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Beijing

Explore Beijing

Hotels (10)
Restaurants (9)
Spa (8)

Where to Stay

1. Rosewood Beijing

2 Michelin Keys· Forbes Five-Star

Rosewood Beijing reimagines the traditional hutong courtyard as a luxury hotel in the central business district, with original cloisonné metalwork adorning each spacious guest room and gongbi brush paintings filling the lobby. The sixth-floor outdoor pool sits amid lush greenery, while Sense spa offers bamboo linen treatments and Lorenzo Villoresi bath products. Seven restaurant concepts, a yoga studio, and obsessive attention to detail define this sophisticated urban retreat.

2. Mandarin Oriental Qianmen

2 Michelin Keys· Forbes Five-Star

Forty-two courtyard suites occupy restored hutong houses in the historic Qianmen district, their classic siheyuan architecture framing Zen courtyards within a labyrinth of narrow alleyways. Contemporary interiors contrast with centuries-old structure, while the Tea House offers traditional ceremonies led by resident ambassadors. The spa centers on Chinese wellness traditions—sound baths, singing bowl therapy, treatments rooted in ancient practice—alongside Cantonese and Italian dining. Complimentary bikes facilitate exploration of surrounding hutongs.

3. Bvlgari Hotel Beijing

2 Michelin Keys· Forbes Five-Star

Antonio Citterio and Patricia Viel's design for this Chaoyang property fuses imported marble, premium leather and wood with Enzo Enea's curated gardens of 200-year-old pines along the Liangma River. The subterranean pool area channels ancient Roman baths through volcanic Vincenza stone and gold-inlaid mosaics, while Niko Romito's Michelin-starred Italian kitchen pairs simplicity-driven cuisine with 500+ wine labels. Butler service, Maserati transfers and an 11-room spa complete the offering.

4. Mandarin Oriental Wangfujing

1 Michelin Key· Forbes Five-Star

Among Beijing's most generously proportioned guest rooms, many overlook the Forbidden City's imperial rooftops. Frank Gehry's scarlet fish sculpture anchors the lobby, while the rooftop MO Bar delivers sunset cocktails with terrace views. Chef Wong Wing-Keung's Café Zi serves dim sum and Cantonese classics; the spa's four themed suites offer treatments including the two-hour Emperor's Longevity ritual. Families appreciate children's menus, babysitting, and proximity to Hamley's flagship toy store.

5. Xitan Hotel Beijing

1 Michelin Key· Relais & Châteaux

Perched in the mountains west of Beijing, Xitan Hotel occupies two hectares of a late-Ming village, its 38 courtyards blending vernacular architecture with contemporary interiors. Each room follows a distinct design concept marrying historical reference and modern restraint. The House of Rong, helmed by Chef Jun Wang, draws on Xin Rong Ji's culinary tradition, while the Qin Spa centres on hydrotherapy amid views of forested peaks.

6. The Peninsula Beijing

1 Michelin Key· Forbes Five-Star

Since 1989, The Peninsula Beijing has anchored Wangfujing with the city's most generous accommodations—all-suite layouts beginning at 645 square feet, each with oversized bath, walk-in dressing room, and separate sleeping and living quarters. A lobby adorned by Qin Feng's avant-garde ink paintings opens onto three floors of designer boutiques, while Jing delivers modern French cuisine and Huang Ting classic Cantonese dishes with full supplier transparency. Yun Summer Lounge crowns the property with rooftop Mediterranean plates and cocktails.

7. The PuXuan Hotel and Spa

1 Michelin Key· Forbes Five-Star

German architect Ole Scheeren's striking glass cube—its façade echoing traditional hutong brickwork—rises steps from the Forbidden City, where Grand Deluxe rooms frame rooftop views of imperial Beijing. Minimalist interiors showcase Chinese artistry and craft traditions, while Fu Chun Ju's Michelin-starred Cantonese kitchen and the Guerlain Spa anchor a serene, adult-focused retreat. Complimentary breakfast, laundry, and minibar reflect the group's "hostmanship" philosophy.

8. Waldorf Astoria Beijing

1 Michelin Key· Forbes Five-Star

A striking copper-and-bronze latticework façade by Adrian Smith + Gordon Gill announces this 176-room property in Wangfujing, minutes from the Forbidden City. Inside, Yabu Pushelberg's interiors layer silk-lined corridors, gold-flecked Italian marble, and black lacquer accents with red and gold overtones. The near one-to-one staff ratio ensures attentive service, while Peacock Alley channels art deco glamour for afternoon tea and cocktails.

9. InterContinental Beijing Sanlitun

Forbes Five-Star

A shimmering LED facade in hexagonal honeycomb patterns marks this sleek tower in Sanlitun's shopping and nightlife hub. Space shuttle-inspired rooms feature floor-to-ceiling windows framing the capital's skyline, while the cathedral-height lobby offers premium tea service beneath brass cable bookshelves. The fifth-floor asymmetrical pool appears to merge with Beijing's rooftops through panoramic glazing. Five dining venues span Cantonese classics to Spanish tapas, crowned by Top Bar's live music terrace.

10. Four Seasons Hotel Beijing

Forbes Five-Star

A soaring twenty-story atrium anchored by four hundred stainless-steel butterfly sculptures sets the tone at this Chaoyang landmark. The spa spans eleven treatment suites with an adjoining Tea Garden pouring gong-fu style infusions alongside imperial snacks, while upstairs Mio and Cai Yi Xuan deliver refined Italian and Cantonese cooking. An indoor pool with panoramic city views and afternoon teas featuring truffles and caviar complete the offering for collectors of urban luxury.

Where to Eat

1. Chao Shang Chao (Chaoyang)

★★★ Michelin

Chef Cheung brings Hong Kong and Shanghai expertise to this three-Michelin-starred Chaozhou restaurant, where the entrance corridor displays premium dried fish maws that signal the luxury ahead. His braised fish maw with 30-year-aged dried radish demonstrates the refined technique applied to regional classics, the aged radish lending profound aromatic complexity. An exceptional wine list and curated tea selection complement the sophisticated dining experience.

2. Xin Rong Ji (Xinyuan South Road)

★★★ Michelin

This flagship location commands three Michelin stars for its refined approach to Taizhou cooking, centered on East China Sea fish prepared in an elegant, modern Chinese dining room. The exclusive 28-day-aged baby Peking duck requires advance ordering and justifies the wait, while the duck stew with fish maw showcases taro so starchy it dissolves on the tongue—a signature of precision technique applied to regional tradition.

3. Blackswan

★★ Michelin

French chef Vianney Massot's two-Michelin-starred restaurant occupies an idyllic setting within Luohong Art Museum, its swan-themed dining room—white arabesques, feather motifs—overlooking a pond where swans and koi glide. His cuisine offers a distinctive interpretation of French tradition through seasonal ingredients, exemplified by slow-roasted wild turbot: firm, intensely briny flesh paired with two sauces that amplify rather than mask its oceanic character.

4. Jingji

★★ Michelin

Jingji revives imperial Chinese cooking with a contemporary lens, holding two Michelin stars for its approach to royal cuisine and regional traditions. Housed at The Ritz-Carlton Beijing, the restaurant presents set menus centered on dried seafood and vegetables, with the braised fish maw in rich broth standing out for its texture and depth. Private rooms allow bespoke menu planning. The name fuses 'Beijing' with 'Yueji,' the capital's official flower.

5. Lamdre

★★ Michelin

Veteran chef Dai brings his Japan-honed mastery of plant-based ingredients to this intimate two-Michelin-starred dining room, where a pitched-roof skylight floods the space with natural light. The seasonal menu showcases Yunnan mushrooms chargrilled for his signature porcini dish with green pepper and sea salt, while the house tofu—steeped in richly layered broth—has earned near-mythic status among Beijing's steakhouse cognoscenti.

6. Lu Shang Lu

★★ Michelin

Lu Shang Lu holds two Michelin stars for its mastery of Shandong cuisine, spotlighting Confucius recipes and sea cucumber alongside live seafood flown daily from the Jiaodong peninsula. The Yantai-born chef's signature—roast 45-day-old duck paired with caviar, prawn crackers, and Shandong pancakes—bridges Beijing and Shandong traditions. An extensive tea menu with personalized service completes the refined dining experience.

7. King's Joy

★★ Michelin· Green Star ●· Relais & Châteaux

Adjacent to the Yonghe Temple, this decade-old courtyard house pursues a lacto-ovo vegetarian ethos through Zen-inspired minimalism and therapeutic precision. Two Michelin stars and a Green Star recognize menus built on steaming, slow-cooking, and sautéing techniques that foreground seasonal produce and herbal properties. Three tasting formats, each spanning over ten courses, accommodate vegan preferences while channeling Beijing's philosophical culinary heritage into contemporary plant-forward gastronomy.

8. Shanghai Cuisine

★★ Michelin

Two Michelin stars recognize this understated dining room where a Shanghainese head chef and team reinterpret regional classics with contemporary precision. The kitchen sources elusive Jiangzhe ingredients rarely found in Beijing, transforming them into seasonal compositions alongside impeccable dim sum—delicate xiao long bao and qingtuan dumplings stuffed with sweet rice and Chinese mugwort. The neutral-grey interior, accented with teal, frames refined Shanghainese gastronomy for serious collectors of culinary tradition.

9. Giada Garden

★ Michelin

The Milanese fashion house behind this elegant dining room brings the same refined sensibility to Northern Italian cuisine as it does to couture. One Michelin star recognizes hand-rolled agnolotti and linguine, veal Milanese pounded thin, and slow-braised Piedmontese beef, all paired with an all-Italy wine list spanning Barolo to Verdicchio. Freshly baked breads arrive warm at the table, completing the experience.

10. Il Ristorante - Niko Romito

★ Michelin

Milanese chef Niko Romito brings refined Italian cooking to Beijing's Bvlgari Hotel, housed beneath Murano glass chandeliers and marble-clad interiors that overlook manicured gardens. The one-Michelin-starred menu reworks antipasti classics with quiet precision—vitello tonnato arrives with veal sliced translucent-thin, its tuna sauce sharpened and balanced for contemporary taste. Expect sophisticated restraint rather than showmanship, each dish layered with depth that rewards close attention.

What to Do

1. Chi, The Spa at China World Summit Wing, Beijing

Forbes Five-Star

Perched high above Beijing's Central Business District, this tranquil sanctuary practices Qi Balance techniques—signature firm handwork and energy therapy exclusive to the spa—that restore equilibrium across body and mind. Each session opens with a ritualistic foot bath and sound bowl ceremony, then proceeds to treatments using eco-conscious Cha Ling formulas infused with Yunnan pu'er tea. Private suites supply massage beds, hot tubs, showers and lounges for unhurried renewal.

2. Sense, A Rosewood Spa at Beijing

Forbes Five-Star

This 32,000-square-foot sanctuary in Rosewood Beijing offers five exclusive suites equipped with Gharieni treatment beds that convert into water spa tables with LED color therapy—the first overnight spa accommodations in the Rosewood portfolio. Candle-lit lanterns guide guests along wooden pathways through spaces defined by sandstone walls and abstract art, culminating in a temperature-controlled pool enveloped by tropical foliage that evokes a verdant jungle retreat within the capital's urban sprawl.

3. The Bvlgari Spa at Bvlgari Hotel Beijing

Forbes Five-Star

Stone walls, warm woods, and candlelight set the tone across eleven treatment rooms spanning 16,145 square feet, where La Mer signature therapies fuse ancient Chinese wellness traditions with European techniques. A cabana-lined indoor pool anchors the two-story sanctuary, its gold and green mosaic work echoing Rome's Terme Di Caracalla, while the lounge overlooks private gardens—Italian sophistication meeting tranquil, restorative ritual in the capital's most design-conscious retreat.

4. The Peninsula Spa Beijing

Forbes Five-Star

Dark wooden lattice screens and rich silks frame a dozen treatment rooms where traditional Chinese medicine converges with contemporary wellness. The signature Jade Hot Stone Massage harnesses the healing properties of China's revered 'Stone of Heaven' across a two-hour ceremony, while cupping, scraping, and qi therapy honor ancient practices. Physiotherapists blend reflexology with personal fitness protocols, and sandalwood-scented lounges serve ceremonial tea between sessions conducted with ESPA and Biologique Recherche formulations.

5. The Spa at Four Seasons Hotel Beijing

Forbes Five-Star

A glass atrium rises twenty-three floors above an interior Tea Garden, flooding this urban sanctuary with daylight while insulating guests from the surrounding capital. Eleven treatment rooms include two VIP double suites equipped with private steam showers and soaking tubs, alongside four double and five single spaces. A sunlit pool and whirlpool command city views, completing a comprehensive wellness offering designed for total retreat.

6. The Spa at Mandarin Oriental Qianmen, Beijing

Forbes Five-Star

Traditional Chinese medicine anchors the treatment philosophy at this 10,000-square-foot retreat tucked among Beijing's historic hutongs. The signature Time Ritual eschews fixed menus entirely—therapists customize each session based on individual needs, incorporating acupuncture, singing bowl therapy, and herbal-infused body treatments. The Qiyuan Healing Space extends beyond conventional spa offerings with gong bath sessions that use acoustic vibrations to improve qi flow, while the Zen courtyard hosts alfresco therapies framed by centuries-old alleyways.

7. The Spa at Mandarin Oriental Wangfujing, Beijing

Forbes Five-Star

Ancient Silk Road wellness traditions meet contemporary innovation at this Wangfujing sanctuary, where massage beds topped with heat-responsive clay stones adapt to each body's contours. Jade, ginger, and quartz infuse treatments inspired by Chinese healing practices, while adjustable mood lighting in therapy suites shifts from energizing to meditative. Extended programs pair personal training with body rituals, and mosaic steam rooms complement petal-strewn foot baths for multi-sensory rejuvenation.

8. Qin SPA

Relais & Châteaux

Located within Xitan Beijing, Qin SPA is a contemporary wellness sanctuary rooted in Chinese therapeutic traditions. Its hydrotherapy pools draw on mineral-rich waters historically associated with healing specific ailments, while the surrounding mountain and forest landscape creates a natural setting for deep restoration. The approach centers on water-based therapies, with treatments designed to honor age-old wellness practices in a modern context—delivering rejuvenation through immersion, mineral absorption, and altitude-enhanced tranquility.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which Beijing neighborhoods offer the best access to historic sites?

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Dongcheng district places you within walking distance of the Forbidden City, Jingshan Park, and the historic hutong lanes. Xicheng, on the western side of the palace complex, offers proximity to Beihai Park and the traditional Shichahai lake area with its courtyard restaurants and evening atmosphere.

When is the best time to visit Beijing?

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Autumn — September through early November — brings clear skies, comfortable temperatures, and excellent visibility for Great Wall visits. Late spring (April to May) is also pleasant, though occasional sandstorms occur. Summer is hot and humid; winter is cold but uncrowded, with dramatic light over the palace rooftops.

What regional cuisines should visitors explore in Beijing?

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Beyond Peking duck, the city excels in Shandong cuisine with its refined seafood and wheat-based dishes, Yunnan cooking from the southwest, fiery Sichuan and Hunan preparations, and increasingly accomplished interpretations of Cantonese dim sum. The diplomatic and business presence also supports strong French, Japanese, and Italian restaurants.