Taipei 101 piercing the clouds, luxury malls connected by skywalks, rooftop bars with the city spread below, and the most spectacular New Year's Eve fireworks in Asia — Xinyi is where Taipei puts its best face forward.
Stand in the centre of Xinyi on a clear night and look up: Taipei 101 blazes gold above the skyline, 508 metres of steel and glass that once held the title of world's tallest building and still commands the city like nothing else. That image — tower, light, city — is the best single frame for what Xinyi District is about. It was conceived in the 1980s as Taipei's answer to Manhattan, planned from scratch with wide boulevards, underground MRT connections and a deliberate concentration of commerce and culture. It exceeded the brief.
What makes Xinyi more than a collection of tall buildings is its completeness as an urban experience. You can spend a morning hiking Elephant Mountain for the perfect skyline photograph, an afternoon drifting through four interconnected world-class malls without ever stepping outside, and an evening at a rooftop bar watching the city lights multiply below you — all without once needing a taxi. Few districts anywhere manage that range.
Direct MRT access: Taipei 101/World Trade Center station Exit 4 places you in front of the tower immediately
Fully walkable via skywalk: all major malls, MRT stations and landmarks connect above street level
All budgets welcome: luxury dining alongside mall food halls, free public plazas and a free memorial hall
Premium hotel base: the best Taipei 101-view hotels in the city are concentrated here
The essentials — who it's for, how to get there and when to go.
Xinyi is Taipei's most polished and cosmopolitan district. It suits couples wanting a fine-dining evening with Taipei 101 as the backdrop, shoppers after international luxury and lifestyle brands, business travellers based in five-star hotels, and any visitor who wants to experience Taipei at its most visually spectacular. The district is immaculate, safe, walkable and genuinely welcoming — with public plazas, free gardens and a free memorial hall balancing the premium retail.
Take the MRT Blue Line to Taipei 101/World Trade Center station (台北101/世貿站) and use Exit 4 — you emerge facing Taipei 101 directly. Alternatively, alight at City Hall station (市政府站) and walk 10 minutes along Xinyi Road through the plazas. Both stations are well-served and easy to navigate. EasyCards bought at the airport work immediately on all lines.
Xinyi rewards visitors from mid-afternoon through late evening. Arrive around 15:00–16:00 for unhurried mall browsing; by 18:00 Taipei 101's lights are on, the rooftop bars fill up and the plazas take on a genuinely cinematic quality. Weekday evenings are calmer than weekends. New Year's Eve draws enormous crowds for the Taipei 101 fireworks — plan months ahead and arrive very early for a good vantage point.
Xinyi is Taipei's downtown — Klook has Taipei 101 (approximately NT$680), Skyline 460 outdoor walkway (approximately NT$680+), and i-Ride 5D theater (approximately NT$680+) tickets, often starting at ~5-15% cheaper than counter + QR entry.
From a world-record tower to a hillside with the best view in the city.
Taipei 101 stands 508 metres tall and held the title of world's tallest building from 2004 until 2010. That record is long gone, but the tower's hold on the Taipei skyline — and on the city's sense of identity — is undiminished. The indoor observatory on Floor 89 is enclosed and climate-controlled; the outdoor Skyline 460 on Floor 91 puts you in open air with the city fanning out in every direction. Inside the atrium, the 660-tonne tuned mass damper — the world's largest publicly visible wind damper — is worth finding. Buy tickets online via Klook to save NT$100 and skip the counter queue.
Xinyi contains the densest concentration of world-class shopping in Taiwan, all connected by skywalks and underground passages. Shin Kong Mitsukoshi (新光三越) occupies four buildings (A4/A8/A9/A11) and covers everything from Japanese department-store staples to international luxury brands. Breeze Xinyi (微風廣場) excels at lifestyle and its basement food hall. ATT4FUN skews younger and later, with restaurants and clubs that operate past 2 a.m. Eslite Spectrum (誠品生活) is the destination for books, Taiwanese design objects and late-night browsing — it closes at midnight.
Elephant Mountain (象山) is a 20–30 minute climb from street level that ends at six enormous granite boulders with an unobstructed view of Taipei 101 framing the entire city skyline behind it. This is the photograph that defines Taipei for the rest of the world — and reaching it costs nothing. The trailhead is 15 minutes on foot from MRT Xiangshan station. Golden hour — roughly 30–40 minutes before sunset — is when the light turns the tower gold and the city below begins to illuminate. Arrive at least an hour before sunset on weekends to secure a good position at the boulders.
One of Xinyi's most underrated features is its skywalk network, which connects MRT Taipei 101 station, both Mitsukoshi complexes, Breeze, ATT4FUN and several office towers without ever requiring you to descend to street level. On rainy or very hot days this is genuinely transformative. The ground-level plazas between the malls host free weekend events — farmers' markets, pop-up food trucks, live music and art installations. On New Year's Eve these same plazas become some of the most sought-after positions for watching the Taipei 101 fireworks display.
Xinyi is the undisputed centre of Taipei's premium nightlife. Alchemy at the Mandarin Oriental is the benchmark rooftop bar — a direct sightline to Taipei 101, well-made cocktails and a crowd that dresses for the occasion. Bar 101 inside the tower itself occupies Floor 35 with panoramic views. ATT4FUN's upper floors host clubs that draw international DJs and local regulars past 3 a.m. For something more low-key, the ground-floor bars along the plazas spill outside and feel like open-air salons on warm evenings. Book rooftop seats in advance on Friday and Saturday nights — the best spots fill days ahead.
The Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall (國父紀念館) anchors the western edge of Xinyi — a vast classical Chinese structure set within wide public gardens that Taipei residents use every morning for tai chi, jogging and dog-walking. Inside, free permanent exhibitions cover the life of Sun Yat-sen and the history of modern Taiwan. The highlight for most visitors is the hourly changing-of-the-guard ceremony performed by white-uniformed soldiers in the main hall — precise, unhurried and genuinely impressive. Everything here is free of charge, making it the ideal counterbalance to the district's spending opportunities.
Songshan Cultural and Creative Park (松山文創園區) occupies a beautifully preserved Japanese-era tobacco factory a short walk from Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall. The red-brick buildings, pond and lawns create one of Taipei's most photogenic public spaces — and the programme of resident designers, pop-up markets, design fairs and rotating exhibitions gives it genuine substance. The summer Taiwan Design Expo is held here and draws international visitors specifically. Surrounding independent shops sell locally designed homeware, ceramics, clothing and stationery that make far better souvenirs than anything in the malls.
Between the malls and office towers, Xinyi has woven in public art and open space with more care than most commercial districts anywhere. Permanent and temporary art installations appear in the plazas around ATT4FUN and Breeze — some commissioned from Taiwanese artists, others internationally sourced. On weekends the same spaces host farmers' markets, food-truck gatherings, pop-up fashion and live acoustic music. The area around ATT4FUN and along Songshou Road has enough outdoor seating and café overspill to simply sit, order something and watch the city go about its evening — which, with Taipei 101 visible from most seats, is not a bad way to spend an hour.
From NT$55 bowls eaten standing up to sit-down meals — the district has it all.
The basement floors of Xinyi's malls are some of the best-stocked food destinations in Taipei. Mitsukoshi A11 B2 has a Japanese supermarket, bakeries and sit-down restaurants covering sushi, ramen and tempura. Breeze B2 runs the gamut from Taiwanese comfort food to international café chains. Eslite B2 has café-bistro options in a bookshop setting. All basement levels connect via underground passages, so you can browse several without surfacing — useful in Taipei's rain and heat alike.
Xinyi has more Michelin-rated and fine-dining restaurants than any other Taipei district. RAW, the restaurant of chef André Chiang, holds one Michelin star and showcases Taiwanese produce through a modern European lens — book weeks ahead. Impromptu by Paul Lee delivers award-winning contemporary cuisine in a more intimate setting. Shin Yeh (欣葉) makes classic Taiwanese home cooking accessible in a refined environment. For the full picture of Taipei's serious dining scene, see the Taipei fine dining guide.
Xinyi has a quieter, more considered café scene than Ximending or Da'an — many of the best places occupy upper floors of office buildings or are tucked into side streets, making them a genuine find. Specialty coffee (NT$150–250 a cup) is the norm rather than the exception. Some cafés have views of Taipei 101 from their windows; others earn their following purely on the quality of the pour. For a curated list across Taipei including the Xinyi area, see the Taipei café guide.
ATT4FUN is the building in Xinyi built explicitly for dining and nightlife. Floors B1 through 5 carry restaurants covering Taiwanese, Japanese, Korean, Western and fusion menus — most open later than standard mall restaurants and several stay open past midnight. The upper floors transition into clubs and bars. Prices sit in the mid-to-upper range but the setting is good and the convenience unbeatable for anyone who wants dinner and a night out in the same building. Located on Songshou Road, a short walk from MRT City Hall.
The streets between Songshan Cultural Park and Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall contain a different Xinyi from the glossy malls — neighbourhood noodle shops, fresh tofu stalls, rice-box lunch counters and Japanese curry restaurants that office workers in the district eat at daily. Prices start at NT$80–150 per meal. Finding them requires a short walk off the main thoroughfares but the contrast with the mall experience is part of the point. For the full picture of what Taipei eats, see 25 Taipei must-eat dishes.
Xinyi is Taipei's premium accommodation district. The best Taipei 101-view hotels in the city are concentrated here.
Staying in Xinyi means waking up with Taipei 101 outside your window — a genuinely different experience from any other part of the city. The district is served by two MRT stations, has a complete skywalk network and is within 20 minutes of every major Taipei attraction. Hotels here skew premium to luxury, making it the natural base for couples, honeymooners and business travellers with higher budgets. See the full roundup at top 10 Taipei 101-view hotels.
10 Best Taipei 101 View Hotels →Xinyi accommodation runs from mid-range to ultra-luxury: 4-star hotels: NT$3,500–6,000 per night · 5-star (Grand Hyatt, W, Mandarin Oriental): NT$8,000–20,000+. Rates spike significantly over New Year's Eve and major holiday periods — book at least 1–2 months ahead for those dates. Weekday nights are typically 15–25% cheaper than weekends.
Search Hotels for Your Dates →Xinyi is an excellent anchor for a Taipei trip — it connects quickly to every other neighbourhood. From the MRT you can reach Ximending (15 minutes), Da'an (two stops), the National Palace Museum (30 minutes) and the airport (45 minutes). See all the city's highlights at Taipei Attractions or follow a ready-made itinerary that includes Xinyi alongside the rest of the city.
3-Day Taipei Itinerary →Xinyi is safe, walkable and well-connected — but a few details will make your visit smoother.
Malls generally open at 11:00 and close at 22:00. ATT4FUN select venues run until 02:00–03:00. The district looks its best after 18:00 when Taipei 101's lights activate and the plaza lighting comes on — plan to be here in the evening at least once. Weekends are busier than weekdays but also more animated with events. New Year's Eve brings enormous crowds for the fireworks — arrive by 20:00 at the latest for a reasonable sightline and book everything months in advance.
Full Taipei Shopping Guide →Xinyi is among Taipei's safest districts — CCTV is dense and police presence consistent. The malls and hotels accept all major credit cards; carry NT$500–1,000 cash for local restaurants and any street vendors. EasyCard covers MRT travel and many convenience-store purchases. The main practical note is New Year's Eve crowd management — keep bags secure and be aware of your surroundings in very dense gatherings.
All Taipei Attractions →Xinyi has two MRT Blue Line stations — Taipei 101/World Trade Center and City Hall — connected by a pleasant 10-minute walk along Xinyi Road. From City Hall you can reach Ximending in 15 minutes, Da'an in two stops and Taipei Main Station in four. Within the district, the skywalk network means you rarely need to touch the street at all. For the complete city picture see the full Taipei guide.
Full Taipei City Guide →Book a hotel with a direct Taipei 101 view or follow a ready-made itinerary that weaves Xinyi together with the rest of the city — from Elephant Mountain at dusk to a night market after dark.