
ValidaTrip / Things to do in Taipei
Things to do in Taipei in January 2027
By ValidaTrip Research · Updated May 20, 2026
Quick answer: Taipei in January 2027 usually runs near 19C by day, 14C at night, with about 13 rainy days.
Good starting points are Bao'an Temple, National Palace Museum, and Longshan Temple.
Check the dated events and venue hours below before assigning fixed dates.
Events, festivals, and public holidays for Taipei, Taiwan, in January 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 Taipei trip in January?
Paste the recommendations you've collected — from friends, a ChatGPT itinerary, or blog listicles. ValidaTrip checks every place against your January dates: opening hours, closures, what needs booking ahead, and which Taipei events overlap your trip.
No account needed to try it.
Month context
Taipei in January: weather, seasonal timing, and what changes.
Taipei weather in January
High
19.4°C
Low
13.9°C
Rain
13d
95mm
10.6h daylight
What to prioritize in January
Prioritize Bao'an Temple, National Palace Museum, Longshan Temple, Beitou Hot Springs, Taipei 101.
Dates to check
Events, festivals, and closures in Taipei.
Public holidays & closures in January 2027
No national public holidays fall in Taiwan during January 2027. Individual venues still keep their own closed days — ValidaTrip checks each place on your list against the exact dates you're there.
City context
What Taipei is known for before you choose what to prioritize.
Known for
City context
Taipei sits in a mountain-ringed basin where the Tamsui and Keelung rivers, MRT lines, and surrounding hot-spring hills shape daily travel. Xinyi, Wanhua, Daan, Shilin, Beitou, and Wenshan each give a different version of the city: tower skyline, old temples, student food streets, museums, baths, and tea mountains.
Food & drink
Local flavor
Taipei is built for grazing: beef noodle soup, oyster omelet, oyster vermicelli, fried chicken fillet, stinky tofu, xiaolongbao, and aiyu jelly all belong on a first trip. Shilin, Ningxia, and Raohe night markets cover snacks, Yongkang Street is a beef-noodle and shaved-ice anchor, Din Tai Fung began on Xinyi Road, and prices stay lower than Tokyo, Seoul, or Hong Kong unless you choose hotel dining or Michelin tasting rooms.
Things to do
Attractions and sights to consider in Taipei.
Things to do in Taipei
Map of top sights in Taipei
- 1Bao'an Temple
- 2National Palace Museum
- 3Longshan Temple
- 4Beitou Hot Springs
- 5Taipei 101
- 6Elephant Mountain (Xiangshan)
- 1
Bao'an Temple
4.7★ · 4,560indoorOpen dailyDalongdong Bao'an Temple sits north of the old core and is often paired with the Confucius Temple. Its restored woodwork and festival calendar make it less rushed than Longshan.
- 2
National Palace Museum
4.6★ · 60,955indoorClosed MonThe Shilin museum holds imperial Chinese collections spanning roughly 5,000 years, with only a small share displayed at one time. It is the city's highest-value indoor stop on rainy days.
Wikipedia - 3
Longshan Temple
4.5★ · 48,972indoorOpen dailyWanhua's Longshan Temple is the best first stop for old Taipei temple life, incense, carved roof detail, and the surrounding herb and night-market lanes. Combine it with Ximending on the same MRT line.
Show 7 more sights
- 4Beitou Hot Springs
- 5Taipei 101
- 6Elephant Mountain (Xiangshan)
- 7Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall
- 8National Revolutionary Martyrs' Shrine
- 9Maokong Gondola & Taipei Zoo
- 10Shilin, Ningxia & Raohe night markets
Areas and routes
Neighborhoods, day trips, and getting around Taipei.
Taipei neighborhoods
Each district has its own character — knowing which one you're in changes what's realistic to fit in a day.
Xinyi
Xinyi is the skyline district: Taipei 101, department stores, city hall, clubs, and Elephant Mountain access. It is clean, vertical, and pricier than the older west side.
Wanhua & Ximending
Wanhua is Taipei's old core around Longshan Temple, while Ximending adds youth fashion, cinemas, street snacks, and pedestrian neon. The contrast is the point: temple incense and pop retail sit minutes apart.
Zhongzheng
Zhongzheng is the political and academic centre, with Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall, government buildings, Taipei Main Station, and access to Gongguan and National Taiwan University areas.
Daan, Yongkang & Shida
Daan is the food-and-cafe base for many visitors, with Yongkang Street, Shida student lanes, Daan Forest Park, and small tea houses. It is central without Xinyi's mall feel.
Shilin & Tianmu
Shilin puts the National Palace Museum, Shilin Night Market, and riverside access on the northern map. Tianmu adds international schools, quieter residential streets, and easy taxi hops toward Yangmingshan.
Beitou & Wenshan
Beitou is Taipei's hot-spring edge, while Wenshan is the tea-and-zoo side with Maokong Gondola. Both are MRT-reachable half-day districts rather than quick downtown detours.
Day trips from Taipei
Doable as a long day or comfortable as an overnight — each one is a destination on its own.
22km / about 40m by MRT Red Line from Taipei Main Station
Tamsui
Tamsui gives Taipei a river-mouth promenade, Fort San Domingo, sunset snacks, and ferry options. It is the easiest half-day that still feels outside the city.
35km / about 1h by train to Ruifang, then bus or taxi
Jiufen
Jiufen climbs a hillside of teahouses, stair lanes, and old gold-mining views toward the northeast coast. Go weekday or early because the main steps choke with day-tour traffic.
40km / about 75-90m by train via Ruifang to the Pingxi Line
Pingxi
Pingxi and Shifen are the sky-lantern and waterfall day trip on the old branch railway. Around the Lantern Festival, crowd control changes the whole transport plan.
Getting around
Taipei MRT trains run roughly 06:00-midnight, with EasyCard fares usually NT20-65 and a 20% discount on many rides; the same card works on buses, YouBike, and convenience-store payments. Taoyuan Airport MRT Express reaches Taipei Main Station in about 38 minutes for around NT150-160, while Maokong Gondola and river/MRT combinations handle the mountain and Tamsui edges.
How to plan Taipei in January
- 1
Anchor the month
Use the Taipei weather, seasonal timing, and attraction list as the spine because the dated January event list is still sparse.
- 2
Protect closure days
Confirm weekly closed days for museums, markets, and major sights even though Taiwan has no national public holidays in January.
- 3
Group and validate
Group each Taipei day by nearby neighborhoods, then validate the saved places against your trip dates before exporting the checked route to Google Maps.
Best rainy-day things to do in Taipei in January
January averages 13 rainy days in Taipei, so keep these indoor stops as realistic backups.
Bao'an Temple
Dalongdong Bao'an Temple sits north of the old core and is often paired with the Confucius Temple. Its restored woodwork and festival calendar make it less rushed than Longshan.
National Palace Museum
The Shilin museum holds imperial Chinese collections spanning roughly 5,000 years, with only a small share displayed at one time. It is the city's highest-value indoor stop on rainy days.
Longshan Temple
Wanhua's Longshan Temple is the best first stop for old Taipei temple life, incense, carved roof detail, and the surrounding herb and night-market lanes. Combine it with Ximending on the same MRT line.
Beitou Hot Springs
Beitou turns the northern MRT line into a hot-spring district with public baths, hotels, the Hot Spring Museum, and steaming Thermal Valley. Winter and rainy days make it feel especially useful.
What to pack for Taipei in January
Pack from the monthly climate profile, not a generic Taipei checklist.
- Layerable daytime clothes for average highs around 19C.
- A light evening layer because nights average 14C.
- Compact rain gear and shoes that handle wet pavement across about 13 rainy days.
How many days do you need in Taipei
4 days covers the main Taipei highlights at a realistic pace. Add 3 extra days if you want the listed day trips.
Is Taipei worth visiting in January
Yes. Taipei in January: 19.4°C high, 13.9°C low, 95mm rain over 13 days, 10.6h daylight. Mild but rainy — flexible plans pay off.
Validate your list
Turn this into a Taipei plan that actually works
All your recs in one place
Paste what friends, ChatGPT, and blogs gave you for Taipei. 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 Taipei, 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 Taipei days are ready to navigate.
Questions
- What's on in Taipei in January 2027?
- We're still compiling the January 2027 event list for Taipei. Public holidays and opening-hour checks still apply to whatever you're planning.
- Are there public holidays in Taipei during January 2027?
- No national public holidays fall in Taipei during January 2027, but individual venues still have their own closed days.
- Will the places on my list be open when I'm in Taipei in January?
- Not always. Opening days and hours vary by weekday, season, and holiday. Paste your Taipei 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 Taipei 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.















