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🗓 Shanghai Itinerary · 5 Days 4 Nights · 2026

Shanghai Without the Rush —
5 Days That Cover Everything

The Bund at dusk, a full day inside Disneyland's biggest castle, 30 minutes by bullet train to UNESCO gardens in Suzhou, and the tree-canopied lanes of the French Concession — this plan misses nothing.

Why 5 days?

Shanghai rewards the traveller who slows down

Most people who do Shanghai in 3 days come back wishing they had more time. The city has layers — the famous ones you can see on a postcard, and then the real ones: the crumbling Art Deco doorways in the French Concession, the elderly couples doing tai chi in Jing'an Park, the coffee shop tucked behind a courtyard wall with no sign outside. Five days gives you the postcard and the city underneath it.

This plan is explicitly different from a 3-day itinerary — it includes a full unrushed day at Shanghai Disneyland (Day 3, the one most short trips skip) and a high-speed rail escape to Suzhou's classical gardens (Day 4, half an hour away). If you only have 3 days, see our 3-day Shanghai plan instead.

Before you book your hotel, read the where to stay guide — which neighbourhood you pick shapes how convenient each day of this plan feels.

5 Days · 4 Nights Full Disneyland Day Suzhou by HSR — 30 min Budget ¥1,800–3,200/person
1
Day 1
The Bund, Yu Garden, Pudong and the Waterfront at Night
The Bund in Shanghai — colonial-era facades facing the Pudong skyline across the Huangpu River
🌅 Morning
Start gently — head to Yu Garden (豫园) right when it opens at 09:00 (admission ¥40/~US$5.50). The Ming-dynasty garden is genuinely beautiful before the midday crowds arrive: whitewashed walls, ornamental rockeries, a zigzag bridge over a carp pond. The surrounding Yuyuan Bazaar is free to enter — grab a basket of soup dumplings (xiaolongbao 小笼包) from one of the stalls in the lane, ideally at Nanxiang Mantou Dian where the queue moves quickly. Take Metro Line 10 to Yuyuan Garden Station.

☀️ Afternoon
Walk 15 minutes north to The Bund (外滩) — Shanghai's most recognisable waterfront, lined with 52 buildings in styles ranging from Beaux-Arts to Art Deco, most built in the 1920s and 1930s. Cross the river on the pedestrian ferry (¥2) to Lujiazui / Pudong and ride up to Shanghai Tower Sky Walk (floor 118) at 546 metres — ticket ¥180 (~US$25), book online to avoid queues. If you want the Oriental Pearl Tower in your frame, the SWFC observation deck (floor 100) gives that angle instead. Take Metro Line 2 to Lujiazui Station.

🌙 Evening
Return to the Bund side around dusk — this is when Shanghai is at its most theatrical. The colonial facades catch the last warm light while Pudong's towers ignite across the water. Walk the full 1.5 km Bund Promenade and choose dinner in the area: the lanes around Xintiandi (a 10-minute walk) have everything from Shanghainese classics to Japanese and international options. See our Shanghai food guide for specific picks.
Tip: Shanghai Tower tickets sell out fast on weekends. Book at least 2–3 days ahead online. For a free Pudong view with no queue, the Bund Promenade itself at night is hard to beat.
2
Day 2
Nanjing Road, Tianzifang, Xintiandi and the French Concession
Tianzifang in Shanghai's French Concession — narrow alleys, brick walls and colourful independent shops
🌅 Morning
Start at People's Square (人民广场) and the Nanjing Road Pedestrian Mall (南京路步行街) — China's busiest shopping street, 1.2 km car-free. Morning is the best time: fewer people, shopkeepers setting up, the old department stores quiet. From here, walk into the Shanghai Museum (上海博物馆) — free entry, world-class collection of Chinese bronzes, ceramics and calligraphy. Allow 1.5 hours. Take Metro Lines 1, 2 or 8 to People's Square Station.

☀️ Afternoon
Head to Tianzifang (田子坊) — a former factory district inside the French Concession now threaded with galleries, ceramic studios, independent coffee shops and design boutiques. Free to enter; just wander. Then walk 10 minutes to Xintiandi (新天地), a block of restored Shikumen (石库门) stone-gate houses converted into restaurants, bars and concept stores — the architecture is original, the tenants are very much 21st century. Take Metro Line 10 to Xintiandi Station.

🌙 Late Afternoon & Evening
Give the evening to the deeper French Concession — specifically Wukang Road (武康路) and Fuxing Road (复兴路). These plane-tree-lined streets, with their French villas, café terraces and neighbourhood bookshops, are what Shanghai residents point to when they say their city is different from every other place in China. There's no schedule here: find a corner table, order something cold, watch the street. Choose dinner from the dense cluster of restaurants between Huaihai Road and Fuxing Road.
Coffee note: The Jing'an and French Concession neighbourhoods together are among the most coffee-dense areas in the world — M Stand, % Arabica and dozens of single-origin independents. See our Shanghai café guide for the ones worth seeking out.
3
Day 3 — The Big One
Shanghai Disneyland — the World's Largest Disney Castle, All Day
Shanghai Disneyland's Enchanted Storybook Castle, the tallest and largest Disney castle in any park worldwide
🏰 All Day — needs advance planning
Shanghai Disneyland is the largest Disney park in Asia, anchored by the Enchanted Storybook Castle — taller and more elaborate than any other Disney castle anywhere in the world. The park has 7 themed lands: Mickey Avenue, Gardens of Imagination, Fantasyland, Adventure Isle, Treasure Cove, Toy Story Land and Tomorrowland.

Getting there: Take the Metro to Longyang Road Station, then transfer to the dedicated Disney Resort Line (the small shuttle metro, included in your Metro card) — about 1 hour from central Shanghai. Plan to arrive at opening time.

Tickets: ¥475–635 (~US$65–87) per person per day, depending on date. Book in advance at disneylandshanghai.com — weekend and holiday tickets sell out weeks ahead.

Don't miss: TRON Lightcycle Run (bikes launch outdoors on a roller-coaster track — queue first thing or buy Lightning Lane) · Roarin' Rapids · Soarin' Over the Horizon · Seven Dwarfs Mine Train · the Enchanted Storybook Castle walkthrough and show schedule

Lightning Lane: Open the Shanghai Disneyland app immediately on entry and grab a Lightning Lane slot for TRON — it's the park's longest queue and the slot fills within minutes of opening.
Sleep near the park? If you want to be first through the gates, see our 7 hotels near Shanghai Disneyland — includes both the official on-resort hotels (Shanghai Disneyland Hotel, Toy Story Hotel) and better-value off-resort options a short ride away.
4
Day 4 — Out of the City
Suzhou by High-Speed Rail — UNESCO Gardens 25 Minutes Away
Suzhou classical garden — pavilions, ornamental rockeries and a still pond reflecting the sky, UNESCO World Heritage Site
🚄 Morning — Train and Arrival
Head to Shanghai Hongqiao Station (虹桥站) via Metro Lines 2 or 10. Board a G or D train to Suzhou Station (苏州站) — journey time 25–30 minutes. A 2nd-class ticket costs ¥40 (~US$5.50) each way. Buy through the 12306 app (available in English) or the station counter; your passport number is required when purchasing and at the ticket gate.

From Suzhou station, head straight to the Humble Administrator's Garden (拙政园) — the largest classical garden in the city and a UNESCO World Heritage site. Admission ¥90 (~US$12.50). Built in the Ming dynasty around 1509, the garden is a complex arrangement of pavilions, covered walkways, stone bridges and lotus ponds. Allow at least 1.5–2 hours.

☀️ Afternoon — Pingjiang Road
Walk to Pingjiang Road (平江路) — a Song-dynasty canal street where whitewashed houses lean over narrow waterways. Teahouses sell jasmine tea, silk shops display bolts of fabric, and a bowl of Suzhou-style noodles from a street stall runs about ¥15. The atmosphere is quieter than anything comparable in Shanghai. If you have energy, Lion Grove Garden (狮子林) is nearby — ¥30, famous for its surreal limestone rockery maze.

🚄 Evening — Return to Shanghai
Trains back to Hongqiao run every 15–20 minutes throughout the evening — no need to rush or pre-book the return leg. Back in Shanghai, a late dinner around Nanjing Road or near your hotel is the easy call before the final day.
Alternative — Hangzhou (杭州): If you'd rather a lake than a garden city, swap Day 4 for Hangzhou — West Lake (西湖) is UNESCO-listed, and the G train takes about 1 hour (¥73/~US$10 each way). Leave earlier. Both are covered in detail in our day-trips guide. For buying tickets: China high-speed rail guide.
🚄
China High-Speed Rail
Book your own HSR tickets with the 12306 app — no agent needed
Full guide →
5
Day 5
Jing'an Temple, a City Park, the Shanghai Museum and a Slow Goodbye
Jing'an Temple in Shanghai — gilded Buddhist halls surrounded by skyscrapers in the middle of the city
🌅 Morning — An Unhurried Start
The last morning calls for Jing'an Temple (静安寺) — a working Buddhist temple whose gilded halls sit directly between skyscrapers, the contrast as striking as anything in the city. Admission ¥50 (~US$7). Come early; local worshippers arrive before the tourist coaches, and the incense smoke and chanting are genuinely atmospheric rather than performative. Take Metro Lines 2 or 7 to Jing'an Temple Station.

Step out to the small Jing'an Park directly opposite the temple — free, and one of the best places in Shanghai to watch the morning routine: ballroom dancers, chess players, grandparents with toddlers.

☀️ Afternoon — Choose Your Exit
The final afternoon is yours. Three honest options:

If you like contemporary art: The Power Station of Art (上海当代艺术博物馆 PSA) on the West Bund is China's largest contemporary art museum — a converted power plant with a permanent collection and rotating international shows. Most exhibitions are free; ticketed specials vary.

If you want to shop: Return to Nanjing Road or cross to Huaihai Road (淮海路) in the French Concession, where Chinese designer labels sit alongside international brands and vintage stores that are genuinely good.

If you're ready to breathe: A long coffee in a French Concession side street, watching the plane trees and the slow afternoon light, is not a bad way to end a Shanghai trip.

✈️ Departure
Shanghai has two airports. Hongqiao (SHA) handles domestic flights (Metro Lines 2/10, ~40 minutes from central). Pudong (PVG) handles international departures — take Metro Line 2 (~70 minutes) or the Maglev from Longyang Road Station (¥50, 8 minutes at 431 km/h — worth it once). Allow at least 2.5–3 hours before your flight, more during peak travel periods.
Last-minute gifts: Super Brand Mall (正大广场) in Lujiazui stays open late and stocks everything from silk tea sets to local snacks — convenient if Pudong Airport is your exit.
Before You Go

Where to Stay and How to Get Around

🏨
Which Neighbourhood for This Plan
For this itinerary, staying on the Puxi (西) side — specifically around Jing'an or People's Square — makes the most sense. Days 1, 2 and 5 are all in Puxi. Day 3 (Disneyland) takes Line 11 from anywhere in central Shanghai. Day 4 connects via Line 2/10 to Hongqiao Station for the HSR.

One alternative worth considering: book a Disneyland-area hotel for Day 2 night → Day 3, so you can walk into the park at opening. Then return to Puxi for the last two nights.
Mid-range: Kerry Hotel · Middle House · Fairmont Peace Hotel Budget: JI Hotel People's Square · Atour Bund · ibis Styles Nanjing Road Full neighbourhood guide →
🚇
Shanghai Metro — Lines You'll Actually Use
Shanghai's metro is clean, fast, well-signed in English and covers every stop in this itinerary. Fares ¥3–8 per trip. Key lines:

Line 10 — Yu Garden Station · Xintiandi Station
Lines 1/2/8 — People's Square (Nanjing Road, Shanghai Museum)
Line 2 — Lujiazui (Pudong), Hongqiao Station (HSR), Pudong Airport
Line 11 — Disney Resort Station
Lines 2/7 — Jing'an Temple Station
Payment: Shanghai Transport Card (buy at any station) · Alipay · WeChat Pay Navigation: Amap (高德地图) is far more accurate in Mainland China than Google Maps
Budget

What 5 Days in Shanghai Actually Costs

Figures below are per person per day, excluding flights and travel insurance. Accommodation uses mid-range hotels (¥500–900/night/room). Two people sharing a room halve the accommodation figure significantly.

Item Days 1–2
(City)
Day 3
(Disney)
Day 4
(Suzhou)
Day 5
(Easy)
Accommodation (per person) ¥500–900
~US$69–124
¥500–900 ¥500–900 ¥500–900
Admission ¥40–180
~US$5.50–25
¥475–635
~US$65–87
¥90–120
~US$12–17
¥0–50
~US$0–7
Metro / HSR ¥15–30 ¥25–40 ¥80–100
(HSR return included)
¥10–50
Food ¥150–300 ¥200–350
(park dining)
¥100–200 ¥150–300
Total / person / day ¥700–1,400 ¥1,200–1,925 ¥770–1,320 ¥660–1,300
5-day total per person (estimate): ¥4,000–7,500 (~US$550–1,030) including accommodation, admissions, food and rail. Budget travellers (hostel + street food + free museums): ¥1,800–2,800 (~US$250–390). Luxury (5-star + riverside dinners): ¥8,000+ (~US$1,100+).

See all hotel options at Top 10 Shanghai Hotels or 8 Best Budget Hotels in Shanghai.

Plan Further

Read Before You Go

Less time? See the 3-Day Shanghai Itinerary — the city-core highlights in a compact, fast-moving plan.
Frequently Asked Questions

Before Your 5-Day Shanghai Trip

Is 5 days enough for Shanghai?
Five days is genuinely comfortable — you can cover every major highlight (The Bund, Pudong, French Concession, Disneyland, Suzhou) without feeling rushed, and still have time to sit in a café and watch the city rather than constantly move through it. For a shorter trip, see the 3-day plan.
How far in advance should I book Disneyland tickets?
At least 2–4 weeks ahead for weekends and holidays, and always in advance for Chinese national holidays (Golden Week in early October is especially busy). Book through disneylandshanghai.com. Tickets run ¥475–635 (~US$65–87) per person. Turning up at the gate without a ticket on a busy day risks being turned away.
How do I take the train from Shanghai to Suzhou?
Take the Metro to Shanghai Hongqiao Station (Lines 2 or 10), then a G or D high-speed train to Suzhou Station — 25–30 minutes, ¥40 (~US$5.50) for 2nd class. Use the 12306 app (English available) or buy at the station counter with your passport. Trains run every 15–20 minutes. Full instructions in the China high-speed rail guide.
When is the best time of year to visit Shanghai?
March–May and September–November are ideal — mild temperatures (15–25°C), low humidity, trees in full leaf. June–August is hot and muggy (35°C+ with high humidity). December–February is cold and occasionally grey, but Lunar New Year and the Spring Festival lights make it worth considering if the dates work.
Do I need a VPN in Shanghai?
If you use Google Maps, Instagram, WhatsApp or similar services, download and test a VPN before leaving home — you cannot install VPN apps inside Mainland China. For navigation, Amap (高德地图) works without a VPN and is more accurate than Google Maps in China anyway. WeChat and Alipay work normally without a VPN.
Which metro lines do I need for this 5-day plan?
Line 10 (Yu Garden, Xintiandi), Lines 1/2/8 (People's Square, Nanjing Road), Line 2 (Lujiazui/Pudong, Hongqiao Station for HSR, Pudong Airport), Lines 2/7 (Jing'an Temple), and Line 11 (Disney Resort Station). A Shanghai Public Transport Card or Alipay/WeChat Pay covers all of them — no cash needed at turnstiles.
Klook · Shanghai Activities

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Klook has tickets for most of this itinerary — skip the queue for Shanghai Tower, book Disneyland dates ahead, and find guided day trips to Suzhou and Hangzhou with transfers included.

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