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China for Travelers

Things to Do in Hangzhou 2026: 10 Picks for Foreigners

The ten things worth your time in Hangzhou — West Lake, Lingyin Temple, Xixi Wetland, the Qinghefang old street, the Grand Canal and the Longjing tea villages — with honest priority calls.

By China for Travelers Editorial · Published · Updated

This guide is written by an editorial team based in Chongqing — the editor has lived in mainland China since 2018 (8 years on the ground) but is not a Hangzhou resident and has not been on the ground in Hangzhou in 2026. The picks, ticket ranges and priority calls draw on aggregated 2024-2026 r/travelchina, r/chinalife and r/Hangzhou threads, Trip.com listings, and 2026-05-22 Amap (高德地图) routing data. This is Path-2 editorial-aggregated coverage — corrections from Hangzhou residents are welcomed (see the about page).

How to think about Hangzhou

Hangzhou — the capital of Zhejiang province, an hour south of Shanghai — is unusual among big Chinese cities in having a single, clear centre of gravity: West Lake. Almost everything worth your time radiates out from it. There is no Forbidden City or Terracotta Army here; instead there is a UNESCO-listed cultural landscape of water, causeways and pagodas that Chinese poets and painters have been celebrating for a thousand years, plus a ring of temples, gardens and tea hills around it.

That shapes how you visit. Hangzhou is a city to slow down in — to walk a causeway, take a boat, sit in a tea house in the hills — not to power through a checklist. Two to three days is the right length. The food deserves planning too: see the Hangzhou food and Longjing tea guide, and the Hangzhou city hub for the full 2 / 3 / 5-day itinerary planner. Many travellers arrive from Shanghai — the Shanghai-to-Hangzhou high-speed train takes only about 45-60 minutes.

1. West Lake (西湖) — the unmissable marquee

West Lake is the reason to come to Hangzhou. A UNESCO World Heritage cultural landscape, it is a freshwater lake ringed by hills and laced with two great causeways — the Su Causeway and the Bai Causeway — that let you walk straight across the water. Out on the lake sit small islands, the most famous being the “Three Pools Mirroring the Moon”, reached by boat. The shoreline is a string of celebrated viewpoints: the Broken Bridge, the Su Causeway in spring, the lotus beds in summer.

The lake is free and open around the clock — rare for a sight of this rank in China. You can easily fill a full day: walk a causeway, take the island boat (roughly ¥45-55), rent a bike, and time the south shore for sunset. It is best at dawn and dusk, before and after the day-trip crowds. The full detail — the ten classic scenes, the boats, where to walk — is in the West Lake guide. If you do only one thing in Hangzhou, do this.

2. Lingyin Temple (灵隐寺) and the Feilai Feng grottoes

In the wooded hills just west of West Lake, Lingyin Temple — the “Temple of the Soul's Retreat” — is one of China's oldest and largest Chan (Zen) Buddhist temples, founded in the 4th century and still an active monastery. Opposite it, the limestone cliff of Feilai Feng (“the Peak that Flew Here”) is carved with hundreds of stone Buddhist figures from the 10th to 14th centuries — among the finest grotto art in southern China.

Ticketing is two-part: roughly ¥45 for the Feilai Feng scenic area and a further ~¥30 for the temple itself. On weekends and holidays the temple caps daily entry, so reserve a day or two ahead in peak season. Allow a half-day. The full walkthrough is in the Lingyin Temple guide. This is the strongest non-lake sight in Hangzhou and worth the trip into the hills.

3. Xixi National Wetland Park (西溪国家湿地公园)

Xixi is the antithesis of the city — a large, calm national wetland park of slow waterways, reed beds, fish ponds and persimmon trees on Hangzhou's western edge, explored by electric boat. It is quiet, green and far less crowded than West Lake, and a half-day here is the right pace: drift the channels, walk the boardwalks, watch the birds.

The main entrance is at 518 Tianmushan Road; entry is a modest fee with the boat ride priced separately. It suits travellers who want nature and calm, families, and anyone who has had their fill of crowds. If your trip is short and lake-focused, it is the most skippable of the close-in sights — but on a third day it is a lovely contrast.

4. Qinghefang / Hefang Street old quarter (清河坊 / 河坊街)

Qinghefang, with its pedestrian spine Hefang Street, is Hangzhou's best-preserved old quarter — a run of restored Qing-era shophouses below Wushan hill, south-east of West Lake. It is touristy but genuinely atmospheric: traditional snack stalls, tea and silk shops, scissor and fan makers, and the historic Huqing Yu Tang traditional-Chinese-medicine hall, which doubles as a museum of Chinese medicine.

It is free to wander, central, and works well as an afternoon or evening between the lake sights — pair it with a Hangzhou-snack crawl. Allow an hour or two; it is a stroll, not a half-day.

5. The China National Tea Museum and the Longjing tea villages

Hangzhou's hills southwest of West Lake grow West Lake Longjing (Dragon Well) — one of China's most famous green teas. The China National Tea Museum (中国茶叶博物馆) is free, set among the tea terraces, and explains the whole culture; just beyond it, Longjing Village (龙井村) and Meijiawu (梅家坞) are working tea hamlets where you can walk the terraced slopes, watch leaves being pan-fired in season, and sit for a tasting.

This is one of the most distinctive things Hangzhou offers and a highlight for anyone interested in tea — a relaxed half-day in the hills. A word of caution from aggregated traveller reports: buy tea only after tasting, and be wary of aggressively-priced “new season” tea pushed to tourists. The villages reward an unhurried visit far more than a quick stop.

6. The Grand Canal (京杭大运河)

Hangzhou is the southern terminus of the Grand Canal — the world's longest ancient canal, running 1,700-odd kilometres north to Beijing, and itself a UNESCO World Heritage site. The atmospheric stretch is around the Gongchen Bridge (拱宸桥), a high-arched Ming-era stone bridge, and the restored Qiaoxi historic district and Xiaohe Street nearby — old warehouses turned into museums (knife-scissors, fans, arts and crafts), tea houses and lanes.

A canal water-bus runs along this section, which makes a pleasant, cheap way to see it from the water. It is free to walk, reachable by metro, and a good half-day for travellers who like industrial-era heritage and a quieter neighbourhood; on a tight schedule it ranks below the lake and the temple.

7. Leifeng Pagoda (雷峰塔)

On West Lake's south shore, Leifeng Pagoda is a modern reconstruction (2002) raised over the excavated base of a 10th-century pagoda that collapsed in 1924 — its fall is woven into the famous Legend of the White Snake. You ride escalators up the tiers, and the reason to come is the panorama: the best elevated view back over West Lake, the causeways and the city, especially at sunset.

Entry is about ¥40. Because it sits inside the West Lake scenic area, it is also covered within the West Lake guide — treat it as the scenic high point of a West Lake day rather than a separate outing, and time it for late afternoon.

8. Museums — the Zhejiang Provincial Museum and the Deshou Palace ruins

Hangzhou was the capital of the Southern Song dynasty (1127-1279), when it was called Lin'an and was, by some accounts, the largest city in the world. Two free museums tell that story. The Zhejiang Provincial Museum has a lakeside branch in the Gushan area of West Lake and a larger modern hall elsewhere in the city, covering the region's history and art. The Southern Song Deshou Palace (德寿宫), opened in 2022, is an immersive ruins museum built directly over the excavated foundations of a Southern Song imperial residence — one of the city's most engaging modern attractions.

Both are free (the Deshou Palace requires advance reservation), and they suit travellers who want the historical context behind Hangzhou's lake-and-garden surface. Skippable on a pure-scenery trip; rewarding if you like your sightseeing with history attached.

9. The Liangzhu Museum and Archaeological Park

Northwest of the city, the Liangzhu Archaeological Site preserves the remains of a 5,000-year-old Neolithic walled city — the centre of the Liangzhu Culture, and a UNESCO World Heritage site since 2019. The well-designed Liangzhu Museum displays the culture's extraordinary jade artefacts, while the archaeological park lets you walk the ancient earthworks and water systems.

It is a half-day round trip out of the centre and clearly a specialist pick — essential for anyone interested in early Chinese civilisation, comfortably skippable on a short first visit focused on West Lake. Treat it as a third-day or repeat-visit choice.

10. Day trips — Wuzhen (乌镇) and Qiandao Lake (千岛湖)

Hangzhou is a strong base for day trips. Wuzhen, about an hour away, is the photogenic canal water town of stone bridges, black-tiled houses and waterside lanes — its East and West Scenic Zones are ticketed, and the West Zone after dark, lit up, is the celebrated version. Qiandao Lake (Thousand Island Lake), about 1.5 hours southwest, is a vast man-made reservoir studded with more than a thousand green islands — boat tours, cycling and clean air.

Worth noting in reverse: Hangzhou is itself the classic day trip from Shanghai — high-speed trains from Shanghai Hongqiao take only about 45-60 minutes (see the Shanghai-to-Hangzhou train guide). For an organised Wuzhen or Qiandao Lake day trip, comparing packaged options is often easier than self-arranging the transfers.

Compare Hangzhou day tours and tickets on Trip.com →

Putting it together — a 2-3 day plan

A clean way to sequence Hangzhou:

  • Day 1 — West Lake. Walk the Bai or Su Causeway in the morning, take the island boat, and time Leifeng Pagoda for sunset over the lake. End at the Qinghefang old street for dinner and snacks.
  • Day 2 — the hills. Lingyin Temple and the Feilai Feng grottoes in the morning; the China National Tea Museum and a Longjing tea village in the afternoon.
  • Day 3 (optional). Xixi Wetland for a calm half-day, or the Grand Canal district, or the Liangzhu Museum — or take a Wuzhen water-town day trip.

The Hangzhou city hub has the full 2 / 3 / 5-day itinerary planner and the practical essentials. Stay central — see where to stay in Hangzhou — so the lake is on your doorstep at dawn and dusk.

Browse Hangzhou hotels near West Lake on Trip.com →

Frequently asked questions

What are the top things to do in Hangzhou?
West Lake (the UNESCO-listed lake of causeways, islands and pagodas), Lingyin Temple and the Feilai Feng grottoes, Xixi National Wetland Park, the Qinghefang / Hefang Street old quarter, the China National Tea Museum and the Longjing tea villages, the southern end of the Grand Canal, Leifeng Pagoda for the sunset lake view, the Zhejiang Provincial Museum and the Deshou Palace ruins site, the Liangzhu Museum and Archaeological Park, and day trips to the Wuzhen water town or Qiandao (Thousand Island) Lake. West Lake is the unmissable one — everything else is built around it.
How many days do you need in Hangzhou?
Two days is the comfortable minimum and three is better. One full day goes to West Lake itself — the causeways, a boat to the islands, and Leifeng Pagoda at sunset. A second day reaches Lingyin Temple, the Longjing tea villages and the Qinghefang old street. A third day adds Xixi Wetland, the Grand Canal or the Liangzhu Museum, or a Wuzhen day trip. Hangzhou rewards a slow garden-and-tea pace, so do not over-pack the schedule.
Is West Lake free to visit?
Yes. West Lake itself — the lakeshore, the Su and Bai causeways, the parks and most of the famous viewpoints — is free and open around the clock, which is unusual for a sight of this rank in China. A few enclosed attractions inside the scenic area charge small fees: Leifeng Pagoda is about ¥40, the boat to the central islands is roughly ¥45-55, and a couple of gardens have token tickets. You can have a full, satisfying West Lake day without paying for any of them.
Is Hangzhou worth visiting, or just a day trip from Shanghai?
It is worth a stay in its own right. Hangzhou is the classic Shanghai day trip — high-speed trains from Shanghai Hongqiao take about 45-60 minutes — and a day does cover a fast loop of West Lake. But the city rewards two or three nights: Lingyin Temple, the tea villages, Xixi Wetland and the Grand Canal are all genuinely worth half-days, and West Lake at dawn and dusk, before and after the day-trip crowds, is the best version of it. If your schedule allows, stay over.
What is the best time of year to visit Hangzhou?
Spring (late March to May) and autumn (late September to November) are the best windows — mild, with the West Lake gardens at their peak and the osmanthus in bloom in autumn. Summer is hot, humid and crowded, though the lotus on West Lake is a draw in June and July. Winter is cool and quiet; a light snow on the Broken Bridge is one of the lake's most celebrated scenes. Avoid the Oct 1-7 National Day Golden Week and the May 1-5 holiday if you can — West Lake is genuinely overwhelmed then.
Do I need to book Lingyin Temple in advance?
It is strongly advised. Lingyin Temple uses a two-part ticket — roughly ¥45 for the surrounding Feilai Feng scenic area and a further ~¥30 for the temple itself — and on weekends and holidays the temple caps daily entry, so same-day tickets can sell out. Reserve through the official WeChat mini-program or a booking platform a day or two ahead in peak season. Off-peak weekdays you can usually buy on arrival.
How do I get around Hangzhou between the sights?
The Hangzhou Metro reaches West Lake (Longxiangqiao and Lingyin Road area stations), the Grand Canal district, Xixi Wetland's eastern edge and both major railway stations. For West Lake itself you walk and use the lakeside tourist buses or bike share; Lingyin Temple and the tea villages are a bus or taxi ride into the western hills. DiDi works city-wide. Allow more time than the map suggests — West Lake is large and the hill sights are spread out.
Is Liangzhu worth the trip out of the city?
For travellers interested in archaeology and early Chinese history, yes — the Liangzhu Museum and Archaeological Park interpret a 5,000-year-old Neolithic walled city and its remarkable jade craft, and the site carries UNESCO World Heritage status. For a first, short Hangzhou visit focused on West Lake and the gardens, it is skippable — it sits northwest of the city and takes a half-day round trip. Treat it as a third-day or repeat-visit choice.

Related Hangzhou guides

Sources: editorial team based in Chongqing (8-year mainland-China resident, NOT a Hangzhou resident), editor's about page, Amap (高德地图) routing data queried 2026-05-22, and aggregated r/travelchina, r/chinalife and r/Hangzhou threads 2024-2026. Ticket prices, reservation rules and opening details change — confirm before your visit.