Quick Verdict
Pick Beijing for Forbidden City's 980 buildings, Mutianyu Great Wall, and Da Dong Peking duck dinners. Pick Hangzhou if West Lake at sunrise, Lingyin Temple in wooded hills, and Longjing tea villages match the calmer pace.
π Hangzhou wins 80 OVR vs 76 Β· attribute matchup 6β1
Hangzhou
China
Beijing
China
Hangzhou
Beijing
How do Hangzhou and Beijing compare?
You have a week in China and you want both the heavyweight history and the postcard scenery β Beijing or Hangzhou as your second city after Shanghai. Beijing is the imperial capital with the receipts: the Forbidden City's 980 buildings, the Mutianyu section of the Great Wall an hour out of town, Tiananmen Square, the Temple of Heaven, and hutong alleys north of the lake district where you can still find courtyard houses. It's a working capital of 22 million people, dusty in spring, freezing in winter, and the food is heavier β Peking duck at Da Dong, lamb hot pot, jianbing from carts at sunrise.
Hangzhou is the lake city the Song dynasty turned into a poem. West Lake earned UNESCO status in 2011 for the cultural landscape itself β willow-lined causeways, pagodas reflected in still water at sunrise, Lingyin Temple in the wooded hills behind, and Longjing tea villages within an hour's bicycle ride. It's $20 cheaper per day ($120 vs $100), milder year-round, and 45 minutes from Shanghai by bullet train. The food is Jiangnan delicate β Beggar's Chicken, Dongpo pork, lake fish in vinegar β and the pace is half Beijing's. You walk the Su Causeway at dawn and you understand why Marco Polo called it the finest city in the world.
Beijing is a four-day minimum if you want the Wall and the Forbidden City done properly. Hangzhou is a perfect two-day add-on after Shanghai. Pro tip: stay at a hotel on the lake's north shore (Beishan Road) β the West Lake light show fills with crowds after 6pm, and only lakeside guests can walk out at 5:30am to catch the mist alone. If you only have one and you've never been to China, Pick Beijing.
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
Hangzhou
Hangzhou is one of the safest large cities in the world β China generally has very low rates of street crime, and Hangzhou specifically (a wealthy provincial capital with a heavy CCTV and policing presence) ranks even lower than the national average. Violent crime against foreigners is essentially unheard of; pickpocketing in tourist crushes (West Lake on a public holiday, Hefang Street) does occasionally happen but is rare. The genuine practical risks are the heat (summer), the traffic on shared scooter-and-pedestrian paths, and the difficulty of operating without WeChat Pay/Alipay and a working VPN.
Beijing
Beijing is generally very safe with low violent crime rates. The main concerns for tourists are scams, pickpocketing in crowded areas, air pollution, and navigating internet restrictions.
π€οΈ Weather
Hangzhou
Hangzhou has a humid subtropical climate with four distinct seasons. Summers are genuinely brutal β July highs of 33β38Β°C with 80%+ humidity and the merciless plum rains (mΓ©iyΗ) of mid-June to mid-July, followed by typhoon season August through September. Winters are damp and cold without snow most years, and the lakeside wind cuts more than the temperature reading suggests. Spring (late March through May) and autumn (late September through early November) are the windows the city was designed for β the cherry blossoms, the West Lake mist, the autumn osmanthus, the golden ginkgo on Beishan Road. Annual rainfall around 1,500 mm; the lake reflection benefits from the clouds.
Beijing
Beijing has a continental monsoon climate with hot, humid summers and cold, dry winters. Spring can bring sandstorms from the Gobi Desert. Autumn is widely considered the best season to visit.
π Getting Around
Hangzhou
Hangzhou has a clean and rapidly expanding metro (12 lines as of 2026), the Chinese standard of cheap and reliable buses, a large fleet of metered Didi taxis, and the world's densest dock-less bike-share network β Meituan, Hellobike, and Qingju cycles are everywhere and unlock for Β₯1.5 per 30 minutes via Alipay. Around West Lake itself, walking and cycling are by far the best options; the lakeside loop is closed to private cars and pleasantly walkable. For longer trips into the suburbs or to the Liangzhu site, the metro plus a Didi at the far end is the foreigner-friendly default.
Walkability: Excellent around West Lake itself β the entire 15-km lakeside loop is pedestrian and cycle priority, with no private cars on the lakefront roads and well-paved promenades. The Hubin Road shopping district, Hefang Street, and the cathedral-bell district are similarly walkable. Outside the central lake area, distances stretch β the Liangzhu site, the airport, and Wu Zhen require metro plus Didi or an organised car. The combination of foot for the lake and Didi for everything else covers 90% of a normal Hangzhou itinerary.
Beijing
Beijing's metro is massive (27 lines, 470+ stations) and covers most tourist areas. Distances between sights can be large β combine metro with taxis or ride-hailing for efficiency.
Walkability: Moderate β individual areas like the Forbidden City surroundings and hutong neighborhoods are very walkable, but Beijing is enormous and distances between attractions are significant.
π Best Time to Visit
Hangzhou
MarβMay, SepβNov
Peak travel window
Beijing
AprβMay, SepβOct
Peak travel window
The Verdict
Choose Hangzhou if...
you want the city Marco Polo called the most beautiful in the world β UNESCO West Lake, Lingyin Temple, Leifeng Pagoda, Longjing tea fields, the Grand Canal, and a 45-minute bullet train to Shanghai
Choose Beijing if...
you want the Forbidden City, Temple of Heaven, Great Wall at Mutianyu or Jinshanling, Summer Palace, Peking duck, and hutong bike rides
Hangzhou
Beijing
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