
ValidaTrip / Things to do in Shanghai
Things to do in Shanghai in February 2027
By ValidaTrip Research · Updated May 20, 2026
Quick answer: Shanghai in February 2027 usually runs near 10C by day, 3C at night, with about 9 rainy days.
Dated picks to verify first include Shanghai Art Museum Winter Exhibition and Shanghai International Film Festival - Special Winter Screenings.
Check the event list and public holidays below before assigning fixed dates.
Events, festivals, and public holidays for Shanghai, China, in February 2027.
The point is making sure the places you already want to see are actually open on the days you'll be there.
Planning a Shanghai trip in February?
Paste the recommendations you've collected — from friends, a ChatGPT itinerary, or blog listicles. ValidaTrip checks every place against your February dates: opening hours, closures, what needs booking ahead, and which Shanghai events overlap your trip.
No account needed to try it.
Month context
Shanghai in February: weather, seasonal timing, and what changes.
Shanghai weather in February
High
10.3°C
Low
3.3°C
Rain
9d
60mm
10.9h daylight
What to prioritize in February
Prioritize The Bund, Nanjing Road Pedestrian Street, Yu Garden & Old City, Shanghai Tower & Lujiazui, Oriental Pearl Tower.
Dates to check
Events, festivals, and closures in Shanghai.
Events & festivals in Shanghai, February 2027
Dates and ticketing change constantly — treat this as a starting point and confirm anything you'd build a day around.
- Feb 5 – Feb 28
Shanghai Art Museum Winter Exhibition
A curated exhibition showcasing contemporary Chinese artists and winter-themed artworks. — Tickets can be purchased online or at the museum.
via GPT Festivals
- Feb 10 – Feb 20
Shanghai International Film Festival - Special Winter Screenings
A special winter edition of the Shanghai International Film Festival featuring screenings of selected films and retrospectives. — Tickets available online and at venue box offices; early booking recommended.
via GPT Festivals
- Feb 15 – Feb 21
Shanghai Lantern Festival
Celebration of the traditional Lantern Festival with lantern displays, folk performances, and cultural activities across the city. — Free entry to most public displays; some special exhibitions may require tickets.
via GPT Festivals
Public holidays & closures in February 2027
On these dates banks, government offices, and many attractions in China close or switch to holiday hours. Worth checking before you pin a must-see to one of them.
- Feb 6Chinese New Year (Spring Festival)
City context
What Shanghai is known for before you choose what to prioritize.
Known for
City context
Shanghai is a Huangpu River city split between older Puxi and Pudong, whose Lujiazui skyline rose after 1990 across from the Bund's concession-era banks. First-timers need five mental districts: Huangpu for the Bund, Nanjing Road, People's Square, and the Old City; Jing'an for high-end westward shopping; the French Concession for lanes and cafes; Pudong for towers; and Hongqiao for transport.
Food & drink
Local flavor
Shanghai food leans sweet, rich, and river-delta specific: xiaolongbao, shengjianbao, hongshao rou, scallion oil noodles, drunken chicken, crab roe noodles, and hairy crab in autumn are the key dishes. Yuyuan Bazaar, Huanghe Road near Nanjing Road, the French Concession, and old-school local restaurants around People's Square make the map; the city is pricier than most mainland Chinese cities but still cheaper than Hong Kong or Tokyo for neighborhood meals.
Things to do
Attractions and sights to consider in Shanghai.
Things to do in Shanghai
Map of top sights in Shanghai
- 1The Bund
- 2Nanjing Road Pedestrian Street
- 3Yu Garden & Old City
- 4Shanghai Tower & Lujiazui
- 5Oriental Pearl Tower
- 6Huangpu River ferry
- 1
The Bund
4.7★ · 7,247outdoorThe Bund runs along the west bank of the Huangpu River with colonial-era banking and trading buildings from Shanghai's concession years. It faces Pudong's skyscrapers and is the city's defining evening walk.
Wikipedia - 2
Nanjing Road Pedestrian Street
4.6★ · 2,066outdoorOpen dailyNanjing Road East runs from the Bund toward People's Square and is fully pedestrianized for the core commercial stretch. The broader Nanjing Road corridor is about 6km long and has been one of Shanghai's signature shopping streets since the 1930s.
- 3
Yu Garden & Old City
4.6★ · 887outdoorThe Old City is the nearly 1,000-year walled core, and Yu Garden is the classical garden set-piece beside bazaar lanes. Use Yuyuan Garden station rather than trying to approach through Bund traffic.
Show 7 more sights
- 4Shanghai Tower & Lujiazui
- 5Oriental Pearl Tower
- 6Huangpu River ferry
- 7French Concession lanes
- 8Jing'an Temple
- 9People's Square & Shanghai Museum
- 10Shanghai Urban Planning Exhibition Center
Areas and routes
Neighborhoods, day trips, and getting around Shanghai.
Shanghai neighborhoods
Each district has its own character — knowing which one you're in changes what's realistic to fit in a day.
Huangpu, Bund & People's Square
Huangpu is the ceremonial centre: the Bund, Nanjing Road East, People's Square, Shanghai Museum, Old City, and Yu Garden cluster around the river and metro Line 2.
Pudong & Lujiazui
Pudong is the post-1990 skyline, with Lujiazui towers, malls, river promenades, Century Avenue, and the Maglev-side airport route. It is impressive but less intimate than Puxi.
French Concession
The French Concession is Shanghai at walking speed: shikumen lanes, Xintiandi, Tianzifang, boutiques, cafes, Huaihai Road, and leafy residential streets.
Jing'an & Nanjing Road West
Jing'an is high-end Puxi, with Jing'an Temple, West Nanjing Road malls, hotels, offices, and easy Line 2 airport-side movement.
Xuhui & Xujiahui
Xuhui stretches the French Concession feeling southwest into Xujiahui shopping, churches, universities, and residential lanes. It is strong for cafes and longer stays.
Hongqiao
Hongqiao is the transport-and-convention side, with the airport, railway station, exhibition traffic, and suburban hotels. It is practical for trains and business, not the first sightseeing base.
Day trips from Shanghai
Doable as a long day or comfortable as an overnight — each one is a destination on its own.
100km / about 30m by high-speed train from Shanghai Hongqiao
Suzhou
Suzhou is the classical-garden and canal day trip, with scholar gardens, old lanes, and enough rail frequency for an easy full day. It is the first choice for a non-skyscraper contrast.
175km / about 45m by high-speed train from Shanghai Hongqiao
Hangzhou
Hangzhou centers on West Lake, silk shopping, tea hills, and Buddhist cave sites. Spring and fall are the strongest seasons, but weekends bring heavy domestic crowds.
50km / about 1h by Metro Line 17 from Hongqiao Railway Station
Zhujiajiao
Zhujiajiao is the easiest water-town half-day from Shanghai, with canals, stone bridges, and snack streets. It is touristy but much simpler than a private-car water-town itinerary.
Getting around
Shanghai Metro is the visitor backbone, especially Line 2 for Pudong Airport, Longyang Road, Lujiazui, East Nanjing Road, People's Square, Jing'an Temple, Hongqiao Airport, and Hongqiao Railway Station. The Maglev runs from Pudong Airport to Longyang Road, while the cheap Huangpu ferry beats the Bund Sightseeing Tunnel for crossing between the Bund and Pudong.
How to plan Shanghai in February
- 1
Anchor the month
Check the 3 dated Shanghai events for anything that overlaps your exact February dates before assigning fixed sightseeing days.
- 2
Protect closure days
Hold flexible plans around the 1 public holiday in China; museums, markets, and government-run sights can switch hours.
- 3
Group and validate
Group each Shanghai day by nearby neighborhoods, then validate the saved places against your trip dates before exporting the checked route to Google Maps.
What to pack for Shanghai in February
Pack from the monthly climate profile, not a generic Shanghai checklist.
- Layerable daytime clothes for average highs around 10C.
- A heavier evening layer because nights average 3C.
- A small umbrella or packable shell for scattered rain across about 9 days.
How many days do you need in Shanghai
4 days covers the main Shanghai highlights at a realistic pace. Add 3 extra days if you want the listed day trips.
Is Shanghai worth visiting in February
Yes. Shanghai in February: 10.3°C high, 3.3°C low, 60mm rain over 9 days, 10.9h daylight. Mild and dry — shoulder-season sweet spot.
Validate your list
Turn this into a Shanghai plan that actually works
All your recs in one place
Paste what friends, ChatGPT, and blogs gave you for Shanghai. ValidaTrip pulls out each place and sorts it — no spreadsheet by hand.
Open on your dates
Every place checked against the days you're actually in Shanghai, with timed tickets and reservation-only spots flagged while you can still get a slot.
Export to Google Maps
Send the cleaned, checked, and neighborhood-grouped plan to Google Maps so your Shanghai days are ready to navigate.
Questions
- What's on in Shanghai in February 2027?
- Around 3 notable events and festivals fall in February 2027, including Shanghai Art Museum Winter Exhibition, Shanghai International Film Festival - Special Winter Screenings, Shanghai Lantern Festival. Dates and times change — confirm each before you build your day around it.
- Are there public holidays in Shanghai during February 2027?
- Chinese New Year (Spring Festival) (Feb 6). Banks, government offices, and some attractions close or run holiday hours on these days.
- Will the places on my list be open when I'm in Shanghai in February?
- Not always. Opening days and hours vary by weekday, season, and holiday. Paste your Shanghai list into ValidaTrip and it checks every place against the exact dates you're there, flagging closures before the trip instead of at a locked door.
- How do I plan Shanghai days without crossing the city twice?
- ValidaTrip groups your places by neighborhood so each day stays in one or two areas instead of zig-zagging. It also flags what needs booking ahead, so timed tickets and reservations don't fall through.















