Beijing, China

State guide with cities, regions, and key information.

Introduction
Beijing is one of China's four direct-controlled municipalities — an administrative unit that operates at the same level as a province despite being essentially a single city. The municipality covers 16,410 square kilometres, roughly the size of Connecticut, and is almost entirely surrounded by Hebei province with Tianjin municipality to its southeast. This makes Beijing not just a city but a city-state: it governs its own urban core, suburban ring, and a mountainous rural hinterland where sections of the Great Wall trace ridgelines that form the municipality's northern boundary.

Discover Beijing

China's four direct-controlled municipalities — Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, and Chongqing — are cities administered at the provincial level, reporting directly to the central government rather than to a provincial authority. For Beijing, this means the city government controls not just the dense urban districts within the old city walls but also suburban new towns like Tongzhou (being built as a secondary administrative centre), mountainous rural counties, and agricultural land. The 16,410-square-kilometre territory divides into sixteen districts, from the dense central Dongcheng and Xicheng (which together contain the Forbidden City, Tiananmen, and most historic sites) to the mountainous Yanqing in the northwest (host of the 2022 Winter Olympics alpine events) and rural Miyun in the northeast. This administrative structure means a "Beijing" day trip to the Great Wall or the Ming Tombs never actually leaves the municipality.

Travel Types

Great Wall Exploration

Multiple wall sections within the municipality — from the polished tourism of Badaling to the wild scrambling of Jiankou — each offering a different experience of one of humanity's most extraordinary constructions.

Imperial Heritage & UNESCO Sites

The Forbidden City, Temple of Heaven, Summer Palace, Ming Tombs, and the Great Wall — Beijing municipality alone accounts for seven UNESCO World Heritage Sites, the densest concentration in China.

Megaregion Day Trips

Tianjin's treaty-port architecture in thirty minutes, Chengde's Qing summer retreat in two hours, Beidaihe's beaches in ninety minutes — high-speed rail turns the capital region into a travel hub.

Mountain Temples & Nature

Ancient Buddhist temples in the Western Hills, autumn foliage in the Fragrant Hills, countryside villages in Mentougou, and reservoir escapes in Miyun — Beijing's rural hinterland surprises.

Beijing Municipality Travel Notes
  • Beijing is a direct-controlled municipality — administratively equivalent to a province, governed directly by the central government. The Great Wall sections, Ming Tombs, and countryside escapes all fall within the municipality's borders.
  • The Forbidden City limits daily visitors and requires online booking through the Palace Museum's official platform. Book several days ahead during peak season (Golden Week, summer holidays). Allow a minimum of three hours; serious visitors return for multiple visits.
  • High-speed rail from Beijing South and Beijing West stations connects to Tianjin (30 minutes), Chengde (2 hours), Shanghai (4.5 hours), Xi'an (4.5 hours), and Guangzhou (8 hours). The intercity rail network makes Beijing an effective base for exploring northern China.
  • Air quality varies significantly by season. Autumn (September-November) typically offers the clearest skies. Winter heating season (November-March) can bring heavy pollution episodes. Spring occasionally brings Gobi Desert dust storms. Check air quality indexes and consider an N95 mask.
  • The subway system covers most tourist areas across 27 lines. Line 1 (Tiananmen, Wangfujing), Line 2 (old city ring), Line 8 (Olympic Park), and the Airport Express are the most useful for visitors. Rush hours (7-9 AM, 5-7 PM) are extremely crowded.
  • Great Wall visits: Badaling is the easiest to reach (bus 877 from Deshengmen, or S2 suburban train) but the most crowded. Mutianyu requires a bus from Dongzhimen hub. Jinshanling and Simatai are best reached by hired car or organised tour. Start early — all sections are better before 10 AM.
  • Best months: September and October for clear autumn skies, April and May for spring blossoms. Avoid Chinese New Year (January/February) and Golden Week (October 1-7) — domestic travel peaks overwhelm all attractions, hotels, and transport.
Cities in Beijing

1 city with detailed travel information