Is Beijing safe with kids?
Beijing is one of the safer megacities to visit with kids. Petty crime exists where it always does (around tourist sights, on packed transit) but violent crime targeted at travelers is rare. The actual risks for families are mundane: getting separated in crowds, jet-lag-induced exhaustion, and reading the metro map wrong. Wear bags in front, agree on a meeting point at every venue, and you'll be fine.
Read the Beijing family guide →How many days do you need in Beijing with kids?
Five days is the right answer for a megacity. Less than that with a famous-sights checklist and you spend the trip in lines; more than five and you start repeating yourself. The trick is to anchor each day on one big sight plus one easy fallback (park, food court, indoor museum), not three sights on the same metro card.
See itineraries for Beijing →When is the best time to visit Beijing with kids?
Best windows: April through June, and September through October. The peak-summer crowds in a megacity are genuinely uncomfortable with strollers and toddler nap schedules; shoulder season halves the queue at every major sight. Avoid the height of summer in tourist hotspots.
Read the full Beijing guide →What's the best neighbourhood to stay in Beijing with kids?
In a megacity, your neighbourhood matters more than your hotel. Pick somewhere walkable to a metro line that runs everywhere you'll go, with a park within five minutes. Chaoyang Park is one of the better-known answers, but the full neighbourhood guide compares all the options with stroller, food, and quiet-evening notes for each.
See all Beijing neighbourhoods →Is Beijing stroller-friendly?
Mostly yes. The metro and major sights have elevators or escalators; the harder part is the rush-hour density on the busiest sidewalks, where a small folding stroller is much easier to navigate than a full travel system. Bring a compact one and accept you'll fold it more often than at home.
Beijing survival guide →What's the best food for picky kids in Beijing?
Megacities reward picky kids: they have everything. Food halls inside major train stations and department stores are the secret weapon — kids point, you pay, everyone eats their thing. Quanjude Roast Duck (Qianmen Branch) is one of the food category's reliable picks; the full food list breaks the rest down by neighbourhood.
Family food picks for Beijing →Can you do Beijing in winter with kids?
Yes, with caveats. winter trips are workable with the right indoor plan. The trade-off in a megacity is fewer crowds at the headline sights and longer indoor stretches; build the trip around the museums and food halls and skip the open-air sights you'd save for spring.
Beijing with a toddler vs older kids?
Different trips. With a toddler, your priorities are subway elevators, parks, and a hotel within walking distance of food. With kids 8+, you can stretch the day into the evening, ride the metro across the city, and stack three sights on a single day. The full guide tags every pick by age band, so the lists shift automatically.
Beijing family guide →