Taiwanâs underrated southern city â bigger than Taipei, half the crowds, and the best night market food in the country.
Bubble tea in one hand, sour plum chicken in the other, and a row of temple lanterns glowing red overhead. Sounds like your kind of trip? Kaohsiungâs calling.
Most travellers fly into Taipei and never make it south. Thatâs a mistake. Kaohsiungâs got a working harbour, art warehouses turned into a creative district, the largest night market in Taiwan, a 300-year-old Taoist temple draped in red lanterns, and an ice cream train. Itâs also the easiest base for day trips to Tainan and Alishan, with the Taiwan High Speed Rail (THSR) putting Taipei just 1.5 hours away.
Hereâs the honest, no-fluff guide to things to do in Kaohsiung â whatâs worth your time, what locals actually do, where to stay, what to eat, and how to pay without losing money to FX fees.
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TLDR: Kaohsiung At A Glance
| Quick Question |
Quick Answer |
| Is Kaohsiung worth visiting? |
Yes â for harbour views, the largest night market in Taiwan, 300-year-old temples, and easier-than-Taipei pacing. |
| How many days do I need? |
2 to 3 days for the city, 4 to 5 if youâre adding Tainan or Alishan. |
| Best time to visit |
October to March (cool and dry). Avoid June to August typhoons. |
| Coldest month |
January. Average 18°C, lows around 16°C. Pack a light jacket. |
| Where to stay (first-timers) |
Yancheng District (near Pier-2) or near Formosa Boulevard MRT (central, MRT-connected). |
| Biggest night market |
Ruifeng Night Market â 1,000+ stalls, localsâ favourite. |
| Must-eat |
Bei Gang Tsai tube rice (Michelin Bib Gourmand), papaya milk, oyster omelette. |
| Getting around |
Kaohsiung MRT (Red and Orange lines) plus Light Rail. Get an EasyCard. |
| Pay without FX fees |
YouTrip multi-currency card (live TWD rates, zero FX fees). |
Table Of Contents
- Is Kaohsiung Worth Visiting?
- How Many Days Do You Need In Kaohsiung?
- When To Go: Weather And The Coldest Month
- Where To Stay In Kaohsiung For First-Timers
- Getting From Taipei To Kaohsiung
- 10 Must-Do Things In Kaohsiung
- Cool And Unique Things To Do (Skip-The-Usual Picks)
- What To Do In Kaohsiung At Night
- What To Eat In Kaohsiung
- Things To Do In Kaohsiung With Kids
- Day Trips From Kaohsiung
- Getting Around Kaohsiung
- How To Pay In Kaohsiung Without Getting Stung On FX
- FAQ
Is Kaohsiung Worth Visiting?
Short answer: yes, especially if youâve already done Taipei.
Kaohsiung is Taiwanâs second-largest city and its biggest port, which means harbour views, an old warehouse district thatâs now an art centre (Pier-2), and a slower, sunnier pace than Taipei. Itâs also home to the largest Nezha temple in Taiwan, the countryâs biggest Buddhist museum, and Ruifeng Night Market, which most locals will tell you beats anything up north.
Who itâs for:
- First-time Taiwan visitors who want both temples and beaches without leaving one city
- Repeat Taipei-goers looking for something different
- Foodies who want night markets without the Shilin tourist crush
- Anyone planning to visit Tainan or Alishan, since Kaohsiung is the natural base
Who might skip it: travellers chasing alpine scenery (head to Taroko or Hualien instead) or hardcore shoppers (Taipei still wins).
Related Guide: Alishan Taiwan: The Complete Travel Guide
How Many Days Do You Need In Kaohsiung?
Honest take based on whatâs actually here:
- 1 day: doable but rushed. Hit Pier-2 Art Center, Lotus Pondâs Dragon and Tiger Pagodas, the Dome of Light, and a night market.
- 2 to 3 days: the sweet spot for first-timers. Add Cijin Island, Fo Guang Shan Buddha Museum, and a proper food crawl.
- 4 to 5 days: start adding day trips. Tainan in a day, Alishan as an overnight, plus a chill day around Yancheng or Shoushan.
If youâve only got a long weekend in Taiwan and youâre choosing between Taipei and Kaohsiung, do 2 nights here and 2 in Taipei. You wonât regret the split.
Related Guide: Taiwan ATM Withdrawal Guide: Fees, Locations, Exchange Rates
When To Go: Weather And The Coldest Month
Kaohsiung is tropical and warm year-round, which means the question isnât âwhen is it warmâ but âwhen isnât it raining or 35°C and humidâ.
- October to March (best window): cool, dry, and breezy. Daytime sits around 22 to 27°C.
- December to February: the dry season peak. Light jacket evenings.
- January (the coldest month): average around 18°C, with lows near 16°C. Still T-shirt weather by day, sweater at night. This is the answer to the âwhat is the coldest month in Kaohsiung Taiwanâ question â and itâs hardly cold.
- April to May: warming up fast, occasional rain.
- June to September: hot, humid, and typhoon season. Skip if you can.
If youâre going in December or January, youâve nailed the timing.
Related Guide: Taiwan Cherry Blossom Guide: Forecast, Top Sakura Spots & Tips
Where To Stay In Kaohsiung For First-Timers
Three areas worth your booking energy:
- Yancheng District (Pier-2 area): Walking distance to the Pier-2 Art Center, harbour, and old British Consulate. Boutique hotels, cafes, and an indie vibe. Best for first-time visitors who want everything at street level.
- Around Formosa Boulevard Station (Sinsing District): The MRT junction of the Red and Orange lines. Right next to Liuhe Night Market and the Dome of Light. Best if you want to use the MRT everywhere without thinking.
- Zuoying District (near THSR Station): Closest to the high-speed rail and Ruifeng Night Market. Best if youâre using Kaohsiung as a base for day trips to Tainan or Taipei.
Skip: anywhere far from an MRT station unless youâre renting a car.
Related Guide: EasyCard Taiwan Guide: Price, Where to Buy, App, Refund & Tips For Tourists
Getting From Taipei To Kaohsiung
Taiwanâs transport is genuinely brilliant. Four ways to make the trip:
1. Taiwan High Speed Rail (THSR) â fastest
- Journey: about 1.5 to 2 hours (Taipei to Zuoying)
- Standard Class one-way fare: 1,490 TWD (~S$65)
- Business Class: around 1,900 TWD (~S$83)
- Concession fares: 50% off (745 TWD) for children, seniors, and travellers with disabilities.
- Arrives at Zuoying Station, north Kaohsiung
- Connect to the MRT Red Line at Zuoying
2. TRA Express Train (Tze-Chiang) â scenic and cheap
- Journey: about 3.5 to 5.5 hours, depending on the train type (newer Tze-Chiang 3000 series / EMU3000 is the fastest at around 3h 36m; Puyuma and Taroko Express run ~3h 40m but sell out fast)
- Fare: ~843 TWD (~S$37) one-way
- Departs from Taipei Main Station, arrives at Kaohsiung Station (city centre â no MRT transfer needed)
- Book ahead on weekends and holidays via the official TRA site â they sell out
- Better views, slower pace, materially cheaper than THSR
3. Domestic Flight
- Journey: about 1 hour, Taipei Songshan to Kaohsiung International
- Fare: from around S$147+ (~3,500+ TWD) one-way on UNI Air or Mandarin Airlines (varies by date)
- Worth it only if youâre connecting internationally at Songshan
4. Long-Distance Bus
- Journey: 4 to 6 hours (traffic-dependent)
- Fare: 450 to 750 TWD (~S$20 to S$33) one-way
- Operators: Ubus (route 1610), Kuo-Kuang, and Ho-Hsin â Ho-Hsin is widely recommended for luxury wide seats and is the most comfortable pick.
- Departure: Taipei Bus Station (next to Taipei Main Station). Most arrivals into Kaohsiungâs Jianguo Station.
- Buses run 24/7; overnight services are available and double as a way to skip a hotel night.
- Book via Klook, Traveloka, or at the station counter.
- Allow extra time on weekends and holidays â Taiwan freeway traffic can add an hour or more.
Related Guide: Taiwan High Speed Rail Guide: Routes, Tickets, Prices & Tips
10 Must-Do Things In Kaohsiung
The shortlist if you only had two days. These are the names that show up in every local recommendation and every TikTok itinerary worth watching.
1. Pier-2 Art Center (And The Mini Train Ride)
Image Credits: éŤéć
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A row of abandoned warehouses on the harbour, now Kaohsiungâs creative heart. Galleries, indie shops, public art (including the famous Transformer Robot), and a ridiculously photogenic mini train that loops the district. Spend a half-day wandering, grab a flat white at one of the cafes, and stay for sunset over the water.
- Address: No. 1, Dayong Rd, Yancheng District, Kaohsiung City 803
- Opening hours: 10 AM to 6 PM (varies by exhibition)
- Nearest stops: Yanchengpu MRT (Orange Line) or Hamasen Light Rail
- Cost: Free to roam, exhibition tickets vary
2. Dragon And Tiger Pagodas, Lotus Pond
Image Credits: Taiwan Tourism Administration
The shot youâve seen on every Taiwan Pinterest board. Walk in through the dragonâs mouth, out through the tigerâs, for traditional good luck. While youâre at Lotus Pond, also see the Spring and Autumn Pavilions and the Confucius Temple.
- Address: Lotus Pond, Zuoying District, Kaohsiung City
- Opening hours: 8 AM to 6 PM
- Cost: Free
3. Dome Of Light, Formosa Boulevard Station
The worldâs largest public art installation made of individual pieces of coloured glass, set inside a working metro station. 30 metres across, 4,500 panels, four years in the making. Catch one of the scheduled light shows after sunset. Itâs literally on your way somewhere, and yes, itâs worth getting off at.
- Address: Formosa Boulevard MRT Station, Sinsing District
- Opening hours: 6 AM to midnight
- Cost: Free (just a regular MRT ticket)
4. Cijin Island And The Tunnel Of Stars
Image Credits: @nse.explores on Lemon8
A 5-minute ferry from Gushan takes you to a different world. Black sand beach, fresh seafood, the Cihou Lighthouse, the Cijin Tunnel of Stars (an old air-raid tunnel turned into a glittery walk-through), and bike rentals to circle the whole island. Half a day minimum.
- Address: Gushan Ferry Pier, Gushan District
- Ferry hours: 5 AM to 2 AM, every 5 to 10 minutes
- Cost: 30 TWD (~S$1.30) cash one way, or 20 TWD with EasyCard/iPass
5. Fo Guang Shan Buddha Museum
Image Credits: Taiwan Tourism Administration
Home to the Fo Guang Big Buddha, the worldâs tallest seated bronze Buddha (108m including its base, made from 1,872 tons of bronze), plus eight pagodas, gardens, and exhibition halls. Genuinely peaceful. Allocate at least 3 hours and bring sun protection.
- Address: No. 153, Xingtian Rd, Dashu District, Kaohsiung City 840
- Opening hours: 9 AM to 6 PM (weekdays), 9 AM to 7 PM (weekends)
- Cost: Free
6. Sanfong Temple
Image Credits: TitaRaketera on Reddit
A 300-year-old Taoist temple (built in 1672) and the largest Nezha temple in Taiwan. The main shrine is incredible, but the real reason to come is the courtyard ceiling: hundreds of red lanterns that glow at night. Skip the usual Taipei temple list and come here instead.
- Address: No. 134, Hebei 2nd Rd, Sanmin District, Kaohsiung City
- Nearest MRT: Formosa Boulevard (about 20 mins on foot)
- Opening hours: 6 AM to 10 PM (lanterns lit 6 PM to 10 PM)
- Cost: Free
7. Old British Consulate At Takao
Image Credits: Taiwan Tourism Administration
Built in 1879, this was the first British consulate in Taiwan. Now a cliffside museum with the best harbour view in the city. Have a pot of English tea at the on-site cafe and watch the ferries cross to Cijin.
- Address: No. 20, Lianhai Rd, Gushan District, Kaohsiung City 804
- Opening hours: 10 AM to 7 PM (weekdays), 9 AM to 7 PM (weekends)
- Cost: 99 TWD (~S$4) adults
8. Hamasen Railway Cultural Park And Takao Railway Museum
Image Credits: éŤéć
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Old railway yard turned open-air park. Vintage trains you can climb on, a railway museum next door, and the areaâs lined with cute cafes. Free, kid-friendly, and a proper hidden gem.
- Address: No. 32, Linhai 2nd Rd, Gushan District, Kaohsiung City
- Nearest stop: Hamasen (Light Rail)
- Opening hours: Park 24 hours; museum 10 AM to 6 PM (closed Mondays)
- Cost: Free
9. Shoushan (Monkey Mountain)
Image Credits: ĺ°çŁĺ
čŻéčŞ
City-edge nature reserve with views over the harbour. Easy trails for casual walkers, a small tea house at the top run by locals, and yes, actual Taiwanese macaques. Donât feed them, donât make eye contact, youâll be fine.
- Address: Shoushan Hiking Area South Entrance, Changshou Rd, Gushan District
- Easiest access: TRA to Museum of Fine Arts Station, walk ~200m west to the trailhead near Qianguang Temple. South Entrance is near Shoushan Zoo.
- Opening hours: 24 hours
- Cost: Free
10. Ruifeng Night Market
Image Credits: monkeyy dai on Google Reviews
The largest night market in Kaohsiung, with over 1,000 stalls across nearly 3,000m². This is the answer to âwhat is the biggest night market in Kaohsiungâ, and itâs where locals actually eat. Open Tuesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays â closed Monday and Wednesday, so plan ahead.
- Address: Yucheng Rd, Zuoying District, Kaohsiung City 813
- Opening hours: 5 PM to midnight (Tue, Thu, Fri, Sat, Sun)
- Nearest MRT: Kaohsiung Arena (R14)
Related Guide: Taiwan Power Plug & Socket Guide: Types, Adapters & Travel Tips
Cool And Unique Things To Do (Skip-The-Usual Picks)
11. KANSYA Japanese Tea Salon (Lingya District)
Image Credits: MICO
A genuinely serious matcha bar that just happens to be in Kaohsiung instead of Kyoto. The space is small, all light wood and paper screens, and the menu is as much a study session as a drinks list â single-origin matcha grades from named tea estates, with options to go iced, hot, or stone-milled to order in front of you.
- Order: the ceremonial-grade matcha tasting flight. If you only have one drink, go for a house matcha latte with oat milk.
- Address: No. 145-6, Guangzhou 1st St, Lingya District, Kaohsiung City 802
- Best time to go: weekday afternoon. Weekends fill up by lunch.
12. Chito Nature Education Area (Day Trip)
Image Credits: Taiwan Tourism Administration
The treetop walk almost no foreign tourist knows about. A bamboo grove turns into a wooden boardwalk through the canopy, and on a clear morning you can see all the way down to the river valley. Easy walking, kid-friendly, and almost completely empty on weekdays.
- What to expect: about 1.5 to 2 hours of total walking. Wear something with grip â boards get slippery in the wet season.
- How to get there: roughly 1.5 hours from central Kaohsiung. Easiest as part of a Klook day tour or with a rental car.
- Pair with: a Baolai Hot Spring soak on the way back.
Related Guide:
13. Tianliao Moon World
Image Credits: éŤéć
é眲
The closest Earth gets to the moon. Eroded badlands of pale grey mudstone form ridges, valleys, and crater-like basins that look genuinely lunar â locals call it ćä¸ç (yueh shijie), literally âmoon worldâ. A wooden boardwalk takes you up to a viewpoint, and at golden hour, the whole landscape glows.
- What to expect: an hour or two of easy walking. No shade, so bring water and a hat.
- Best time to go: late afternoon, an hour before sunset, especially from November to March.
- Address: No. 36, Yueqiu Rd, Tianliao District, Kaohsiung City
- Opening hours: Park accessible 24 hours; visitor information centre 10 AM to 5 PM
Related Guide:
14. Sanhe Tile Kiln
Image Credits: Klook
The last surviving Qing-Dynasty era brick kiln in Taiwan, kept alive as a working cultural site. The wood-fired Hoffman Kiln is still there, and the venue runs DIY workshops (tile painting, simple brick making), bookable on Klook and a few local platforms.
- What to do here: book the tile-painting DIY in advance via Klook or the kilnâs official site â most sessions take around 30 minutes, and you take your painted tile home.
- Best time to go: weekend morning. Afternoon slots sell out fast.
Related Guide:
15. Meinong Folk Village
Image Credits: Wikipedia
A working Hakka cultural village an hour out of the city, famous for two things: hand-painted oil-paper umbrellas (the kind you see on every Taiwan postcard) and lei cha, a pounded tea-and-grain drink the Hakka community has been making for generations.
- What to expect: umbrella-painting workshops, lei cha-making demos, a small museum on Hakka tobacco-curing barns, and a row of food stalls doing Hakka classics like ban tiao (flat rice noodles) and salty rice balls.
- Order to eat: ban tiao soup with pork and a side of stir-fried Hakka stinky tofu.
- Pair with: Baolai Hot Springs in the afternoon. Theyâre in the same direction, and the combo is the classic Kaohsiung day-trip route.
- Address: No. 147, Section 1, Jhongsing Rd, Meinong District, Kaohsiung City 843
- Cost: Free entry to the village
- Opening hours: Generally 8:30 AM to 5 PM
Related Guide:
16. Farewell 886 (Cultural Park Of Taiwan Military Veteran Village)
Image Credits: Taiwan Tourism Administration
A preserved military dependentsâ village turned cultural heritage park. The â886â is a nod to the 886 officially registered military dependentsâ villages that once spread across Taiwan after 1949, all of which were home to families who fled mainland China. Half-museum, half-time-capsule: walk through real homes furnished with mid-century kitchens and learn the everyday history of these communities.
- What to do here: four themed exhibitions across the Mingde New Village zones cover different eras and aspects of veteran-village life.
- Best time to go: weekend afternoon, when more zones are open, and the cafes inside are running.
- Address: No. 2, 3, 4, 10 and 11, Mingde New Vil., Zuoying District, Kaohsiung City
- Opening hours: Tuesday to Friday, 11 AM to 5 PM (last entry 4:30 PM); Saturday, Sunday, and public holidays, 10 AM to 6 PM(last entry 5:30 PM). Closed Mondays.
18. E-Da Theme Park
Image Credits: Klook
A Greek-themed park in Dashu District, opened in 2010, with three main areas: Acropolis, Santorini, and Trojan Castle. Roller coasters, rides for kids and thrill-seekers, plus an attached outlet mall and hotel â easy to make a full day of it.
- What to expect: thrill rides plus kid-friendly attractions across the Greek-themed zones.
- Best time to go: weekday off-season (October to February, excluding Lunar New Year). Half the queues, same rides.
- How to get there: bus from Zuoying THSR Station or other Kaohsiung MRT stations (Gangshan, Nanzi, or Fengshan)
- Ticket prices: ~770 TWD (~S$33)
19. Baolai Hot Springs
Image Credits: éŤéć
é眲
The mountain escape Kaohsiung locals slip away to in the cooler months. The springs are sodium-bicarbonate (the type Taiwanese onsen-goers swear by for skin), and the village itself sits in a forested valley along the Laonong River â quiet, small, and big on slow weekends.
- What to do here: soak the public pools, walk the Baolai Flower Park (cherry blossoms January to February, plum blossoms in winter), or pair the trip with white-water river rafting on the Laonong (April to October).
- Best time to go: December to February. Cool air plus hot water plus cherry blossoms is the move.
- What to bring: swimsuit (mixed pools require one) and your own towel.
- Address: Liugui District, Kaohsiung City 844
- Cost: Public hot spring pool 300 TWD (~S$13) weekday / 350 TWD (~S$15) weekend. Foot bath from 100 TWD (~S$4).
20. SKM Park Outlets
Image Credits: éŤéć
é眲
The all-weather plan. Formerly Taroko Park (opened 2016, rebranded), now a sprawling outlet-mall-and-amusement-park combo on the edge of the city. Big-brand outlets, a decent food hall, the Suzuka Circuit Park (a kid-sized go-kart track licensed from Japan), and a cluster of fairground rides including a Ferris wheel.
- What to do here: outlet shop in the morning, lunch at the food hall, rides at Suzuka Circuit Park in the afternoon. Half a day is enough.
- Best time to go: rainy day, or anytime you need air-conditioning. Itâs also one of the easier evenings if youâre travelling with kids.
- Address: No. 1-1, Zhongan Rd, Qianzhen District, Kaohsiung City 80665
- Opening hours: 11 AM to 9:30 PM (weekdays), 10:30 AM to 10 PM (weekends)
- Nearest MRT: Caoya Station (R5, Red Line), Exit 2
Related Guide: SGD To TWD: How To Get The Best Taiwan Dollar Rate
What To Do In Kaohsiung At Night
Kaohsiung at night is night markets, harbour walks, and stained-glass shows. Hereâs the playbook:
- Ruifeng Night Market: The largest night market in Kaohsiung, and where locals go. Bring an empty stomach and small bills.
- Liuhe Tourist Night Market: More central and tourist-friendly than Ruifeng. The first-timerâs introduction to night-market food: stinky tofu, oyster omelette, papaya milk, grilled squid.
- Pier-2 After Dark: The Love River and harbour are lit up at night, and Pier-2 stays alive with bars, cafes, and weekend live music. Come for sunset, stay for drinks at Hamasen.
- Dome of Light Light Show: The Dome of Light has scheduled light shows on the hour after sundown. Less a âthing to doâ and more a âhappens to be on your routeâ stop.
Related Guide: 15 Fun Things To Do In Taichung City, Taiwan
What To Eat In Kaohsiung
Image Credits: MICHELIN Guide
Kaohsiung punches harder on food than Taipei does. Donât fight it â build half your itinerary around eating.
- Bei Gang Tsai Rice Tube (Michelin Bib Gourmand): A signature southern Taiwanese dish: glutinous rice steamed with braised pork in a metal tub, turned out and topped with gravy. Bei Gang Tsai Rice Tube (Yancheng) is the third-generation family stall behind it (since 1956) and is recognised in the 2025 Michelin Guide Taiwan with a Bib Gourmand. Order the soy-marinated iron egg on the side.
- Cianjin Braised Pork Rice (Lu Rou Fan): The Kaohsiung answer to lu rou fan, served bowl-after-bowl in Cianjinâs old-school eateries. Cheap, fast, ridiculously good.
- Papaya Milk: Liuhe Night Marketâs most famous drink. Fresh blended papaya plus condensed milk plus ice. Order one, regret nothing.
- Oyster Omelette & Stinky Tofu: Order at the night market. Both are non-negotiable.
- Li How Cafe: Minutes from Pier-2, perfect post-art-walk coffee
- KANSYA Japanese Tea Salon: Serious matcha in Lingya
Related Guide: 10 Affordable Leisure Farmstays In Taiwan
Things To Do In Kaohsiung With Kids
Kid-friendly Kaohsiung is easier than youâd think. The shortlist:
- Pier-2 mini train and the Transformer Robot statue
- Cijin Island ferry, plus beach, plus bike rental
- Fo Guang Shan Buddha Museum (huge open grounds, easy walking)
- Hamasen Railway Park (climb-on trains, free)
- E-Da Theme Park (full day out)
- SKM Park Outlets (Suzuka Circuit Park go-karts plus AC)
Skip Tianliao Moon World and Shoushan with very young kids â terrainâs not pram-friendly.
Related Guide: The Ultimate 7-Day Taiwan Itinerary
Day Trips From Kaohsiung
Kaohsiungâs location makes it the best day-trip base in Taiwan.
- Tainan: Taiwanâs oldest city. Temples, beef soup, old fortresses. Doable in a day, better as an overnight.
- Alishan (best as overnight): Sea of clouds, sunrise from the mountain railway, and forest trails through giant cypress. Take the THSR from Zuoying to Chiayi, then the Taiwan Tourist Shuttle bus from Chiayi HSR to Alishan. Skip the pure day trip â go up the night before, sunrise the next morning, back to Kaohsiung by afternoon.
- Taipei (1.5 hours by THSR): Yes, Taipei works as a day trip from Kaohsiung â thatâs how good the high-speed rail is. THSR Pass holders can do it round-trip without thinking about ticket prices.
Related Guide: Things to Do in Taipei: 15 Best Picks
Getting Around Kaohsiung
Kaohsiung is one of the easier cities in Taiwan to navigate.
- Kaohsiung MRT: two lines, Red and Orange, intersecting at Formosa Boulevard. Covers most major sights.
- Light Rail (Circular Line): loops the harbour past Pier-2, Hamasen, and the Dream Mall.
- EasyCard / iPass: tap-and-go for MRT, light rail, buses, and the Cijin ferry. Get one at the airport or any MRT station.
- Buses: fill the gaps where MRT doesnât reach.
- Kaohsiung International Airport (KHH): on the Red Line (Station R4). About 16 minutes to Formosa Boulevard (central). Easier than Taoyuan in every way.
- Taxis and Uber: widely available, metered, and cheap.
If youâve got an EasyCard from Taipei, it works here too.
How To Pay In Kaohsiung Without Getting Stung On FX
A few honest realities for paying in Taiwan as a Singaporean:
- Night markets, temples, and small eateries are still cash-first. Pull TWD before you head out.
- MRT, 7-Eleven, FamilyMart, and chain cafes accept contactless, but smaller spots donât.
- Currency exchange at money changers in SG is fine, but the rateâs not always great. ATM withdrawals at Taiwan banks (Taishin, CTBC, E.SUN) are usually cheaper if your card supports it.
- Foreign-issued credit cards often add 3 to 3.5% in FX and DCC fees you only notice on the statement.
This is where a multi-currency travel wallet pays for itself. With YouTrip, you lock in the live TWD rate at point of payment, with zero FX fees. You can also withdraw foreign currency from ATMs free up to S$400 per calendar month (2% fee thereafter), which is exactly what night-market Kaohsiung needs.
If youâre still using a plain bank card, youâre leaving money on the table.
FAQ
Q: What is Kaohsiung famous for?
Kaohsiung is famous for being Taiwanâs biggest port city, the Pier-2 Art Center, the Dragon and Tiger Pagodas at Lotus Pond, the Dome of Light at Formosa Boulevard Station (described as the worldâs largest public art installation made from individual pieces of coloured glass), and Ruifeng Night Market.
Q: How many days is enough for Kaohsiung?
Two to three days for the city itself. Add another two if youâre using Kaohsiung as a base for Tainan or Alishan.
Q: Where should I go in Kaohsiung first?
Start with Pier-2 Art Center, Lotus Pondâs Dragon and Tiger Pagodas, the Dome of Light, and Ruifeng Night Market. Thatâs the headline four.
Q: Where to stay in Kaohsiung for first-timers?
Yancheng District (near Pier-2) for indie vibes, or near Formosa Boulevard MRT for transport convenience.
Q: What is the biggest night market in Kaohsiung?
Ruifeng Night Market in Zuoying District is consistently described as one of the largest and most popular in Kaohsiung, with hundreds of food stalls. Verify exact opening days and hours via the official Kaohsiung Tourism site before visiting.
Q: What is the coldest month in Kaohsiung Taiwan?
January, with average temperatures around 18°C and lows near 16°C. Pack a light jacket for evenings.
Q: Is Kaohsiung worth visiting?
Yes â especially if youâve already seen Taipei, want better night-market food, or are planning a Tainan or Alishan trip.
Q: How do I get from Taipei to Kaohsiung?
The Taiwan High Speed Rail (THSR) is the fastest, getting to Zuoying in about 1.5 to 2 hours, with a Standard Class one-way fare of 1,490 TWD (~S$65). TRA Tze-Chiang express trains are slower (3.5 to 5.5 hours) but much cheaper at around 843 TWD (~S$37) and arrive in the city centre.
Q: What should I eat in Kaohsiung?
Bei Gang Tsai Rice Tube (Yancheng) for tube rice (Michelin Bib Gourmand), Cianjin braised pork rice, papaya milk at Liuhe Night Market, oyster omelette, and stinky tofu.
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