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🍢 Night Market Deep-Dive · Updated 2026

Taipei's Most Famous Night Market —
A Deep-Dive into Shilin 2026

A chicken cutlet bigger than your hand sizzling in the wok, oyster-omelette steam curling against the neon, order numbers shouted down the lane — we walk you through Taipei's biggest and most famous night market: which station to use, how to navigate it, what to eat at which stall, and when to dodge the crush.

The Opening

Taipei's Flagship MarketThe Biggest, the Most Famous, Buzzing Every Night

Ask anyone in Taipei which night market you have to see at least once, and the first answer is almost always Shilin (士林夜市) — not because it's the tastiest, but because it's the legend. The market grew out of a daytime produce market formally established in 1909 by an old wharf on the Keelung River, where farm goods from the Shilin area were shipped across the city. At its heart still stands the Cixian Temple, a Matsu temple more than two centuries old — and it was the lanes around that temple courtyard that became the cradle of Shilin's evening food stalls.

Today Shilin is the biggest and most recognised night market in Taipei, a sprawling web of lanes around Danan and Wenlin roads, plus a freshly renovated indoor underground food court. You'll find street-food stalls, clothing shops, goldfish-scooping games, claw machines and several Michelin Bib Gourmand stalls. Honest truth: it's also the most tourist-heavy market in the city, and prices run a touch higher than smaller local markets. But if it's your first trip to Taipei, this is the most complete street-food crash course you'll find in one place — and this guide will help you eat every step of it well.

🎡
The biggest market
A sprawling web of lanes plus an indoor underground food court — graze all night
🚇
Reachable by MRT
Jiantan Station on the Red Line, a short walk across the road (not Shilin Station)
Michelin-listed stalls
Several Shilin stalls carry a Michelin Bib Gourmand seal
🍗
Home of giant fried chicken
Hot-Star's world-famous cutlet, bigger than your hand, was born here
A lane of food stalls inside Shilin Night Market, Taipei, at night
A food lane in Shilin — stalls down both sides, the whole alley thick with charcoal smoke and broth steam.
Crowds of visitors walking shoulder to shoulder through Shilin Night Market, Taipei
Weekend nights at Shilin really are packed — especially the lanes in front of Cixian Temple, the densest spot.
Getting There · When to Go

Which MRT Stationand What Time to Show Up Without the Crush

The number-one mistake visitors make is getting off at the wrong station — remember that Shilin Night Market means Jiantan Station, not Shilin Station.

🚆 Getting There

  • 🚇Take the Red Line (Tamsui–Xinyi) to Jiantan Station (劍潭), Exit 1 — leave the station and cross the Jihe-Wenlin intersection; the southern tip of the market is a 2–3 minute walk away.
  • ⚠️Not Shilin Station, which is one stop further on. Get off there and you face a walk of more than a kilometre — this is the single most common visitor mistake.
  • 🅿️About 15 minutes by MRT from Songshan Airport · about 12 minutes from Taipei Main Station.
  • 🏨Stay near Taipei Main Station, Zhongshan or Ximending and ride the MRT in — no taxi needed.

🕕 Hours · Best Time to Visit

  • 📅Open every day, no closing day — stalls open from around 4 PM and many keep going until midnight or 1 AM, with some famous ones until 2 AM.
  • The sweet spot is 5–7 PM — stalls are all open but the crowds haven't built; comfortable for photos and short queues.
  • 👥Peak crush is roughly 7–10 PM, especially Friday and Saturday nights and long holidays. Go on a weekday if you dislike crowds.
  • 🚇The last MRT runs around midnight — plan your return, or budget for a taxi.
💡

Foodie tip: If you're in a group, split up and queue at different stalls, then regroup to share — you'll taste far more without standing in line one stall at a time. And don't fill up at the first stall: the best bites are waiting several lanes deeper.

Know the Layout

Shilin Is Not One ZoneWalk It Right and You'll Eat More

Shilin splits into several zones with distinctly different characters — knowing the layout helps you plan a smart eating route.

An open-air street-food lane inside Shilin Night Market, Taipei
Zone 1 Open-air food lanes

The web of lanes around Danan and Jihe roads is the heart of the market — street-food stalls down both sides, real atmosphere, real smoke. Many foodies prefer eating here; the deeper back lanes often hide local stalls where Taiwanese diners queue.

Zone 2 Cixian Temple courtyard

Around the old Matsu temple at the market's centre — always the most congested spot, with several well-known stalls clustered nearby. Brace yourself for the crowds.

The market zone and crowds at Shilin Night Market, Taipei, in the evening
Zone 3 Underground food court (B1)

An indoor food hall beneath the market building, reopened in April 2025 after renovation — an air-conditioned space with stalls along the walls, central seating and a buzzer system for your order. Great when it rains or you want to sit down. Heads-up: some stalls down here can be pushy with touts, so check menus and prices before you order.

Zone 4 Clothing · games · arcades

The Wenlin Road stretch and covered arcades are packed with youth-fashion shops, shoes, claw machines and dart and goldfish-scooping games — fun for families and couples.

Signature Dishes · Famous Stalls

8 Things to Eat at ShilinThat You Absolutely Cannot Miss

Hand-picked signature dishes with rough prices, plus the famous stall names to look for — prices shift with ingredients and season.

🍗~TWD 80–100

Giant fried chicken cutlet

Hot-Star Large Fried Chicken

A chicken breast pounded thin and wide — bigger than your hand — battered, deep-fried crisp and dusted with chilli and pepper. The dish that made Shilin world-famous.

Original stall: Hot-Star (豪大大雞排), open roughly 3 PM to midnight; the queue is long but moves fast.
🥩~TWD 120–180

Flame-grilled cube steak

Teppanyaki Cube Steak

Diced beef seared on a scorching hotplate in black sauce, served with a fried egg and noodles on a still-sizzling iron platter. A Shilin signature image for decades.

Where to find it: hotplate-steak stalls are scattered around — pick the one with the longest local queue.
🦪~TWD 60–100

Oyster omelette

Oyster Omelette · 蚵仔煎

Egg fried with sweet-potato starch for a chewy, gooey body, small fresh oysters tucked inside, finished with a sweet orange-red sauce. Taiwan's classic surf-and-turf, best in cooler months.

Famous stall: Zhong Cheng Hao (忠誠號) in the underground food court — oyster omelette around TWD 60–70.
🍜~TWD 50–80

Thick vermicelli soup

Mee Sua · 麵線

Soft, fine mee sua noodles in a thick, glossy broth — order it plain or loaded with squid, oyster or pork intestine. Hot, easy to slurp, and genuinely good.

Michelin-listed: A Hui Mee Sua (阿輝麵線) holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand.
🧀~TWD 40–60

Fried stinky tofu

Stinky Tofu · 臭豆腐

Fermented tofu fried until crisp outside and soft within, served with tangy pickled vegetables to cut the richness. Pungent in smell, milder in taste than you'd expect — a Taiwanese favourite and a traveller's rite of passage.

Tip: choose a stall with a local queue so the tofu is fresh and fried to order.
🌪️~TWD 50–70

Tornado potato

Tornado Potato

A whole potato cut into one long spiral, skewered and deep-fried crisp, then dusted with your choice of seasoning — cheese, seaweed, barbecue. A photogenic, fun snack that teens love.

Where to find it: fried-snack stalls along the lanes — spot the spiralled potato on a stick.
🌭~TWD 40–70

Taiwanese sausage

Taiwanese Sausage · 香腸

A sweet-savoury pork sausage charcoal-grilled until fragrant, eaten with thin slices of raw garlic the local way — or ordered as the "small sausage in a big sausage," wrapped in a sticky-rice sausage.

Try this: Da Chang Bao Xiao Chang (大腸包小腸) — sticky rice wrapped around the sausage, Shilin-style.
🥭~TWD 60–120

Fresh juice & mango shaved ice

Fresh Juice & Mango Shaved Ice

Whole cups of fresh-blended fruit juice, sweet and cooling, plus shaved ice piled with ripe mango and condensed milk — the light, refreshing finish after a night of fried snacks.

Tip: pick a stall that blends to order and look for fresh fruit before you buy.
Insider Tips

6 Tipsto Eat Shilin Well and Not Get Short-Changed

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Always carry small cash
Nearly all street stalls are cash only — keep small notes and coins handy. ATMs are in the convenience stores around the market and inside Jiantan Station.
🕕
Arrive 5–7 PM
Stalls are all open but the crowds haven't built. After 7 PM the temple lanes get so packed that walking slows and photos get tricky.
🥢
Order small, share around
Don't fill up at the first stall. Order little and often, walk and graze — you'll try far more without getting full too soon.
👀
Check prices before ordering
Shilin is a tourist market, so prices run slightly higher than local ones — especially in the underground food court where some stalls can be pushy. Check the price sign before you commit.
📅
Skip Friday and Saturday nights
Weekends and long holidays get so crowded that walking slows to a shuffle. Go Monday to Thursday for an easier walk and faster queues.
🍢
Follow the local queue
A queue of Taiwanese diners is a reliable sign of a good stall, and many Michelin Bib Gourmand stalls display a seal you can spot.
Plan Ahead

Fit ShilinInto Your Taipei Trip

See the other night markets, open the full city guide, or pair it with daytime sights.

🌃

Taipei Night Markets Guide

Compare 8 of Taipei's night markets — which is best, what to eat, and when to dodge the crowds.

See the night markets guide →
🏙️

Taipei City Guide

The full picture of Taipei across every tab — where to stay, eat, see, plan and prepare.

Open the Taipei guide →
📍

Top 10 Taipei Attractions

Taipei 101, Longshan Temple, the Palace Museum and more — daytime sights before a night-market crawl.

See Taipei attractions →
🟠 Klook

🥟 Shilin Night Market Food Tour on Klook
Guided, English

Navigate Shilin like a local on a guided English food tour — your guide takes you past the tourist traps straight to the legendary stalls for oyster vermicelli, XXL popcorn chicken, stinky tofu and freshly made sugar cakes. Small group, 2–3 hours, no reservation chaos.

🛒 Check Price on Klook →
Wherebest is a Klook affiliate partner — we may earn commission at no extra cost to you
Frequently Asked

What to Know BeforeYou Take On Shilin Night Market

Which MRT station do I use for Shilin Night Market?
Take the Red Line (Tamsui–Xinyi) to Jiantan Station and use Exit 1, then cross the Jihe-Wenlin intersection — the market's southern tip is a 2–3 minute walk away. Do not get off at Shilin Station, which is one stop further. Many visitors get off there because of the name and end up with a walk of more than a kilometre — just remember "Shilin Night Market means Jiantan."
What days and hours is Shilin Night Market open?
It's open every day with no closing day. Stalls start opening around 4 PM, the market is in full swing by about 7 PM, and many stalls keep going until midnight or 1 AM, with some famous stalls until 2 AM. Most of the market is closed during the daytime, so come in the evening — and leave time to catch the last MRT around midnight.
What is the underground food court and how is it different from the street level?
The underground food court (the Shilin Market food court, level B1) is an indoor food hall beneath the market building. It reopened in April 2025 after a major renovation and is now an air-conditioned space with stalls along the walls, central seating and a buzzer system that tells you when your order is ready — handy when it rains or you want to sit. The street level above is open-air lanes with a more authentic market feel, and many serious foodies prefer eating up top. Note that some underground stalls can be pushy with touts, so check menus and prices before ordering.
What are the must-try dishes at Shilin and how much do they cost?
Must-try dishes include the giant Hot-Star fried chicken cutlet (about TWD 80–100), flame-grilled cube steak, oyster omelette, thick mee sua noodle soup from a Michelin-listed stall, stinky tofu, tornado potato, Taiwanese sausage and fresh fruit juice. Most dishes cost TWD 50–120, and a budget of TWD 400–600 per person lets you graze across several stalls comfortably. Prices shift with ingredients and season.
Does Shilin Night Market accept credit cards?
Almost all street stalls are cash only, so carry small notes and coins. There are ATMs in the convenience stores around the market and inside Jiantan Station. Some underground food court stalls may accept EasyCard, but not all of them — the safest bet is to bring enough cash.
When should I visit Shilin to avoid the crowds?
Avoid Friday and Saturday nights and long holidays, when it gets so packed you can barely move. Visit on a weekday (Monday to Thursday) between 5 and 7 PM for the most comfortable walk — stalls are open but the crowds haven't built up yet. The Danan Road lanes in front of Cixian Temple are always the most congested spot. For a more local, less touristy atmosphere, try Raohe or Ningxia in our Taipei Night Markets Guide.
Ready to Go

Stay Near an MRT Station
and Eat Shilin Every Night

Pick a hotel around Taipei Main Station, Zhongshan or Ximending for an easy Red Line ride to Shilin. Open the full Taipei city guide to plan every meal, or start browsing hotels now.

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