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🇨🇳 Shanghai Accommodation Guide · 2026

Hotel by the Night or Serviced Apartment by the Month?
Picking Your Shanghai Stay

Full service vs your own front door — a straight comparison to help you decide before you book

The question before you book

How long are you staying, and what are you here for?

Here is a scenario many people hit when planning a Shanghai trip: a decent hotel runs about ¥700 a night (around ฿3,500), and a serviced apartment with a kitchen, washing machine and a separate bedroom comes in at roughly ¥12,000 a month (~฿60,000). The apartment works out cheaper per night — but it is not simply a cheaper hotel. These two options suit completely different kinds of stays.

This guide lays out the practical differences so you can decide quickly. Whether you are here for a long weekend, a three-week workation, or a three-month family secondment — the right answer depends on your situation, not on which type of accommodation sounds more appealing in the abstract.

One thing to sort out first: if you have not decided which neighbourhood to stay in yet, read the Shanghai neighbourhood guide before choosing your accommodation type. Location decisions and accommodation-type decisions interact.

Quick answer

The short version before the detail

If you had to decide right now

Short stay (up to 5 nights) · Sightseeing or business meetings · Want breakfast + daily housekeeping + 24-hour front desk Go with a per-night hotel — flexible, easy to cancel, no deposit, someone on hand at all hours. Hotels are built for travellers who want to focus on the city, not on managing domestic life.
Longer stay (2 weeks or more) · Workation or corporate secondment · Travelling with family or want a kitchen Go with a monthly serviced apartment — the weekly and monthly rates win clearly on price, a kitchen saves a fortune on eating out, and a separate living room makes a real difference after week one.
Per-Night Hotel

When full service is the whole point

The Bund, Shanghai — the riverside promenade where many of Shanghai's top hotels are located

The Bund — the historic waterfront where many of Shanghai's leading hotels are positioned

Hotels offer things a serviced apartment simply cannot match in the same way: room cleaned every single day, fresh linen, a concierge who can book a restaurant or call you a taxi at midnight, a front desk that holds your luggage when you check out early, and breakfast ready when you walk downstairs. If you are here to see the city and you do not want to think about domestic logistics — that is exactly what you are paying for.

Mid-range hotels in central Shanghai run roughly ¥500–900 per night (~฿2,500–4,500). Upper-tier properties — Kerry, Ritz-Carlton, The Middle House — start at ¥1,800–4,000+. Converted to a monthly figure, 30 nights at ¥700 comes to ¥21,000, which is well above what a comparable serviced apartment charges per month.

The flexibility point matters too. Most hotels allow free cancellation up to 24–48 hours before arrival. No deposit. No minimum stay. If your plans shift mid-trip, you can move. Serviced apartments do not offer that — once you sign, you are committed.

Nanjing Road, Shanghai — the city's main shopping boulevard with hotels throughout the area

Nanjing Road — Shanghai's central shopping boulevard, surrounded by hotels at every price point

Pros & cons
Maximum flexibility — book by the night, cancel easily, no deposit, change hotels mid-trip
Daily housekeeping, fresh linen, bins emptied — someone else handles all of it
Breakfast, concierge, 24-hour front desk — full support while you focus on the city
Central locations near Metro, The Bund, Lujiazui — made for tourists and short business trips
No large upfront deposit required
Spa, gym, pool, bar on-site — everything in one building
High per-night cost — staying a month in a mid-range hotel costs far more than a serviced apartment
No kitchen, no washing machine — eating out every meal and paying for laundry adds up fast
Rooms are typically smaller — no separate work desk, no living room for families
Monthly cost hard to predict across long stays depending on rates and availability
Monthly Serviced Apartment

When you need a temporary home, not a hotel room

A serviced apartment is not a cheaper hotel — it is a genuinely different product. A full kitchen with hob, fridge and utensils. A washing machine inside your unit. A bedroom door that closes. A sofa you can sit on without also being in bed. These things sound minor until you are on week two of a month-long stay and your hotel room feels like a very expensive cage.

On price, mid-range serviced apartments in Shanghai run roughly ¥8,000–15,000 per month (~฿40,000–75,000). Upper-tier properties by Ascott, Fraser or Shangri-La Residences sit closer to ¥18,000–35,000 per month. Break that down per night and mid-range comes to roughly ¥267–500 — meaningfully less than a comparable hotel. Cooking even a few meals a day in your apartment kitchen saves another ¥100–200 per day against eating out every meal.

What you need to know before signing: a deposit of one to two months is standard. Most brands require a minimum of seven nights, some only take monthly bookings. Breaking a lease mid-term is harder than cancelling a hotel stay. And housekeeping is once or twice a week — not daily.

Jing'an district, Shanghai — a popular neighbourhood for serviced apartments and long-stay residents

Jing'an district — one of the most popular areas in Shanghai for serviced apartments and expat long stays

Tianzifang, French Concession, Shanghai — a residential neighbourhood popular with long-stay visitors and expats

Tianzifang in the French Concession — a residential area popular with longer-stay visitors and the expat community

Pros & cons
Lower per-night cost at monthly rates — the longer you stay, the bigger the saving
Full kitchen — cooking your own meals saves ¥100–200+ per day against eating out
In-unit washing machine — no expensive hotel laundry bills
Separate bedroom, living room, work desk — real living space, not just a bed and a bathroom
Feels like a home base — better for families and long assignments
Predictable monthly cost — easier to budget for long stays
Minimum stay usually 7 nights to 1 month — not suitable for 2–3 night trips
Housekeeping once or twice a week — you handle everything else yourself
No breakfast included, no concierge — more self-reliant, less hand-holding
Deposit of 1–2 months upfront; harder to exit early if plans change
Recommended brands

Trusted serviced apartment brands in Shanghai

Shanghai's best serviced apartments are run by international brands with clear standards: Ascott (Ascott Huai Hai Rd · Ascott IFC Pudong) · Fraser (Fraser Suites Top Glory · Fraser Residence) · Somerset · Oakwood · Citadines. All have verifiable reviews, transparent lease terms, and English-speaking management. See the full ranked list below.

Side-by-side comparison

Every dimension in one table

Factor Per-Night Hotel Monthly Serviced Apartment
Typical cost (mid-range) ¥500–900/night (~฿2,500–4,500) ¥8,000–15,000/month (~฿40,000–75,000) ≈ ¥267–500/night
Minimum stay 1 night — maximum flexibility Usually 7 nights to 1 month depending on the brand
Housekeeping Daily — linen changed, room cleaned, bins emptied Once or twice a week — you manage everything else
Breakfast Often included or available to buy in the hotel Not included — you cook or eat out
Kitchen / laundry None, or at best a microwave Full kitchen with hob and fridge · in-unit washing machine
Space One room — bed + bathroom, typically 25–45 sqm Separate bedroom + living room + kitchen, 50–90+ sqm
Concierge / front desk 24-hour front desk — restaurant bookings, taxis, luggage Reception desk present but usually not 24 hours; fewer services
Deposit / contract No deposit; free cancellation common Deposit of 1–2 months; minimum lease; harder to exit early
Best for Tourists and short business trips of 1–7 nights Workations 2+ weeks · families · corporate secondments
Cost crossover

When does the apartment start winning on price?

To make it concrete: a mid-range hotel at ¥700 per night versus a comparable serviced apartment at ¥12,000 per month.

7 nights: Hotel = ¥4,900. Apartment (7/30 of ¥12,000) ≈ ¥2,800. The apartment is already cheaper on paper — though you need to factor in the deposit and setup costs for a first booking.

14 nights (2 weeks): Hotel = ¥9,800. Apartment ≈ ¥5,600. That is nearly half price. Add cooking some meals yourself at a saving of ¥150 per day and you save a further ¥2,100 over two weeks on food alone.

The honest crossover point: Roughly 5–7 days is where the monthly apartment rate starts to beat the hotel on pure nightly cost. But the hotel's flexibility (cancel anytime, no deposit) has real value if your plans are uncertain — factor that in before you decide.

Decision matrix

Which should you choose if you are...

Staying ≤5 nights to explore the city — The Bund, Yu Garden, Pudong skyline — Book a hotel. Daily cleaning, breakfast, a concierge who knows the city, and a central location are exactly what a short sightseeing trip needs. See Top 10 Shanghai Hotels for ranked options at every price.
Here for 4–5 days of business meetings near Lujiazui or Hongqiao — A business hotel near your meeting location makes the most sense. Good transport links, loyalty points, and a desk in your room. See Shanghai Business Hotels.
On a workation for 3–4 weeks — need a proper desk, reliable internet, and a kitchen — A serviced apartment is the clear answer. Predictable monthly cost, space to think, and you will not go slightly mad eating in restaurants for every single meal. See Top 8 Shanghai Serviced Apartments.
Travelling with family, staying 2–3 weeks, with kids who need a routine — Serviced apartment wins here. Separate bedrooms, a kitchen for breakfast, a washing machine for the inevitable clothing disasters. Family-friendly hotels in Shanghai are an option too for shorter stays, some with large connecting rooms.
On a corporate secondment for 1–3 months, with or without family — Serviced apartment is the obvious choice. Brands like Ascott and Fraser handle this situation constantly — monthly rates, professional management, English-speaking staff, and lease terms designed for exactly this scenario.
Not sure how long you are staying, or likely to change plans mid-trip — Start with a hotel. The flexibility of no deposit and free cancellation is worth paying a premium for when your timeline is uncertain. Once you know you are extending, look at moving to a serviced apartment for the remainder.
Frequently asked questions

FAQ · Hotel vs Serviced Apartment

Can you book a Shanghai serviced apartment for just one or two nights?
Most major serviced apartment brands in Shanghai — Ascott, Fraser, Somerset — require a minimum of seven nights, and some only take monthly bookings. If you are staying fewer than five nights, a regular hotel will be more flexible: no deposit required, free cancellation is common, and you are not locked into a lease. See budget hotel options in Shanghai for flexible short-stay picks.
At what point does a serviced apartment become cheaper than a hotel in Shanghai?
The crossover is roughly one to two weeks. Once you pass seven nights, the weekly and monthly discounts on serviced apartments start to win clearly over per-night hotel rates. Factor in the money saved by cooking some meals in your apartment kitchen — easily ¥100–200 per day — and the gap widens further. For stays under five nights, hotels win on price and flexibility combined. See top serviced apartments in Shanghai.
Which is better for families staying in Shanghai long-term — hotel or serviced apartment?
Serviced apartments are the clear choice for families staying a week or longer. Separate bedrooms, a full kitchen, an in-unit washing machine, and a living room that is not also the bedroom make daily life far more manageable. Family-friendly hotels in Shanghai work well for short stays, but for anything measured in weeks, an apartment simply feels more like a temporary home.
Do Shanghai serviced apartments include housekeeping?
Yes, but far less frequently than a hotel. Hotels clean your room every day, change the linen and empty the bins. Serviced apartments typically clean once or twice a week — some only every two weeks. If daily housekeeping is important to you, a hotel is still the better choice. See top-rated Shanghai hotels for properties known for strong housekeeping service.
Is a serviced apartment or hotel better for a workation in Shanghai?
Serviced apartments work better for workations. You get a proper desk separated from the bed, a kitchen for your own coffee and lunch, reliable internet, and a predictable monthly cost. Some buildings also have co-working space on-site. Hotels are better for short business trips of a few days where you do not need a permanent desk setup. See how to get around Shanghai to plan your commute from your chosen neighbourhood.
Are Shanghai serviced apartments more expensive than hotels?
On a per-night basis, no. A mid-range serviced apartment runs roughly ¥8,000–15,000 per month (~฿40,000–75,000), which works out to about ¥267–500 per night — less than most mid-range hotels that start at ¥500–900 per night. Add the savings from cooking in your kitchen instead of eating out every meal, and the monthly cost advantage becomes substantial. See top serviced apartments in Shanghai.