic shot of the season. For Elephant Mountain, blue hour (18:30–19:00) with Taipei 101 lit up behind the blossoms is unmissable.
Ready to Plan Your Taipei Cherry Blossom Trip?

Taipei's Sakura Season Is Waiting —
Check Status and Start Planning

Browse the full Taipei guide or explore all attractions and hotels — then check blossom status on Yangmingshan NP's social media before you travel.

🌸 Yangmingshan ♨️ Beitou Onsen