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👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Family Travel Guide · Updated 2026

Kids Stay Engaged,
Parents Don't Burn Out

Stroller-friendly MRT with lifts at every station, Asia's largest zoo, a crystal-floor cable car, interactive science museums, public hot springs and safe night markets — Taipei is one of the easiest and most rewarding family destinations in East Asia.

Why Taipei Works for Families

Taipei — East Asia's Best Family Destination

If you had to choose one city in East Asia to take a family with young children, the case for Taipei is stronger than most people expect. It is not Tokyo — though it shares that city's cleanliness and sense of order. It is not Bangkok — though it has the same warmth and generosity towards children. What Taipei has that few other cities can match is a genuinely stroller-friendly transit system, an extraordinary range of child-oriented attractions within easy MRT reach, a culture that is openly affectionate towards children, and costs that remain well below Tokyo, Hong Kong or Singapore.

Every MRT station has a lift. Every platform has space for strollers. Children under six ride free. Convenience stores open 24 hours stock nappies, formula and children's medicine on every corner. Nursing rooms exist in museums, department stores and major MRT stations. Restaurants welcome children without reservation — figuratively and literally. The city is safe enough that even anxious parents relax within a day of arriving.

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Taipei's MRT is fully stroller-accessible — lifts at every station, priority spaces in carriages, and children under 6 ride free.

Stroller-friendly MRT: lifts at every station, no need to fold — children under 6 / under 115 cm ride free

Wide attraction range: zoo, cable car, science museum, aquarium, hot springs, night markets with games

Exceptionally safe: consistently one of Asia's lowest crime-rate cities — families relax quickly

Good value: zoo entry from NT$60, most museum tickets NT$100–200, children often free or half-price

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Stroller-friendly MRT
Lifts at every station · priority carriage space · kids under 6 ride free
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Asia's largest zoo
Taipei Zoo has 300+ species including giant pandas — kids love it
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Exceptionally safe city
Taipei ranks among Asia's safest cities year after year
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Affordable for families
Young children often free · street food from NT$40 · MRT fares low
Why Taipei Beats the Competition

Three Reasons Taipei Wins for Family Travel

Measured against other major Asian city destinations, Taipei has concrete, practical advantages for families with children.

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Transit That Actually Works With Strollers

Taipei's MRT is the most stroller-friendly metro in Asia. Every station — without exception — has a lift and ramp access throughout. Train carriages have designated stroller parking areas. You never need to fold the pram. Children under 6 years old or shorter than 115 cm ride completely free. An EasyCard bought at the airport works on all MRT lines, buses and in most convenience stores — tap in, tap out, done.

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A Genuine Range of Kid-Friendly Attractions

Taipei is not just temples and night markets. Within MRT reach you will find Asia's largest zoo (with giant pandas), a crystal-floor cable car, a riverside children's amusement park, a hands-on science education centre, an astronomical museum with a planetarium, a modern immersive aquarium, public hot spring baths and night markets with games for children. The variety means every age group in the family finds something genuinely engaging.

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Honest Value for Families

Taipei is significantly cheaper than Tokyo, Hong Kong or Singapore for family travel. Zoo entry is NT$60 for adults and free for children under 6. MRT fares are low. Street food starts at NT$40–60 per dish. A decent family hotel room costs NT$3,000–6,000 per night. A five-day, four-night family trip of four — flights included — typically comes in well below equivalent trips to Japan, making Taipei one of the best-value serious destinations in the region.

Kid-Friendly Attractions

10 Taipei Attractions Children Actually Love

Curated for families — every attraction here works for children of different ages, with practical tips to make each visit smoother.

🦌🌳 Zoo · Giant Pandas1
Taipei Zoo (臺北市立動物園)
Asia's Largest Zoo — Giant Pandas, Native Wildlife & a Full Day Out

Taipei Zoo is the largest zoo in Asia by area — 165 hectares housing over 300 species. The star attractions for most children are the giant pandas Yuan Yuan and Yuan Zai, but the Taiwanese native wildlife section, the Australian zone, the indoor aquatic house and the free-flight bird aviary all hold their own. An electric tram runs a circuit of the zoo for younger children who tire of walking. Budget a full day; there are several restaurants and rest areas. Children under 6 enter free, making it among the best-value days out in the city.

📌Getting there: MRT Brown Line (Circular) to Taipei Zoo station (终點站) Exit 1
Hours: 09:00–17:00 daily (closed first Monday of each month)
💰Admission: NT$60 adults · NT$30 children 6–12 · under 6 free
🚠⛰️ Cable Car · Crystal Cabin2
Maokong Gondola (貓空纜車)
Cable Car From the Zoo to Taipei's Tea Mountain — Kids Love the Crystal Cabin

The Maokong Gondola departs from a station beside Taipei Zoo, climbing 4 kilometres through four stops to the tea-growing hills of Maokong. Children are reliably delighted by the ride — especially the optional Crystal Cabin, which has a transparent floor revealing the hillside far below. The journey takes around 30 minutes each way. At the top, tea houses serve Taiwanese oolong with snacks and panoramic views of the Taipei basin. Pairing this with the zoo makes a natural full day without doubling back.

📌Getting there: MRT Brown Line to Taipei Zoo, then 5 min walk to gondola station
Hours: Tue–Fri 09:00–21:00 · Sat–Sun 08:30–21:00 (closed Monday)
💰Fare: NT$120 adults return · NT$50 children · Crystal Cabin NT$50 supplement
🎡🎢 Amusement Park · Riverside Rides3
Taipei Children's Amusement Park (臺北市兒童新樂園)
Riverside Rides, a Vintage Train & Over 20 Attractions for Young Children

Taipei Children's Amusement Park sits along the Jilong River in the Shilin area — a compact but well-maintained park with over 20 rides sized for children aged roughly 3 to 12. The highlight for younger visitors is the electric train that loops the park, but the small Ferris wheel, bumper cars, splash zone and carousel all earn their place. Entry is free; rides are purchased individually with tokens. The park is open until 20:00 on weekends, making it viable for an early-evening visit after Taipei Zoo nearby.

📌Getting there: MRT Red Line to Jiantan station (劍潭站) Exit 1 — 10 min walk
Hours: Tue–Fri 09:00–17:00 · Sat–Sun 09:00–20:00 (closed Monday)
💰Cost: Free entry · rides use tokens at NT$20 each (most rides 1–3 tokens)
🐠🌊 Aquarium · Penguins4
Xpark Aquarium (Taoyuan)
Taiwan's Most Modern Aquarium — 45 Minutes From Central Taipei

Xpark is the newest and most technically ambitious aquarium in Taiwan, located inside Mitsui Outlet Park in Taoyuan — about 45 minutes from Taipei by HSR and shuttle. The main draw for families is the walk-through shark tunnel, the touch pool where children can handle sea creatures, the penguin enclosure and the dolphin show. Plan two to three hours inside. Many families combine the visit with outlet shopping at the attached mall. Worth the trip if your children are genuinely engaged by marine life. → Read our full Xpark guide — cheaper Klook tickets, all 13 zones & Penguin Café booking tips →

📌Getting there: HSR to Taoyuan station, then bus or taxi ~20 min to Mitsui Outlet Park
Hours: 10:00–18:00 daily (Sat–Sun until 20:00)
💰Admission: NT$590 adults · NT$390 children · under 3 free
🔭🧪 Science · Planetarium5
National Taiwan Science Education Center & Taipei Astronomical Museum
NTSEC — Five Floors of Hands-On Science in Shilin

The National Taiwan Science Education Center (NTSEC) in Shilin is a large, hands-on science museum with five floors of interactive exhibits spanning biology, technology, physics and earth sciences. Older children particularly enjoy the technology and biomedical zones. A short walk away, the Taipei Astronomical Museum has a planetarium dome, space exploration exhibits and an IMAX-format theatre — the combination of the two sites makes a natural full-day outing without leaving the Shilin MRT area.

📌Getting there: MRT Red Line to Shilin station (士林站) Exit 1 — 10–15 min walk
Hours: Tue–Sun 09:00–17:00 (closed Monday)
💰Admission: NT$100 adults · NT$70 children · planetarium NT$100 extra
🎡✨ Ferris Wheel · Night Views6
Miramar Ferris Wheel (美麗華百樂園)
80-Metre Rooftop Ferris Wheel With 360° Views of Taipei

The Miramar Ferris Wheel sits on the roof of the Miramar Entertainment Park shopping mall — an 80-metre wheel that makes one slow 17-minute rotation with a 360-degree view across Taipei. Children find the elevated vantage point genuinely exciting, and the ride is gentle enough for all ages. The mall below has a cinema, restaurants and a small indoor amusement area. The wheel looks spectacular at night, making it a good option for an early-evening outing after a quieter day in the city.

📌Getting there: MRT Green Line (Songshan–Xindian) to Jiannan Road station (劍南路站) — 5 min walk
Hours: Weekdays 11:00–23:00 · Sat–Sun 11:00–24:00
💰Fare: NT$150 adults · NT$100 children · under 2 free
🌳⛳ Free Play · Green Space7
Daan Forest Park (大安森林公園)
Taipei's Central Park — Lawns, Playgrounds & Free Entry

Daan Forest Park is the closest thing Taipei has to a Central Park — 26 hectares of woodland, open lawns, a small lake, a playground and wide paths popular with joggers, families with strollers and school groups. It is an excellent place to let children run freely after a morning of museums, or to decompress on the last afternoon before a flight. Entry is free at all hours. Café kiosks around the perimeter sell drinks and snacks. The nearby 228 Peace Park, beside the CKS Memorial Hall, is a smaller but equally pleasant option for younger children.

📌Getting there: MRT Green Line to Daan Forest Park station (大安森林公園站) Exit 5
Hours: Open 24 hours · free entry
💡Tip: Best with children 16:00–18:00 when local families gather and the light is golden
♨️🛁 Hot Springs · Public Baths8
Beitou Hot Springs (北投溫泉)
Family-Friendly Public Hot Spring Baths — 30 Minutes From Central Taipei

Beitou is Taipei's hot-spring district, reached in around 30 minutes from central Taipei by MRT. The Millenium Hot Spring (千禧湯) is a public outdoor bathhouse charging just NT$40 per person — genuinely one of Asia's great bargains. Multiple pools at different temperatures allow families to choose a comfortable heat level, and children take quickly to the experience. Before or after soaking, walk through the Beitou Hot Spring Museum (free), a beautifully preserved Japanese colonial bathhouse. Full details in the Beitou guide.

📌Getting there: MRT Red Line to Xinbeitou, then Xinbeitou Branch Line one stop to Beitou
Millenium Hot Spring: 05:30–22:00 daily (closed first Monday of each month)
💰Cost: NT$40 adults · NT$20 children · under 6 free
🏙️🌟 Skyscraper · Fast Elevator9
Taipei 101 Observatory
World's Fastest Elevator & an Outdoor Sky Deck at 450 Metres

Older children are reliably thrilled by Taipei 101's observatory elevator — the world's fastest at the time of construction, reaching floor 89 from floor 5 in 37 seconds (ears pop; children love it). Floor 89 is the indoor observatory; floor 91 is the outdoor Sky Deck with open-air views across the Taipei basin. Inside the tower, the Damper Baby mascot (a cartoon version of the 660-tonne wind damper ball) appears throughout and tends to be a hit with young children. Book tickets online through KKday or Klook to skip queues. See the full Taipei 101 guide.

📌Getting there: MRT Red Line to Taipei 101/World Trade Center station Exit 4
Hours: 09:00–22:00 daily (last entry 21:15)
💰Admission: NT$600 adults · NT$540 children 6–11 · under 6 free
🎮🌃 Night Market Games · Street Food10
Night Markets with Games
Shilin & Raohe Night Markets — Fishing Games, Ring Toss & Street Food for All Ages

Taiwan's night markets are not just about food — game stalls run alongside the eating, offering goldfish scooping, ring toss, air-rifle shooting and ball games that children gravitate towards immediately. Shilin Night Market (MRT Jiantan) is the largest and most tourist-ready, with the most game stalls and a huge underground food court. Raohe Night Market (MRT Songshan) is smaller, slightly less hectic and has the famous Fuzhou pepper buns queue. Both are suitable for families in the early evening (17:00–20:00) before crowds peak. Full details at the Taipei night market guide.

📌Shilin: MRT Red Line, Jiantan station · Raohe: MRT Green Line, Songshan station
Best family timing: 17:00–20:00 before the largest crowds arrive
💡Tip: Night market floors are level and stroller-friendly but very crowded at peak — keep young children very close
Family Logistics

Practical Family Know-How — Before You Arrive

Taipei handles families better than most Asian cities. Here is the practical detail that makes the difference.

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MRT with Strollers

Every Taipei MRT station has at least one lift from street level to platform — you never need to fold a stroller. Platform gaps are small and manageable. Carriages have a designated stroller and wheelchair space near the door. Children under 6 or shorter than 115 cm ride free. Buy an EasyCard (NT$100 deposit) at the airport arrival hall or any MRT station for all adults; tap in and out on every journey. The card also works on city buses and at 7-Eleven.

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Family Hotel Rooms

Most Taipei hotels sell family rooms or connecting-room packages that cost less than two separate rooms. For a family of four, look for hotels with rooms that can add a rollaway cot (NT$300–600 extra). The Xinyi and Zhongshan districts have the widest selection of 4-star family-suitable rooms at reasonable prices. For a curated comparison with pools, Beitou onsen resorts and family-specific rooms, see the 10 Best Family Hotels in Taipei roundup — it covers every budget from NT$2,300 to NT$11,000.

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Convenience Stores (24 Hours)

Taiwan's density of convenience stores is extraordinary — there is a 7-Eleven or FamilyMart within 300 metres of virtually every point in central Taipei. They sell nappies, wet wipes, infant formula, children's snacks, over-the-counter medicines, ready meals and freshly made onigiri and sandwiches. Hot water for formula is always available at the beverage counter. For a full supermarket run, Carrefour and PX Mart have branches within walking distance of most central MRT stations.

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Nursing Rooms

Dedicated nursing rooms (哺乳室) are standard in all MRT stations, major department stores, SOGO, Mitsukoshi, and large attractions including Taipei Zoo and Taipei 101. The rooms typically include a changing table, a private seat for feeding and a sink. Look for the universal baby-symbol sign or ask any staff member — they are invariably helpful. Taiwan has a high social acceptance of breastfeeding in public cafés and restaurants as well.

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Best Seasons for Families

The best months for families are October to December (clear skies, low humidity, 18–26°C) and March to May (cherry blossom season, comfortable temperatures). Summer (June–September) is hot, humid and has typhoon risk — still very manageable, but plan indoor attractions for afternoons and carry hydration. January–February brings the Lunar New Year, when many shops close for 3–7 days; check before travelling. Pack light breathable clothing, a foldable rain jacket and an insect repellent stick.

Day Trips

Three Day Trips Children Will Actually Remember

Taipei is the ideal base for easy day excursions — all three below are reachable by public transport without hiring a car.

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Jiufen & Shifen — Lanterns & Old Streets

The classic northern Taiwan day trip: release a sky lantern on the Shifen railway tracks (children absolutely love writing wishes on the lantern before it floats away), then climb the atmospheric stone steps of Jiufen Old Street for taro balls and panoramic sea views. The teahouses perched above the valley are the inspiration for a famous animated film. Both towns are reachable by bus from Taipei or by a train-and-bus combination. Details and timing at the Jiufen & Shifen day trip guide.

Jiufen & Shifen Day Trip →
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Yehliu Geopark — Alien Landscape

Yehliu Geopark on the northern coast is a genuinely otherworldly landscape of wind-sculpted mushroom rocks and sea-eroded formations — the kind of place that triggers genuine wonder in children and adults alike. The centrepiece is the Queen's Head rock, which does uncannily resemble a crowned profile. The park is small enough to cover in 90 minutes at a leisurely pace. Combine it with Jiufen on the same day for a full circuit of the northeast coast. Full transport and timing details at the Yehliu guide.

Yehliu Geopark Guide →
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10 Best Family Hotels in Taipei 2026

We picked 10 Taipei hotels that pass real family criteria: swimming pools, child-accessible hot-spring baths, rooms that sleep 4, and Beitou onsen resorts that children name as the holiday highlight. Every budget covered from NT$2,300 to NT$11,000, with prices compared across 3 booking sites.

10 Best Family Hotels in Taipei →
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Full Family Trip Plan

If you want a ready-made itinerary that balances kid-friendly highlights with realistic pacing — including midday rest breaks, meal stops and fallback options for rain — the 4-Day Taipei Family Itinerary maps out a complete trip from airport arrival to departure. It covers Taipei Zoo, Maokong Gondola, Taipei 101, the Children's Amusement Park, a Jiufen day trip and two night market evenings in a sequence that works for families with children aged 3 and up.

4-Day Taipei Family Itinerary →
Family Tips

Six Tips That Make Taipei with Kids Far Easier

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Start early — Taipei rewards early risers with families
The Taipei Zoo, Taipei 101 observatory and the Children's Amusement Park are all significantly less crowded before 10:00. An early arrival at the zoo means you catch the animals at their most active before the midday heat quietens them. Starting at 09:00 instead of 11:00 also gives you a natural reason to break for lunch and a midday rest — which younger children will need — and still finish the main attraction before the afternoon crowds build. The MRT is noticeably quieter before 09:30 on weekdays.
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Buy an EasyCard at the airport — one per adult
The EasyCard (NT$100 deposit, top up as needed) covers MRT, city buses, YouBike hire and purchases at 7-Eleven, FamilyMart and many restaurants. Children under 6 ride the MRT free without a card. Buying the card at the airport arrival hall — rather than at a city station — saves time on your first morning. Load NT$500 per adult to start; top-up machines are at every MRT station and convenience store. A single card cannot be shared between two people tapping at the same time.
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Pack insect repellent and sunscreen — the heat is real
Between May and September, Taipei is hot and humid and the sun is fierce. Apply sunscreen in the morning before outdoor attractions like the zoo or the Children's Amusement Park; reapply after any outdoor pool or water activity. A DEET-based insect repellent stick (available at any convenience store or pharmacy) is essential for Beitou and any riverside or park visit after 17:00, when mosquitoes are most active. Taiwan's pharmacies (often green cross sign) sell effective local brands cheaply.
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Download two apps before you leave home
Two apps transform family navigation in Taipei. Google Maps has complete Taipei MRT data, walking directions and lift locations — search for "accessible route" to get stroller-friendly paths. Taiwan Railways (TRA) app handles intercity trains for day trips. For Japanese-speakers or non-English visitors, the Taipei MRT app shows real-time train arrivals and exit locations. A local SIM card or international roaming plan is essential — buy an airport SIM from Chunghwa Telecom or Far EasTone on arrival (NT$300–500 for 5–7 days of data).
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Book Taipei 101 and the Maokong Gondola tickets in advance
Taipei 101 observatory tickets sell out on weekends and during Golden Week (late April–early May) and Lunar New Year holidays — book through Klook or KKday at least 3 days ahead to guarantee a slot. The Maokong Gondola does not require advance booking on weekdays, but weekend queues can reach 60–90 minutes at peak times (10:00–14:00). Arriving at Maokong station before 10:00 or after 15:00 avoids the worst. If the queue is very long, the Crystal Cabin (transparent floor) can be skipped in favour of the standard cabin — still a wonderful ride.
😴
Build in genuine rest time every afternoon
Two to three attractions per day is the sustainable pace for families with children under 10. Taipei's heat and humidity are real physical stressors, and young children will crash if pushed through four or five attractions in a single day. Structure each day with one morning attraction, lunch and a 90-minute midday break (return to the hotel or find an air-conditioned café), then one afternoon attraction, followed by an early evening at a park or night market. This rhythm keeps the trip enjoyable rather than exhausting — and adults benefit equally.
FAQ

Taipei with Kids — Questions Answered Directly

Is Taipei good for families with children?
Taipei is one of the best family destinations in East Asia. The MRT system is clean, safe and fully stroller-accessible with lifts at every station. There is an excellent range of child-friendly attractions — Asia's largest zoo, a cable car, an interactive science museum, an aquarium, public hot springs and safe night markets with games. Local people are warm and welcoming towards children, crime rates are extremely low, and costs are very reasonable compared with Tokyo or Hong Kong.
Is the Taipei MRT stroller-friendly?
Yes — every Taipei MRT station has at least one lift and ramp access throughout, so you never need to fold a stroller. Carriages have a designated priority space for strollers and wheelchairs. Children under 6 years old or shorter than 115 cm ride free. Buy an EasyCard at the airport for all adults; it works on the MRT, buses and convenience stores.
What are the best Taipei attractions for toddlers (under 5)?
For young children, the top picks are Taipei Zoo (giant pandas and diverse animals; children under 6 free), Taipei Children's Amusement Park (gentle rides and a miniature train along the river), Daan Forest Park (wide lawns for running around, free entry) and the Maokong Gondola (children love the cable-car ride and the transparent Crystal Cabin floor). All are accessible by MRT and none require long walks.
How many days do you need in Taipei with kids?
Plan for at least 4–5 days. Keep the pace relaxed — 2 to 3 attractions per day with a midday rest is sustainable for families with young children. A suggested shape: days 1–2 for city highlights (Taipei 101, National Palace Museum, Longshan Temple), day 3 for Taipei Zoo and Maokong Gondola, day 4 for a day trip to Jiufen and Shifen, day 5 for a relaxed morning in a park followed by shopping.
Where can I buy baby supplies in Taipei?
7-Eleven and FamilyMart convenience stores are everywhere and open 24 hours — they stock nappies, infant formula, children's snacks and basic medicines. Carrefour and PX Mart supermarkets carry a full range of baby products at reasonable prices. Familiar international brands such as Pampers and Enfamil are widely available. Many MRT stations and major department stores have nursing rooms (哺乳室) — ask staff or look for the baby symbol sign.
Ready to Plan Your Family Trip?

You Know the Highlights —
Now Build the Itinerary

Follow a ready-made family itinerary with realistic pacing, midday rests and fallback options for rain — or browse all Taipei attractions to build your own day-by-day plan.

🗺️ Family Itinerary 📍 Taipei Attractions