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Beijing 7-Day — The Capital in Full, with a Day Trip

Every major sight at a relaxed pace, plus a quieter Great Wall hike, the imperial Ming Tombs, and a high-speed-rail option to Tianjin or beyond

Seven days is enough to see Beijing thoroughly and add the things shorter trips skip: a second, quieter Great Wall experience, the Ming Tombs and the Sacred Way, and a high-speed-rail day trip (Tianjin is 30 minutes away). Days 1-5 build on the 5-day plan; Day 6 pairs the Ming Tombs with a wilder Wall stretch or a relaxed hutong-and-tea day; Day 7 is a high-speed-rail day trip or final sights and departure. As always: VPN and Alipay/WeChat set up before arrival, passport carried at all times.

A full week is enough to actually understand Beijing. Three days for the major districts, three days for nearby regions, and one day for the offbeat neighborhoods most tourists miss. The back half of the trip is more about texture than checking landmarks — your photos get more diverse and you walk away with a three-dimensional sense of the city.

7-Day Total Budget at a Glance

Budget

$428

Per person, flights excl.

Recommended

Mid-Range

$965

Per person, flights excl.

Luxury

$2,370

Per person, flights excl.

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Day-by-Day Detailed Schedule

DAY 1

Tiananmen Square + Forbidden City + Jingshan + Peking duck

Tiananmen Square - Forbidden City (Meridian Gate to north) - Jingshan Park panorama - Wangfujing - Peking duck

Activities

  1. 08:00 Tiananmen Square 1h

    Start at the world's largest public square — the Monument to the People's Heroes, the Great Hall of the People, and the gate of the Forbidden City to the north. Free, but expect airport-style security and a passport check.

    Cost: Free TIP: Bring your passport — it's required at the security check to enter the square. Go early to beat crowds and haze. Don't photograph police or military, and avoid the 'tea ceremony / art student' touts who approach foreigners here. The flag-raising ceremony at sunrise draws big crowds if you want to see it.
  2. 09:30 Forbidden City (Palace Museum) 3h

    The vast Ming-and-Qing imperial palace, UNESCO-listed, entered from the south Meridian Gate and walked north through the great halls and inner courts to the exit. Basic ticket about ¥60 ($8.50).

    Cost: ¥60 ($8.50); Treasure & Clock galleries extra TIP: Reserve online about 7 days ahead using your passport — there's a daily cap and it sells out, especially in peak season. Tickets release at 20:00 Beijing time. Closed Mondays except public holidays. Enter at the Meridian Gate (south), walk one direction north, and exit at the north gate — you can't backtrack. Allow extra time for the Treasure and Clock galleries.
  3. 13:00 Lunch near the Forbidden City + Jingshan Park 2h

    Lunch near the north exit, then climb Jingshan Park (¥2) — the hill directly behind the Forbidden City — for the classic panorama looking down over the golden palace roofs. The best free view in central Beijing.

    Cost: Jingshan Park ¥2; lunch ¥40-80 TIP: Jingshan is the photo you came for — the whole Forbidden City laid out below, best on a clear day. Siji Minfu's Nanchizi branch (Peking duck) is nearby if you want to eat duck at lunch instead of dinner; expect a queue. Pay via Alipay/WeChat.
  4. 15:30 Wangfujing or Beihai Park 2h

    Wangfujing is the central pedestrian shopping street; nearby Beihai Park (¥10) is a serene former imperial garden around a lake with a white dagoba. Pick shopping or a stroll depending on energy and weather.

    Cost: Beihai Park ¥10; shopping extra TIP: Skip the touristy, overpriced Wangfujing Snack Street — it's a trap. Beihai Park is the calmer, prettier choice and pairs well with the imperial theme. On a smoggy or cold day, duck into a museum or café instead.
  5. 18:30 Dinner — Peking duck 2h

    Beijing's signature meal. Choose Siji Minfu (locals' value pick, ¥150-300), Quanjude (the 1864 historic name, ¥300-500), or Da Dong (modern and refined, ¥350-600). Duck is sliced tableside and wrapped in pancakes.

    Cost: ¥150-600 for two, depending on venue TIP: Reserve ahead at Siji Minfu and Da Dong, or expect a wait. The duck comes with pancakes, scallion, cucumber, and sweet bean sauce — wrap it yourself. Order duck soup made from the carcass to finish. Tipping isn't customary; pay via Alipay/WeChat.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast or a jianbing cart

Dongcheng · ¥10-40

A jianbing (savory crêpe) from a hutong cart is the classic Beijing breakfast.

Lunch

Near the Forbidden City north exit

Jingshan / Dongcheng · ¥40-80

A casual noodle or dumpling lunch — or Peking duck at Siji Minfu.

Dinner

Peking duck (Siji Minfu / Quanjude / Da Dong)

Dongcheng / Chaoyang · ¥150-600 for two

Beijing's signature dish — choose value, heritage, or modern.

Transit:

Tiananmen and the Forbidden City are walkable as one route (south to north). Use the metro (¥3-9, bilingual) and Didi for longer hops. Allow time for security checks at metro stations and sights.

DAY 1 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $55 Mid $130 Luxury $340
DAY 2

The Great Wall at Mutianyu — a full day

Mutianyu Great Wall - cable car up - walk the towers - toboggan or cable car down - return to Beijing

Activities

  1. 07:30 Travel to Mutianyu 1h30

    Set out early for the Mutianyu section, about 1.5 hours north. Options: bus 916 (express) from Dongzhimen to Huairou then a local bus/taxi, a private driver (~$80-120 round trip split among a group), or a small-group tour ($40-90 per person).

    Cost: Bus ¥15-40; private driver/tour $40-120 TIP: Mutianyu is the best balance for first-timers — restored, scenic, forested, and less crowded than Badaling. Public transport is cheap but slow with transfers; a driver or tour saves hassle. Start early to beat coach groups and afternoon haze. Pre-book tickets online in peak season as time slots sell out.
  2. 10:00 Cable car up + walk the Wall 3h

    At Mutianyu, take the shuttle from the ticket office to the Wall, then the cable car up (entrance ~¥40, cable car ~¥120 round trip). Walk the restored ramparts between the watchtowers along the forested ridgeline.

    Cost: Entrance ~¥40 + cable car ~¥120 TIP: The walk between towers involves steep, uneven steps — wear proper shoes and pace yourself. Towers 6-10 are a good, scenic stretch. Bring water and sun protection (little shade up top). Autumn (Sep-Oct) brings the clearest air and best foliage; summer mornings beat the heat.
  3. 13:30 Toboggan down + lunch 1h30

    Ride the toboggan slide down from the Wall (a Mutianyu signature, separate ticket) or take the cable car, then a late lunch at a restaurant near the base — local Huairou dishes or simple noodles.

    Cost: Toboggan ~¥100; lunch ¥40-80 TIP: The toboggan is a fun, gentle slide down through the trees — popular with families and a Mutianyu highlight. Lunch options at the base are touristy; a simple noodle or dumpling meal is fine. Some tours include lunch.
  4. 15:30 Return to Beijing + rest 2h

    Head back to the city (about 1.5 hours). Rest at the hotel after a demanding day on your feet before an easy evening.

    Cost: Bus ¥15-40; driver/tour included TIP: Traffic back into Beijing can be heavy in late afternoon — a driver or tour smooths this. If you took public transport, allow buffer time. Recharge before dinner; the Wall is the most physically taxing day of the trip.
  5. 19:00 Dinner — hot pot or hutong dumplings 1h30

    An easy, warming dinner: Haidilao hot pot (¥100-250, English menu, famous service) or Mr. Shi's Dumplings in a Gulou hutong (¥35-85, 50+ fillings, English menu).

    Cost: ¥35-250 per person TIP: Hot pot is the classic post-Wall meal, especially in cooler months — order the split (yuanyang) pot for mixed spice levels. Mr. Shi's is the easygoing, foreigner-friendly dumpling option. Reserve Haidilao or come off-peak to avoid a wait.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early hotel breakfast or grab-and-go

Dongcheng · ¥10-40

Eat before the early departure; pack water and snacks for the Wall.

Lunch

Restaurant near Mutianyu base

Huairou (Mutianyu) · ¥40-80

Simple local noodles or dumplings — or a tour-included lunch.

Dinner

Haidilao hot pot or Mr. Shi's Dumplings

Chaoyang / Gulou · ¥35-250

A warming hot pot or easygoing hutong dumplings after a long day.

Transit:

Mutianyu is ~1.5h north of Beijing. Bus 916 express + local transfer is cheapest; a private driver or small-group tour is faster and easier. Pre-book Wall tickets online in peak season.

DAY 2 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $70 Mid $150 Luxury $360
DAY 3

Lama Temple + Confucius Temple + 798 Art District

Lama Temple (Yonghe Gong) - Confucius Temple & Guozijian - lunch - 798 Art District galleries - Sanlitun evening

Activities

  1. 09:00 Lama Temple (Yonghe Gong) 1h30

    Beijing's most important Tibetan Buddhist temple — a series of incense-filled halls culminating in a giant Maitreya Buddha carved from a single sandalwood trunk. Active place of worship as well as a sight. Admission ~¥30.

    Cost: ~¥30 TIP: Free incense is provided — light it respectfully if you wish. Come earlier to avoid crowds. Dress modestly. The 18-meter Maitreya Buddha in the rear hall is the highlight. It's a genuine, atmospheric working temple, not a museum.
  2. 11:00 Confucius Temple & Guozijian 1h30

    A short walk from the Lama Temple, the serene Confucius Temple and the adjacent Imperial Academy (Guozijian) sit on a quiet, restored hutong street with ancient cypress trees and stone tablets of imperial-exam scholars. Combined ticket ~¥30.

    Cost: ~¥30 TIP: Far quieter than the Lama Temple next door — a calm contrast. Guozijian Street itself, lined with old archways, is one of central Beijing's nicer hutong lanes for a stroll and a coffee. Good on a clear day.
  3. 13:00 Lunch + travel to the 798 Art District 1h30

    Lunch around the Lama Temple area, then head northeast to the 798 Art District (Dashanzi) — a former Bauhaus-style factory complex turned into Beijing's main contemporary-art quarter.

    Cost: Lunch ¥40-80; metro/Didi ¥3-30 TIP: 798 is a bit out of the way — a Didi is the simplest route. Eat before you go, though 798 has cafés too. Galleries are mostly free to enter.
  4. 14:30 798 Art District galleries 3h

    Wander the converted factory halls — independent galleries, large-scale installations, design shops, street art, and cafés. The mix of socialist-era industrial architecture and cutting-edge art is the draw. Free to roam; some exhibitions ticketed.

    Cost: Free to roam; some shows ticketed TIP: A complete change of pace from the imperial sights — modern, creative, and photogenic. Check what's on, as exhibitions rotate. Great on a smoggy or rainy day since much is indoors. Allow time to get lost among the warehouses.
  5. 18:30 Sanlitun evening — dinner + craft beer 2h30

    Sanlitun, Beijing's main nightlife district, is near 798 — international restaurants, bars, and the Jing-A craft-beer taprooms with their Chinese-ingredient brews. A relaxed, cosmopolitan evening.

    Cost: ¥80-300 per person TIP: Sanlitun has the city's widest range of international food and bars if you want a break from Chinese cuisine. Jing-A is the local craft-beer name. Pay via Alipay/WeChat. Use Didi to get back to your hotel.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast or jianbing

Dongcheng · ¥10-40

Jianbing or hotel breakfast before the temples.

Lunch

Near the Lama Temple

Dongcheng · ¥40-80

A casual noodle or dumpling lunch before 798.

Dinner

Sanlitun restaurants / Jing-A

Chaoyang (Sanlitun) · ¥80-300

International dining or craft beer in the nightlife district.

Transit:

The Lama Temple and Confucius Temple are walkable together (metro Yonghegong stop). 798 and Sanlitun are northeast — use the metro or Didi. Galleries are largely indoors, good for poor-air days.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $50 Mid $120 Luxury $300
DAY 4

Summer Palace + Houhai hutongs + Drum & Bell Towers

Summer Palace and Kunming Lake - Houhai lake - hutong cycling or rickshaw - Drum & Bell Towers - dinner

Activities

  1. 08:30 Summer Palace + Kunming Lake 3h30

    Start early at the Summer Palace, the sprawling Qing imperial garden around Kunming Lake and Longevity Hill — the Long Corridor, Marble Boat, temples, and pavilions, all UNESCO-listed. A 'through ticket' bundles the inner sites.

    Cost: Through ticket ~¥50-60 TIP: Go early to beat crowds and have the lake to yourself. Buy the through ticket for the inner halls. It's large — comfortable shoes essential. A boat across Kunming Lake is a relaxing way to cross. Autumn and spring are the loveliest.
  2. 13:00 Lunch + travel to the hutongs 1h30

    Lunch near the Summer Palace or back toward the center, then head to the Houhai and Gulou hutong area for the afternoon.

    Cost: Lunch ¥40-80; metro/Didi ¥3-30 TIP: The Summer Palace is far northwest, so build in transit time back toward the center. A Didi is easiest. Eat a simple lunch before diving into the hutongs.
  3. 15:00 Houhai + hutong cycling or rickshaw 2h

    Explore the lanes around Houhai lake on foot, by shared bike, or by rickshaw — the heart of old Beijing, with courtyard homes, small shops, and lakeside life. A guided rickshaw tour adds context.

    Cost: Free to walk; rickshaw ¥100-200; bike via app TIP: Shared bikes (Alipay/WeChat mini-program) are perfect for the flat lanes. The quieter side hutongs are more atmospheric than the bar-lined lakefront. A rickshaw tour is touristy but informative if you want the history.
  4. 17:30 Drum & Bell Towers 1h30

    Climb the historic Drum Tower (and the facing Bell Tower) for a drum performance and a rooftop view over the gray-tiled hutong rooftops — one of central Beijing's best urban panoramas. Admission ~¥20-30.

    Cost: ~¥20-30 TIP: The Drum Tower has periodic drum performances — check times. The steep stairs reward you with a classic view across the old-city rooftops, especially at golden hour. The plaza between the towers is a pleasant evening hangout.
  5. 19:30 Dinner — hutong dumplings or lamb skewers 2h

    Dinner in the Gulou hutong area — Mr. Shi's Dumplings (50+ fillings, English menu) nearby, or lamb skewers and beer on Gui Jie ('Ghost Street') for a livelier night.

    Cost: ¥35-100 per person TIP: Mr. Shi's is the easygoing, foreigner-friendly choice right in the hutongs. Gui Jie's all-night skewer strip is cheap and fun. Both pair well with a craft beer. Pay via Alipay/WeChat.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast or jianbing

Dongcheng · ¥10-40

Eat before the early Summer Palace start.

Lunch

Near the Summer Palace or central

Haidian / Dongcheng · ¥40-80

A quick noodle or dumpling lunch.

Dinner

Mr. Shi's Dumplings or Gui Jie skewers

Gulou · ¥35-100

Hutong dumplings or all-night lamb skewers.

Transit:

The Summer Palace is far northwest — metro plus a walk, or Didi. Houhai, the hutongs, and the Drum & Bell Towers are central and walkable, with shared bikes ideal for the flat lanes.

DAY 4 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $58 Mid $130 Luxury $320
DAY 3

Temple of Heaven + Summer Palace + Houhai hutongs

Temple of Heaven morning - Summer Palace and Kunming Lake - Houhai and the hutongs - rickshaw or cycling - farewell dinner

Activities

  1. 08:30 Temple of Heaven 2h

    The Ming-and-Qing ceremonial complex where emperors prayed for good harvests, centered on the iconic round, triple-eaved Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests. Buy the 'through ticket' to access the main halls, not just the park. Mornings bring locals doing tai chi and dancing.

    Cost: Through ticket ~¥28-34 TIP: Get the combined 'through ticket' (taolian piao), not the cheaper park-only entry, to see the famous halls. Come early to catch the morning park life — tai chi, fan dancing, music — which is half the charm. The zhajiangmian halls near here (Old Beijing Noodle King) make a good lunch stop.
  2. 11:30 Travel to the Summer Palace + lunch 1h30

    Head northwest to the Summer Palace (metro plus a short walk, or Didi). Grab a quick lunch en route or near the gate.

    Cost: Metro ¥3-9; lunch ¥40-80 TIP: The Summer Palace is far from the center, so factor in travel time. Eat a simple lunch before or at the entrance — options inside are limited and pricey. A Didi is easiest if you're short on time.
  3. 13:00 Summer Palace + Kunming Lake 3h

    The sprawling Qing imperial garden around Kunming Lake and Longevity Hill — the Long Corridor, the Marble Boat, temples, and pavilions, all UNESCO-listed. A 'through ticket' bundles the inner sites.

    Cost: Through ticket ~¥50-60 TIP: Buy the through ticket to enter the inner halls and the Buddhist temple complex. It's large — allow at least half a day and wear comfortable shoes. A boat across Kunming Lake is a pleasant option. Autumn (golden ginkgo) and spring (blossoms) are the prettiest seasons here.
  4. 17:00 Houhai + the hutongs 2h

    Return toward the center to Houhai lake and the surrounding hutongs (narrow gray-brick lanes) — the heart of old Beijing. Wander on foot, by shared bike, or take a rickshaw tour around the Drum and Bell Towers.

    Cost: Free to walk; rickshaw tour ¥100-200 TIP: The hutongs are best explored slowly on foot or by shared bike (via the Alipay/WeChat mini-program once payment is set up). Houhai's lakeside bars are touristy and uneven — the quieter side lanes are more atmospheric. The Drum and Bell Towers are worth the short climb for the rooftop view.
  5. 19:30 Farewell dinner — hutong restaurant or craft beer 2h

    A final dinner in the Gulou/hutong area — imperial-style cuisine at Najia Xiaoguan, lamb skewers on Gui Jie ('Ghost Street'), or a craft beer and pub plates at a Jing-A taproom in Sanlitun.

    Cost: ¥55-320 per person TIP: Najia Xiaoguan is a good atmospheric sit-down choice (reserve ahead). For a casual night, Gui Jie's all-night skewer strip is fun and cheap. Jing-A is the spot for craft beer brewed with Chinese ingredients. Pay via Alipay/WeChat.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast or jianbing

Dongcheng · ¥10-40

A jianbing cart or hotel breakfast before an early Temple of Heaven start.

Lunch

Zhajiangmian or near the Summer Palace

Dongcheng / Haidian · ¥40-80

Old Beijing zhajiangmian noodles, or a quick lunch by the Summer Palace.

Dinner

Najia Xiaoguan / Gui Jie / Jing-A

Gulou / Chaoyang / Sanlitun · ¥55-320

Imperial-style cuisine, lamb skewers, or craft beer to finish the trip.

Transit:

The Summer Palace is far northwest — use the metro plus a walk, or Didi. Houhai and the hutongs are central and walkable. Shared bikes work well in the flat hutong lanes once Alipay/WeChat is set up.

DAY 3 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $58 Mid $135 Luxury $330
DAY 6

Ming Tombs + Sacred Way + a quieter Wall option

Ming Tombs (Changling) - the Sacred Way - optional Jinshanling/Mutianyu hike - return - relaxed dinner

Activities

  1. 08:30 Travel to the Ming Tombs 1h30

    Head northwest to the Ming Tombs, the UNESCO-listed imperial mausoleum complex of 13 Ming emperors, about an hour from the city. A driver or tour is the practical way; some combine it with a Great Wall section.

    Cost: Driver/tour $40-100; or bus + transfers TIP: The Ming Tombs are often combined with Badaling on tours since they're in the same direction — but doing them at a calm pace is more rewarding. A private driver gives flexibility. Check which tombs are open (Changling and Dingling are the main visitable ones).
  2. 10:00 Changling Tomb + the Sacred Way 2h30

    Visit Changling, the largest and best-preserved tomb, then walk part of the Sacred Way (Shendao) — the ceremonial avenue lined with monumental stone animals and officials leading to the tombs. Admission ~¥30-45 each.

    Cost: ~¥30-45 per site TIP: The Sacred Way's stone statues are the photogenic highlight — a peaceful, tree-lined walk. Changling's great hall is built of enormous nanmu-wood pillars. Far quieter than the Forbidden City. Dingling (the only excavated underground tomb) is the other main option.
  3. 13:00 Lunch + optional quieter Wall stretch 3h

    Lunch en route, then optionally add a quieter Great Wall experience — a Mutianyu return at a calmer pace, or for the fit, the dramatic, partly 'wild' Jinshanling section, which sees far fewer people.

    Cost: Lunch ¥40-80; Wall entry ~¥40-65 TIP: Jinshanling is the choice for keen hikers wanting solitude and the most striking, less-restored ramparts — it's farther (about 2-2.5h) and best with a driver. If you'd rather not double up on the Wall, swap this for a relaxed hutong-and-tea afternoon back in the city.
  4. 18:00 Return to Beijing + relaxed dinner 2h30

    Head back to the city and enjoy an easy dinner — hot pot, dumplings, or a return to a favorite from earlier in the trip.

    Cost: Dinner ¥40-250 TIP: A long day out of the city, so keep the evening low-key. Hot pot (Haidilao or Donglaishun) is a comforting end to a day in the hills. Reserve or come off-peak. Pay via Alipay/WeChat.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Early hotel breakfast

Dongcheng · ¥10-40

Eat before the early departure; pack water and snacks.

Lunch

Near the Ming Tombs / Wall

Changping / Miyun · ¥40-80

A simple local lunch, or a tour-included meal.

Dinner

Hot pot or dumplings

Dongcheng / Chaoyang · ¥40-250

A warming, low-key dinner after a long day.

Transit:

The Ming Tombs are ~1h northwest; a private driver or tour is most practical and pairs well with a Wall section. Jinshanling (for hikers) is farther (2-2.5h). Allow for late-afternoon traffic returning to the city.

DAY 6 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $70 Mid $160 Luxury $380
DAY 7

High-speed-rail day trip or final sights + departure

Optional Tianjin high-speed day trip - or final Beijing sights and shopping - airport departure

Activities

  1. 08:00 Option A — high-speed train to Tianjin 4h30

    Tianjin is about 30 minutes from Beijing by high-speed rail — a port city with European-style concession architecture, the Italian Quarter, the Tianjin Eye ferris wheel, and a riverside old town. A relaxed half-day contrast to Beijing.

    Cost: Train ~¥55 each way; sights vary TIP: Book the train via Trip.com or 12306 with your passport, which is also your ticket. Arrive 30-45 min early — stations are large with security. Tianjin's walkable old quarters and riverfront make an easy, low-effort day trip. Return to Beijing with buffer before your flight.
  2. 08:30 Option B — final Beijing sights 3h

    If you'd rather not travel, pick a final Beijing sight you've missed — Beihai Park, the Olympic Park (Bird's Nest), the National Museum (free, reserve ahead), or a last hutong wander — at a relaxed pace.

    Cost: Free-¥30 TIP: Match the choice to the weather: outdoor parks on a clear day, the National Museum or galleries on a smoggy one. Keep it light and unhurried before departure, watching your flight time.
  3. 13:00 Last lunch + souvenir shopping 2h

    A final Beijing meal and any last shopping — tea, silk, crafts, or snacks around Wangfujing or Qianmen — before heading to the airport.

    Cost: Lunch ¥40-150; shopping extra TIP: Bargain at markets and avoid the tea-ceremony scam touts near tourist areas. If you took the Tianjin trip, eat there and shop on return. Pay via Alipay/WeChat.
  4. 16:00 Travel to the airport + departure 3h

    Head to the airport — confirm Capital (PEK) or Daxing (PKX), as they're far apart. Airport Express, high-speed rail (to Daxing), or Didi/taxi.

    Cost: Airport Express ¥25-45; taxi ¥120-150 TIP: Allow generous buffer for traffic and big-airport security. Have your passport ready. Arrive 2.5-3 hours before an international flight. The Airport Express is reliable; a Didi is door-to-door.

Meal Recommendations

Breakfast

Hotel breakfast or jianbing

Dongcheng · ¥10-40

A relaxed final-morning breakfast.

Lunch

Tianjin street food or final Beijing meal

Tianjin / Beijing · ¥40-150

Tianjin's famous goubuli buns, or a last Peking duck.

Dinner

In-flight or airport dining

PEK / PKX · ¥50-150

Airport noodles or in-flight meal.

Transit:

Tianjin is ~30 min by high-speed rail (~¥55, book with passport). Confirm your departure airport (PEK vs PKX). Airport Express (¥25-45) or Didi/taxi (¥120-150); allow extra time for traffic and security.

DAY 7 Estimated Spend (per person, flights excl.)

Budget $70 Mid $150 Luxury $360

Book Beijing Tours & Tickets

Packing Checklist

Beijing 7-Day Itinerary FAQ

What's worth adding on a 7-day Beijing trip?
A second, quieter Great Wall experience (a calm Mutianyu return or the wild, dramatic Jinshanling hike), the UNESCO-listed Ming Tombs with the statue-lined Sacred Way, and a high-speed-rail day trip — Tianjin is just 30 minutes away. Seven days also means you never have to rush the core imperial sights or the hutongs.
Is a high-speed-rail day trip from Beijing easy?
Yes — Tianjin is about 30 minutes away, and the network is fast, modern, and punctual. Book through Trip.com or the official 12306 platform using your passport, which doubles as your ticket at the gate. Arrive 30-45 minutes early because the stations are huge with airport-style security. It's a low-effort way to add a different city.
Which Wall sections suit a repeat visit?
If you did Mutianyu earlier, Jinshanling is the standout second choice for fit travelers — partly 'wild,' less restored, dramatically scenic, and almost empty compared to the popular sections, though it's farther and best with a driver. If you'd rather not hike hard, a relaxed return to Mutianyu or a hutong-and-tea day is the gentler alternative.
Do the visa and Great Firewall rules change often?
The visa and visa-free/transit rules do change — China has been expanding visa-free entry and transit options for many nationalities, so always confirm the current policy for your passport and route with a Chinese embassy before booking. The Great Firewall (blocking Google, Instagram, WhatsApp) is a constant: install and test a VPN before you arrive, since the apps are hard to get once you're in China.

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Why you can trust 7-day itinerary

Jimmy Kong TripPick founder · Travel content creator

Based in Chiang Mai for 8+ years, with 30+ countries visited across Southeast Asia, Japan, and Europe. Every detail in this guide is primary-source verified as of April 2026, with prices auto-refreshed via live exchange rate APIs. This isn't AI-generated boilerplate — it's written from the perspective of someone who has actually been there.

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