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Taipei is one of those cities that operates on its own clock. Breakfast starts at 6 AM with lines already forming. Lunch is whenever you finish the morning tea. Dinner begins at 5 but the real eating starts at 9, at the night markets. The city sleeps late and wakes early, and somehow it all works.

Here’s how to spend 48 hours without wasting a minute.

Day One: The Classic Loop

Morning: Yongkang Street Breakfast

Start at Yong He Soy Milk King (永和豆漿大王) or any of the breakfast shops along Yongkang Street. The order:

  • Shaobing youtiao (燒餅油條) — Flaky sesame flatbread wrapped around a fried cruller
  • Xian doujiang (鹹豆漿) — Savory soy milk, curdled with vinegar, topped with dried shrimp and scallions
  • Dan bing (蛋餅) — Egg crepe, the Taiwanese breakfast staple

This meal costs under $3 USD and it will ruin every other breakfast for the rest of your trip.

Mid-morning: Chiang Kai-shek Memorial

The memorial itself is polarizing, but the plaza is genuinely beautiful — especially in the morning when tai chi groups practice in front of the National Theater. The changing of the guard happens every hour on the hour.

Afternoon: Dadaocheng & Dihua Street

Skip the tourist areas and head to Dadaocheng, Taipei’s oldest commercial district. Dihua Street has traditional dried goods shops alongside converted warehouses that now house coffee roasters and design studios. It’s gentrification done thoughtfully — the old buildings are preserved, not demolished.

Stop at ASW Tea House for oolong tea with a rooftop view, or Fleisch for craft cocktails in a former fabric warehouse.

Evening: Shilin Night Market

The biggest and most overwhelming night market. Strategy:

  1. Enter from the main entrance — Orient yourself
  2. Go straight to the food basement (美食區) — Less crowded, more variety
  3. Must-eat: Large fried chicken (豪大大雞排), oyster omelette (蚵仔煎), pepper pork bun (胡椒餅), mango shaved ice (芒果冰)
  4. Skip: Stinky tofu (unless you already know you like it)
  5. Exit through the game section — Claw machines and ring toss, surprisingly fun at 11 PM

Budget: $10-15 USD for a very full stomach.

Day Two: Mountains & Culture

Morning: Elephant Mountain (象山)

A 20-minute hike that rewards you with the postcard view of Taipei 101 against the skyline. Go at sunrise if you can handle the early alarm. The trail starts right outside Xiangshan MRT station.

Bring water. The stairs are steeper than they look.

Late Morning: Songshan Cultural Park

A repurposed tobacco factory turned creative hub. The architecture is beautiful — Japanese colonial industrial style with modern additions. Usually has free art exhibitions and a good design bookshop.

Afternoon: Beitou Hot Springs

Take the MRT to Beitou (yes, there’s a hot spring town inside Taipei). Options:

  • Public outdoor foot bath — Free, at Beitou Hot Spring Park
  • Millennium Hot Spring — Public pool, $1.50 USD entry
  • Private room — Various hotels, $15-40 USD per hour

After soaking, walk to Beitou Library — a wooden, eco-friendly building that’s one of the most beautiful public libraries in Asia.

Evening: Raohe Night Market

Smaller and more manageable than Shilin. The signature item is the pepper pork bun (胡椒餅) at the entrance — the line is always 30+ people deep. It’s worth it. The bun is baked in a clay oven, charred on the outside, with peppery pork and juices that burst when you bite in.

Other Raohe highlights:

  • Medicinal herbal ribs soup (藥燉排骨) — Rich, herbal, warming
  • Flame-torched beef — Wagyu-style cubes, seared tableside
  • Bubble tea — Get it anywhere, but Tiger Sugar (老虎堂) does the best brown sugar boba

Getting Around

  • MRT covers 90% of what you need. Get an EasyCard (悠遊卡) at any station.
  • YouBike (public bikes) are great for flat areas. Same EasyCard works.
  • Taxis are cheap and honest — meters always run.
  • Walking — Taipei is surprisingly walkable, especially in the older districts.

The Vibe

What makes Taipei special isn’t any single attraction. It’s the texture — the way a 100-year-old temple sits next to a bubble tea shop, which sits next to a tech startup office. The way strangers help you read a menu. The way the mountains are always visible at the end of every street, reminding you that nature is 20 minutes away.

It’s a city that doesn’t perform for tourists. It just lives — generously, deliciously, and a little chaotically.

48 hours isn’t enough. But it’s enough to know you’ll come back.