The Classic Triangle — Beijing, Xi'an and Shanghai

The Classic Triangle — Beijing, Xi'an and Shanghai

If you ask ten people who flew to China for the first time where they went, nine will say the same thing: Beijing, Xi'an, Shanghai. The Classic Triangle.

That's no accident. These three cities give you China in three different dimensions — the imperial past, the historic heart, and the dizzying future. In one trip you see where China came from and where it's going.

But the real question is: is it still the right route for you in 2026? Let's break it down city by city, and then I'll give you the honest answer.

Beijing — the imperial past

The capital. This is where China's historical weight sits, which is why most itineraries start here.

Beijing isn't a city you love from the first moment — it's huge, crowded, and sometimes challenging. But it's essential to understanding China.

Xi'an — the historic heart

Second stop, a journey of about two or three hours by high-speed train from Beijing. Xi'an was China's capital for a thousand years, and the endpoint of the Silk Road.

Xi'an is more compact than Beijing, and two days is usually enough. It adds a deep historical layer to the itinerary.

Shanghai — the future

The last stop, and often the favorite. Shanghai is the complete opposite of Beijing — glittering, more Western, futuristic.

Beijing teaches you where China came from. Shanghai shows you where it's going. Xi'an connects the two.

So — is it still worth it in 2026? The honest answer

Yes — if it's your first trip to China. The Classic Triangle is a classic for good reason: it gives you the broad picture in the most efficient way, and the logistics between the three cities are relatively simple thanks to the high-speed trains.

But here's the honest caveat: it's also the most touristed route in China. If you're looking for authentic, wild China, the kind that has seen fewer tourists — the Triangle won't give you that. For that there's Yunnan, Guilin, Zhangjiajie.

My recommendation:

How many days you need

The minimal classic itinerary: Beijing (3–4 days), Xi'an (2 days), Shanghai (2–3 days). In total 8–9 net days, not counting flight days. The high-speed trains connect everything comfortably and quickly — far more pleasant than domestic flights.

In the coming posts I'll get into the nature regions — Guilin, Yangshuo, and Zhangjiajie — for those who want to go beyond the classic.

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