A Taipei Tea Itinerary (1–2 Days)
A practical one- to two-day Taipei tea plan — a historic salon, a modern tea bar, old-Taipei tea heritage, and the Maokong hills — with who each day suits.
By Mei-Ling Chen · Updated June 3, 2026 · 7 min read

How this plan works
Taipei rewards a focused tea day or two. This itinerary moves from city tea houses to the Maokong hills, one or two stops per half-day so nothing feels rushed. It uses our current sample venues and conceptual areas, and avoids exact transit times or venue hours we can't keep current.
Day 1, morning — a historic salon
Start slow at a heritage salon such as Eighty-Eightea: traditional service in a beautiful restored room. (The landmark Wistaria is temporarily closed for renovation — check before planning.) Arriving near opening gives you the quietest table.
Day 1, afternoon — a modern tea bar
Shift to a design-forward bar like Zhang Men for a contemporary take — flights of high mountain oolong and cold brew. The contrast with the morning salon is the point.
Day 1, optional — old-Taipei tea heritage
With extra time, wander Dadaocheng, old Taipei's historic tea-trade quarter, and shop for loose-leaf tea using our buying tips.
Day 2, optional — Maokong half-day
Ride the Maokong Gondola up to the city's tea hills for hillside teahouses and views. See our Maokong half-day itinerary for structure.
Who it suits
City-based visitors who want a real tea experience without a long journey, and who prefer an unhurried pace over a packed schedule.
Make it yours
Mix and match with our Taipei tea route and the quiz. Start at the modern bar if you're new, or the historic salon if you want depth first.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Can I do Taipei tea in one day?
- Yes. A historic salon in the morning and a modern tea bar in the afternoon is a complete one-day tea experience without leaving the city.
- What should I add on a second day?
- A relaxed half-day at Maokong by gondola, or old-Taipei tea heritage in Dadaocheng paired with a buying stop.
- Do I need a car?
- No. The city stops and the Maokong Gondola are reachable by public transport. We don't publish exact transit times — check live transit on the day.
- Which venues does this use?
- It uses the current Leaf Guide sample venues (such as Eighty-Eightea and Zhang Men; the landmark Wistaria is temporarily closed for renovation) plus conceptual areas like Maokong and Dadaocheng. We don't invent venues or hours.
- Is this good for beginners?
- Yes — start at the modern tea bar if you're new, then visit the historic salon once you're comfortable. See our first-time-visitor guide.