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Chinese Festivals & Holidays 2026: Plan Your Trip Around China's Best Celebrations
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Chinese Festivals & Holidays 2026: Plan Your Trip Around China's Best Celebrations

June 30, 20269 min

Spring Festival, Mid-Autumn, National Day Golden Week — when they fall in 2026, how they affect travel, and which festivals are worth planning your trip around.

核心要点

  • Rule 1: Avoid travelling during peak periods.
  • | Festival | Date (2026) | Type | Travel Impact | |----------|-------------|------|---------------| | New Year's Day (元旦) | Jan 1-3 (Sat-Mon) | Public holiday | Minor crowding | | Spring Festival (春节) | Feb 17 - Mar 3 | Major holiday | EXTREME — a...
  • Dates: Feb 17 (New Year's Day) — the celebration runs from New Year's Eve (Feb 16) through to Lantern Festival (Mar 3) What it is: China's most important holiday.
  • Dates: Oct 1-7 What it is: Celebrating the founding of the People's Republic of China.

I made my first mistake with Chinese festivals in 2008. I booked a flight to Beijing during Spring Festival — the busiest travel period on earth. The airport was chaos. Trains were sold out for weeks. I learned the hard way that knowing China's festival calendar is not optional; it's survival.

But here's the flip side: some Chinese festivals are the best time to visit. The lanterns, the food, the fireworks, the family gatherings — festivals reveal a China that everyday tourism never shows you.

This guide covers every major Chinese festival in 2026: when they fall, how they affect your travel, and which ones are worth chasing.

The Golden Rules of Chinese Festivals

Rule 1: Avoid travelling during peak periods. The three major travel rushes are Spring Festival (春运), National Day Golden Week (国庆黄金周), and Labour Day (五一). During these weeks, every train sells out, flight prices triple, and popular attractions are shoulder-to-shoulder.

Rule 2: Book everything 2-3 months in advance for peak periods. If you plan to travel during or near a major festival, book flights, trains, and hotels as early as possible.

Rule 3: Some festivals are worth the crowds. Spring Festival in a small town, Mid-Autumn Festival in a park, Chinese New Year's Eve anywhere — the atmosphere makes the crowds bearable.

2026 Festival Calendar

FestivalDate (2026)TypeTravel Impact
New Year's Day (元旦)Jan 1-3 (Sat-Mon)Public holidayMinor crowding
Spring Festival (春节)Feb 17 - Mar 3Major holidayEXTREME — avoid travel
Chinese New Year's Eve (除夕)Feb 16Family celebrationTrains fill up from Feb 10
Lantern Festival (元宵节)Mar 3TraditionalMinor — beautiful lantern displays
Qingming Festival (清明节)Apr 4-6 (Sat-Mon)Public holidayModerate — tomb sweeping
Labour Day (劳动节)May 1-5 (Fri-Tue)Golden WeekHIGH — avoid major attractions
Dragon Boat Festival (端午节)Jun 19-21 (Fri-Sun)Public holidayModerate — dragon boat races
Mid-Autumn Festival (中秋节)Sep 27 (Sun)Major holidayModerate — beautiful lanterns
National Day (国庆节)Oct 1-7 (Thu-Wed)Golden WeekEXTREME — avoid all travel
Double Ninth Festival (重阳节)Oct 28 (Wed)TraditionalMinor — climbing hills

Spring Festival (春节) — The Big One

Dates: Feb 17 (New Year's Day) — the celebration runs from New Year's Eve (Feb 16) through to Lantern Festival (Mar 3)

What it is: China's most important holiday. Families reunite, fireworks explode across every city, and the entire country shuts down for 1-2 weeks. It's the world's largest annual human migration — 3+ billion trips in a 40-day period.

Travel impact:

  • Trains sell out 2-3 weeks in advance
  • Flight prices triple
  • Many restaurants and shops close for 1-2 weeks
  • Tourist attractions are empty (locals are home with family)
  • Taxis and DiDi are hard to find
  • Should you visit during Spring Festival?

    Yes, but with strategy:

  • DO NOT travel the week before or after New Year's Day (Feb 10-24 are peak)
  • DO arrive 1+ week before and settle in one city
  • DO experience New Year's Eve in a big city — the fireworks are incredible
  • DO visit during the lull (Feb 20 - Mar 3) when crowds thin out
  • DO NOT try to visit multiple cities — pick one and stay put
  • Where to experience it:

  • Beijing — Temple fairs (庙会) at Ditan Park and Longtan Park
  • Xi'an — Tang Paradise lantern festival
  • Harbin — Ice and Snow World (runs through February)
  • Small towns — More authentic celebrations, fewer tourists
  • National Day Golden Week (国庆黄金周) — The Other Big One

    Dates: Oct 1-7

    What it is: Celebrating the founding of the People's Republic of China. Another week-long holiday where the entire country travels.

    Travel impact:

  • ALL major attractions are packed (Great Wall, Forbidden City, etc.)
  • Hotels in popular cities are booked months in advance
  • Flight and train prices at peak
  • High-speed trains sell out
  • Should you visit during Golden Week?

    Honestly: avoid it if you can. Wait a week and everything returns to normal. If you must travel:

  • Go to less popular destinations (smaller cities, countryside)
  • Book EVERYTHING 3 months in advance
  • Avoid all Tier-1 tourist attractions
  • Dragon Boat Festival (端午节) — Worth Planning For

    Dates: Jun 19-21, 2026

    What it is: Commemorates the poet Qu Yuan. Dragon boat races, zongzi (sticky rice dumplings), and drinking realgar wine.

    Where to experience it:

  • Hangzhou — West Lake dragon boat races
  • Guangzhou — Pearl River dragon boat competitions
  • Miluo River (汨罗江), Hunan — The most authentic celebrations (Qu Yuan drowned here)
  • Hong Kong (China) — International dragon boat races
  • Travel impact: Moderate. It's a 3-day weekend, so domestic tourists fill up popular spots, but it's not as bad as Golden Week.

    Mid-Autumn Festival (中秋节) — The Most Beautiful

    Dates: Sep 27, 2026

    What it is: The full moon festival. Families gather, eat mooncakes (月饼), light lanterns, and admire the moon. It's the most poetic Chinese festival.

    Where to experience it:

  • West Lake, Hangzhou — "Moon on the lake" — the most famous moon-viewing spot in China
  • Beijing — Moon-viewing at the Summer Palace or Temple of Heaven
  • Guangzhou — Lantern displays and mooncake tasting
  • Chengdu — Jinli Ancient Street with lanterns
  • Travel impact: Moderate. It's a single-day holiday (Sunday), so less travel disruption.

    Lesser-Known Festivals Worth Your Time

    Lantern Festival (元宵节) — March 3. The grand finale of Spring Festival. Massive lantern displays across every city. Xi'an's Tang Paradise and Nanjing's Confucius Temple area are spectacular.

    Qingming Festival (清明节) — April 4-6. Tomb-sweeping day, but also the start of spring. Perfect for visiting parks and countryside. Cherry blossoms in Wuhan, peach blossoms in Chengdu.

    Double Ninth Festival (重阳节) — October 28. People climb mountains and admire chrysanthemums. Great for hiking in China's scenic areas.

    Practical Festival Travel Tips

    Avoid high-speed rail during peak periods. Trains are packed, and standing-room-only tickets are sold. If you must travel, take a slower train or fly early in the morning.

    Hotels double in price during Golden Week. A ¥400 room becomes ¥800-1200. Book refundable rates and check prices early.

    Many museums are FREE during public holidays. The Forbidden City, National Museum, and others offer free entry — but you need to book weeks in advance through their WeChat mini-programs.

    Download these apps before festivals:

  • 12306 (train app) — Crucial for Spring Festival tickets
  • Trip.com — English-friendly booking for flights and hotels
  • Meituan — For food delivery (many restaurants close, but delivery keeps going)
  • Carry cash. During Spring Festival especially, some small vendors only take cash or WeChat Pay. If you don't have WeChat Pay set up, cash is essential.

    My Festival Travel Recommendations

    If you can time your trip around one festival: Mid-Autumn Festival. It's beautiful, the weather is perfect (autumn in China is stunning), and the travel disruption is minimal.

    If you want the most unique experience: Spring Festival in a small Chinese town. Try Pingyao or Lijiang — ancient towns that put on incredible traditional celebrations without the crowds of Beijing or Shanghai.

    Avoid at all costs: National Day Golden Week in Beijing, Xi'an, or Shanghai. You'll spend more time in queues than seeing anything.

    Planning your China trip and not sure about the best timing? I can help you plan around festivals — or INTO them, if that's your style. Tell me about your trip and I'll help you get the timing right.

    Related: Best Time to Visit China | China Travel Checklist 2026 | China High-Speed Train Guide | Must-Have Apps for China Travel

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