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🌅 Attraction Deep-Dive · Updated 2026

Taipei's Most Beautiful Sunset
A Half-Day Tamsui Deep-Dive

Ride the MRT to the very end of the line, step off the train, and there it is — a wide river and a salt-tinged breeze. This is Tamsui, the old port town where Taipei has come to watch the sunset for over a century. Wander the Old Street snacking on a-gei and iron eggs, climb to a colonial-era red fort, cross over to Lover's Bridge, then wait for the moment the sun slips into the river mouth. We map out this half-day for you, from the minute you get off the train to the last frame of the last light.

The Story

The Port Town at the River's Endwhere all of Taipei comes to watch the sun go down

Right at the mouth of the Tamsui River, where the water from the mountains meets the Taiwan Strait, sits a small town that was once the most important harbour in northern Taiwan. The Spanish built a fort here in the 17th century; the Dutch took it over; tea merchants raised warehouses along the waterfront; Canadian missionaries opened schools and churches on the hill above. Every era left a mark on the small street plan of a town called Tamsui (淡水 · Danshui). The trading junks are long gone, but the charm of a port town remains — and crucially, it sits at the very end of an MRT line, which makes it the easiest "escape from the city" trip in all of Taipei.

What makes Tamsui special isn't any single sight — it's the chance to spend an unhurried half-day by the river. You stroll an Old Street thick with the smell of fried snacks, taste a hot a-gei with a bowl of fish-ball soup, pose with a soft-serve cone taller than your head, and walk a riverside promenade dotted with buskers and anglers. Then you drift up to the red fort on the hill, or take a ferry across to Fisherman's Wharf — and everything builds towards the sunset, which is the single biggest reason people come to Tamsui. This guide walks you through it all: how to get there, a half-day plan built around catching the sunset, the sights you shouldn't miss, the street food, and the honest things worth knowing before you go.

🚇
End of the Red Line
A straight 35–40-minute MRT ride from central Taipei to the Tamsui terminus
🌅
A Legendary Sunset
The sun drops right into the river mouth — Taipei's most-loved sunset view
🍢
An Old Street of Snacks
A-gei · iron eggs · fish-ball soup · towering ice cream cones
🏛️
Colonial Heritage
A Spanish-British red fort · consular residence · old churches and schools
Golden-orange sunset over Tamsui Fisherman's Wharf, with lamp posts lining a wooden boardwalk and a pavilion, Taipei
Sunset at Tamsui Fisherman's Wharf — the sun drops straight into the river mouth, the single biggest reason people make the trip.
Entrance archway to Tamsui Old Street with crowds of visitors browsing food stalls on both sides, Taipei
Tamsui Old Street — a long snacking lane running parallel to the river, packed with local food stalls and souvenir shops.
Book Tours & Ferry Tickets

Tamsui Tours + Ferry Tickets + Sunset Dinner Cruise
The Best Sunset in Taipei

Tamsui–Bali ferry tickets (approximately NT$70) or a sunset dinner cruise at Fisherman's Wharf via Klook for approximately NT$1,200–2,500/person including dinner + live music — the most romantic date-night option in Taipei.

✓ Often cheaper than counter ✓ Instant QR ticket ✓ Skip the queue ✓ Free cancellation on some
⛴️ See Tamsui Sunset Cruises on Klook →
Wherebest is an affiliate partner of Klook — we may earn a commission when you book through our links, at no extra cost to you.
Getting There · Hours

Ride the Red Line to the Endthen take a ferry or light rail on to the Wharf

Tamsui is one of the easiest day trips in Taipei — the old town is walkable from the MRT station, but Fisherman's Wharf lies further out and needs a ferry, light rail or bus connection.

🚆 Getting Around

  • 🚇Take the MRT Red Line (Tamsui–Xinyi Line) all the way to its final stop, Tamsui (淡水). Step off and the river and Old Street are right there. From Taipei Main Station it's about 35–40 minutes.
  • ⚠️Red Line trains alternate — some run all the way to Tamsui, others terminate at Beitou. Check the destination sign on the front of the train reads "Tamsui"; if you board the wrong one, just get off at Beitou and wait for the next.
  • ⛴️Reach Fisherman's Wharf three ways — a river ferry from Tamsui Wharf (around NT$60, the most scenic); the Danhai LRT light rail coastal line (transfer at Hongshulin); or bus R26 (fastest, roughly 15–20 minutes).
  • There's also a cross-river ferry to Bali (八里) on the opposite bank — a quieter village with a riverside cycling path, worth it if you have spare time.

🕙 Hours · Tickets

  • 🆓The Old Street, the riverside promenade, Fisherman's Wharf and Lover's Bridge are all free — Tamsui is a budget-friendly trip; you mostly pay for transport and snacks.
  • 🎟️Fort San Domingo costs around NT$80, and one ticket covers three sites: the fort, the Former British Consular Residence and Hobe Fort.
  • 🚫The fort and its sister museums open roughly 09:30–17:00 on weekdays and 09:30–18:00 at weekends, with ticket sales stopping 30 minutes before closing. Closed on the first Monday of each month — check before you go.
  • 💳Everything takes an EasyCard — the MRT, the river ferry, the light rail and convenience stores — so you don't need much cash.
💡

The key to a Tamsui trip is timing: Tamsui is at its best when you plan the whole trip to end with the sunset. Check the day's sunset time first (around 18:30 in summer, around 17:15 in winter), then count backwards to work out when to leave the city — leaving in the mid-to-late afternoon usually lands it just right.

Half-Day Plan

Tamsui in Half a Dayeverything timed to end with the sunset

The times below assume a sunset around 18:00 (shift earlier or later by season) — the formula is to wander the old town through the afternoon, then move to the riverside or Fisherman's Wharf in time for the last light.

13:30 · Start

Arrive at Tamsui Station — walk into the Old Street

Leave Tamsui MRT station and turn into Tamsui Old Street (淡水老街), which runs parallel to the river. Start with a slow graze — sample a few local snacks, browse the souvenir shops, and save your appetite for a proper feed at dusk. Don't rush this part; let the port-town mood settle in.

14:30 · Late lunch

A-gei and fish-ball soup

Find an a-gei (阿給) shop — fried tofu stuffed with glass noodles in a well-balanced sauce, the town's signature dish — and pair it with a bowl of hot Tamsui fish-ball soup. It's a light late lunch that keeps room for more snacking later in the evening.

15:30 · Heritage on the hill

Walk up to Fort San Domingo

Head up Zhongzheng Road towards Fort San Domingo (紅毛城) — a red-walled stone fort begun by the Spanish, extended by the Dutch, and used by the British as a consulate for over a century. Beside it stands the elegant red-brick Former British Consular Residence; one ticket covers both, with wide river views from the hilltop. Allow about an hour.

16:45 · Move to the river mouth

Ferry or light rail to Fisherman's Wharf

Walk back down to the waterfront and head out to Fisherman's Wharf — the river ferry along the water is the most atmospheric way, giving you the town from a river's-eye view. For speed, take the Danhai LRT light rail or bus R26 instead. Aim to arrive 30–45 minutes before sunset.

17:30 · The day's highlight

Walk Lover's Bridge and wait for sunset

Step onto Lover's Bridge (情人橋), a white sail-shaped pedestrian bridge arcing over the marina. Wait for the moment the sun sinks into the river mouth and the sky turns from gold to pink-purple. After dark, the bridge lights up in shifting colours — the loveliest possible way to close the day.

18:30 · Before you head back

Dinner by the river, then the MRT home

After sunset, stop for dinner — seafood at Fisherman's Wharf, or take the ferry back to graze more along the Old Street. Try a towering soft-serve cone for dessert, then walk back to Tamsui MRT station and ride the Red Line back into the city.

Have a full day? Start earlier and you can easily add more — climb up to Tamkang High School and Aletheia University, the old church-and-college quarter on the hill, with its historic Oxford College hall and photogenic Chinese-Western fusion buildings; or take the ferry across to Bali for a riverside cycle — then loop back to finish with the sunset all the same.

Don't Miss

5 Key Sights in Tamsuithat make the half-day complete

From the snacking lane by the river to the red fort on the hill and the bridge built for sunsets — these are the sights that make Tamsui Tamsui.

Wooden boardwalk at Tamsui Fisherman's Wharf at sunset, lined with lamp posts and people taking in the view Highlight No. 1

The Tamsui Sunset

The single biggest reason people come to Tamsui — the west-facing river mouth means the sun drops straight into the water, the sky sliding from gold to orange to pink and finally purple. The favourite vantage points are the riverside promenade in front of the Old Street and Lover's Bridge at Fisherman's Wharf.

The honest caveat: it's entirely weather-dependent — a hazy day means no real colour, so check the forecast. Autumn through winter (Oct–Feb) usually has the clearest skies. Arrive 30–45 minutes early to claim a spot.

Tamsui Old Street lined with shops on both sides and crowds of visitors walking through, Taipei The Snacking Lane

Tamsui Old Street (淡水老街)

A long snacking lane running parallel to the river, starting almost at the MRT station — both sides packed with local food stalls, grilled snacks, souvenir shops and retro game arcades. It's the place to wander and graze before heading off to watch the sunset.

The honest caveat: it's a full-on tourist quarter, some things cost more than elsewhere, and it gets very crowded at weekends and in the evening. For an easier stroll, come on a weekday or in the early afternoon.

Tamsui Fisherman's Wharf with fishing boats moored and the castle-shaped Lover's Tower building, Taipei The River Mouth

Fisherman's Wharf & Lover's Bridge (情人橋)

The harbour where the Tamsui River meets the sea — rows of moored fishing boats, seafood restaurants, and the standout sight: Lover's Bridge, a 196-metre white sail-shaped pedestrian bridge that opened on Valentine's Day in 2003 and lights up in shifting colours after dark.

The honest caveat: Fisherman's Wharf is well beyond the old town — you'll need a ferry, light rail or bus, so factor in the travel time. It is the best sunset spot in Tamsui.

Fort San Domingo, a red stone fort with the Taiwan national flag flying on top, Tamsui, Taipei Colonial Heritage

The Red Fort — Fort San Domingo (紅毛城)

A red-brick stone fort on the hill above the river — begun by the Spanish in the 17th century, extended by the Dutch, and leased by the British as a consulate for over a hundred years. Locals call it the "fort of the red-haired people". Beside it stands the handsome red-brick colonial Former British Consular Residence.

Visiting: entry around NT$80, one ticket covering three sites (the fort, the consular residence, Hobe Fort) · open 09:30–17:00 (to 18:00 at weekends) · closed the first Monday of each month.

Former British Consular Residence in Tamsui, a two-storey red-brick colonial building with arched verandahs and old cannons in front
The Former British Consular Residence — a red-brick colonial building beside the red fort, included on the same single ticket.
The white sail-shaped Lover's Bridge at Tamsui Fisherman's Wharf at dusk, with boats moored in the marina below
Lover's Bridge at dusk — the sail-shaped pedestrian bridge that has become Tamsui's most popular spot to stand and watch the sun go down.

The fifth sight — the old college quarter: Up the hill above the Old Street are Aletheia University and Tamkang High School, the quarter where Canadian missionary George Leslie Mackay founded some of northern Taiwan's first schools. You'll find the historic Oxford College hall, churches, and photogenic Chinese-Western fusion campus buildings — well worth it if you have a full day.

Tamsui Street Food

What to Eat in Tamsui— the local bites worth trying

Tamsui has hometown dishes you'll struggle to find elsewhere — the trick is to graze a little from several stalls rather than ordering one big portion.

The Town's Signature

A-gei (阿給)

The dish that symbolises Tamsui — fried tofu sliced open and stuffed with glass noodles, sealed with minced fish paste, steamed hot and topped with a sweet-savoury sauce. Eaten piping hot as a light meal. The name "a-gei" comes from the Japanese word for fried tofu.

Popular Souvenir

Iron Eggs (鐵蛋)

Eggs braised and re-braised in soy sauce over many rounds until they shrink small, turn chewy and go a deep black, with a salty-savoury depth. They were invented in Tamsui by accident, by a vendor re-simmering unsold eggs day after day. Today they're an easy souvenir to take home.

Sip It Hot

Fish-Ball Soup & Fish Crackers

As an old fishing port, Tamsui does seafood well — a bowl of clear, hot fish-ball soup pairs perfectly with a-gei, while crispy fried fish crackers (魚酥), made from minced fish, are a long-keeping souvenir to carry home.

Photo Fun

Towering Ice Cream & Local Snacks

The Old Street's signature photo prop — a soft-serve cone piled taller than your head, an image now inseparable from Tamsui. Beyond it there are plenty of local snacks: grilled bites, fried treats and traditional sweets tucked down the lanes. Just keep grazing as you walk.

Traveller Tips

6 Tipsfor getting the most out of half a day in Tamsui

🌅
Plan the Trip to End at Sunset
Check the day's sunset time first, then count backwards to work out when to leave the city.
🚆
Check the Train's Destination
Red Line trains alternate — board one that reads "Tamsui"; if you board wrong, get off at Beitou and wait.
⛴️
Take the Ferry to the Wharf
The river ferry beats the light rail for atmosphere — around NT$60 with an EasyCard.
🎒
Avoid Weekends if You Can
The Old Street and wharf get very crowded at weekends and in the evening — weekdays are far easier.
🌧️
The Sunset Depends on Weather
A hazy day means no real colour — check the forecast; autumn to winter brings the clearest skies.
🍢
Graze From Several Stalls
There's a lot of street food — don't order one big portion; sample small bites as you walk.
Plan Ahead

Fit Tamsuiinto your Taipei trip

Pair it with more of Taipei — soak in the Beitou hot springs, ride the Maokong Gondola for tea on the hill, or dive into a night market after dark.

♨️

Beitou Hot Spring Guide

The sulphur hot-spring valley on the same MRT line — an easy soak to add to a Tamsui itinerary.

See the Beitou guide →
🚠

Maokong Gondola Guide

A 4-kilometre glass-cabin cable car up the mountain to oolong teahouses and Taipei views.

See the Maokong guide →
🌃

Taipei Night Markets Guide

Taipei's best night markets — Shilin, Raohe, Ningxia — what to eat and how to start.

See the night markets guide →
🟠 Klook

⛵ Tamsui Sunset River Cruise on Klook
1.5h Yacht with Welcome Drink

Watch the famous Tamsui sunset from the water on a 1.5-hour yacht cruise along the river mouth, welcome drink included. One of Taipei's most romantic half-day outings — available on Klook with easy online booking and instant confirmation.

🛒 Check Price on Klook →
Wherebest is a Klook affiliate partner — we may earn commission at no extra cost to you
Frequently Asked

What to Know BeforeVisiting Tamsui, Taipei

How do I get to Tamsui, and how long does it take?
Take the MRT Red Line (Tamsui–Xinyi Line) all the way to its final stop, Tamsui (淡水) station. Step off the train and you are right by the river and the Old Street. From Taipei Main Station it takes roughly 35–40 minutes. One thing to know: Red Line trains alternate — some run all the way to Tamsui, others terminate at Beitou — so check the destination sign on the front of the train reads "Tamsui".
How do I continue on to Fisherman's Wharf and Lover's Bridge?
Fisherman's Wharf sits out at the river mouth, beyond the old town. There are three ways to reach it: (1) a river ferry from Tamsui Wharf to Fisherman's Wharf, around NT$60 with an EasyCard — the most scenic option; (2) the Danhai LRT light rail coastal line, transferring at Hongshulin station one stop before Tamsui; or (3) bus R26 from outside Tamsui MRT station, the fastest at roughly 15–20 minutes.
Where do I watch the Tamsui sunset, and when is best?
The two favourite sunset spots are the riverside promenade in front of Tamsui Old Street, and Lover's Bridge at Fisherman's Wharf, where the sun drops right into the river mouth. Arrive 30–45 minutes before sunset to claim a spot. Autumn to winter (October–February) usually brings the clearest skies and the richest sunset colours — but it always depends on the weather on the day.
How much is Fort San Domingo, and what are the opening hours?
Fort San Domingo (紅毛城) costs around NT$80, and a single ticket covers three sites in the Tamsui Historical Museum group: Fort San Domingo, the Former British Consular Residence and Hobe Fort. It is open roughly 09:30–17:00 on weekdays and 09:30–18:00 on weekends, with ticket sales stopping 30 minutes before closing. It closes on the first Monday of each month, so check current opening days before you go.
What street food should I try in Tamsui?
Tamsui's signature snacks include a-gei (阿給), fried tofu stuffed with glass noodles in a savoury-sweet sauce; iron eggs (鐵蛋), eggs braised and re-braised in soy until dark and chewy; Tamsui fish-ball soup; the famous towering soft-serve ice cream cones; crispy fish crackers (魚酥) as a popular souvenir; and many traditional snacks along the Old Street. Graze a little from several stalls rather than ordering one big portion.
How much time should I allow for Tamsui?
Tamsui works well as a half-day to full-day trip. To stroll the Old Street, visit Fort San Domingo and stay for sunset at Fisherman's Wharf, allow roughly 4–6 hours, leaving central Taipei in the afternoon so the final part of your trip lines up with sunset. If you want an unhurried pace, set aside the whole day. See more of Taipei's sights on the Taipei attractions page.
Ready to Go

Plan your whole Taipei trip
and make Tamsui your most beautiful evening

Tamsui is the evening to "slow down" on a Taipei trip — open the full Taipei guide to plan every day, or find a well-placed hotel to base yourself.

📖 Taipei Travel Guide Taipei Attractions