Canton. The word sounds like Guangdong because it comes from the Portuguese attempt to pronounce it. For 2,000 years this city was China’s primary interface with the world: silk and porcelain going out, spices and silver coming in. Cantonese cuisine, the most globally recognized form of Chinese cooking, was refined here in the teahouses of the old city.
The UNESCO Silk Roads listings include Guangzhou as the primary Chinese maritime terminus. Most international visitors skip it entirely. They are flying past the city that invented what they think of as Chinese food.
At a Glance
| Item | Detail |
| Best months | October to November. March to May. Avoid summer heat and Canton Fair peaks. |
| Canton Fair | April and October. Fills hotels and raises prices. Check dates before booking. |
| Must do | Morning dim sum at 8am. Shamian Island. Pearl River cruise at night. |
| To Hong Kong | G-train from Guangzhou South: 47 min. Faster than any other option. |
| Getting around | Metro Line 1 and Line 2 cover most tourist sites. English signage. |
| Stay near | Beijing Road or Liwan District for dim sum culture. Tianhe for modern city. |
Dim Sum: The Reason to Come
Guangzhou invented dim sum. Not in the sense of originating a style of cooking, but in the sense of creating a specific social ritual around small dishes and tea that has been practiced in this city’s teahouses since the 13th century. The ritual is called yum cha (饮茶): literally ‘drinking tea,’ but meaning the entire practice of spending a morning with family or colleagues over basket after basket of small dishes.
The operating principle is 一盅两件 (one cup, two items): keep the tea hot, keep the food coming, do not rush. Full dim sum guide: Dim Sum in Guangzhou.
Where to go
- Tao Tao Ju (陶陶居, est. 1880): The most historic dim sum restaurant in Guangzhou. Still uses push-cart service. Red lanterns, Cantonese paintings, the atmosphere of 19th-century Canton. Arrive before 9am on weekends. Liwan District, Dishifu Road.
- Panxi Restaurant (泮溪酒家): Set in gardens beside Liwan Lake, this is the most visually beautiful dim sum setting in the city. Traditional banquet atmosphere. Push-cart service. Longjin West Road, Liwan District.
- Dian Dou De (点都德): The best-known local chain. Multiple locations across the city. Their signature red rice rolls (金莎红米肠, ¥34) are a must-order: shrimp wrapped in crispy youtiao inside a vibrant red rice roll with sesame sauce. Easier for foreigners than historic teahouses. English picture menu at some locations.
- Hongtu Hall (鸿图厅) at White Swan Hotel: Overlooking the Pearl River on Shamian Island. Michelin-recognized quality. Queue at 7:30am. The most photogenic dim sum setting in Guangzhou.
Shamian Island
Shamian (沙面) was the foreign concession area from 1861 onwards: a sandbar island where the French and British communities built their consulates, churches, banks, and mansions in European colonial style. The island is 900 metres long and 300 metres wide. Broad pedestrian avenues lined with mature ficus trees run the length of it. The buildings are cream-colored stucco over brick, with wrought iron balconies and the architectural language of tropical European colonialism.
The White Swan Hotel (first five-star hotel in China, opened 1983) stands on the Pearl River side. Shamian is walking distance from the Chen Clan Ancestral Hall and convenient to the city’s main metro network.
Chen Clan Ancestral Hall
The Chen Clan Ancestral Hall (陈家祠, Chenjia Ci) was built between 1888 and 1894 as a center for the Chen family clan across Guangdong province. It is now the Guangdong Folk Art Museum: 19 buildings in a symmetrical courtyard complex with extraordinary decorative craftsmanship throughout. The roof ridges are covered in 陶塑 (tao su): elaborate fired-clay figurines depicting historical scenes from Chinese literature and history. Entry ¥10.
Metro Line 1 to Chen Clan Academy (陈家祠) station. One of the finest examples of Lingnan decorative architecture in the world.
Canton Tower and the Pearl River
The Canton Tower (广州塔) at 600 metres is China’s second tallest structure. It stands on the southern bank of the Pearl River in the Haizhu district. The observation deck at 488 metres and the revolving restaurant below it are the main visitor experiences. At night, the tower is illuminated with changing colored lights that reflect in the Pearl River below.
The Pearl River night cruise (departing from multiple piers near Tianhe and Haizhu) gives you the river view of the illuminated city. Full evening guide: Canton Tower and Pearl River Night Guide.
Beijing Road: The Old Commercial Center
Beijing Road (北京路) is Guangzhou’s oldest commercial street, pedestrianized and lined with a mix of chain stores and local shops. At the street’s southern end, an archaeological excavation display shows the original paving stones of the street through every dynasty from Han to Qing: layers of history visible through glass panels in the pavement. The street connects to Haizhu Square and the north riverfront, both pleasant for walking in the evening.
Getting to Hong Kong
Guangzhou South station (广州南站) is the hub for the Guangzhou-Shenzhen-Hong Kong Express Rail Link. G-trains to Hong Kong West Kowloon: 47 minutes, several daily. Immigration is handled at Guangzhou South before boarding. This is significantly faster than any bus or ferry option and more convenient than flying. Metro Line 2 connects Guangzhou city center to Guangzhou South station (40 minutes). Full guide: HK to Mainland Bullet Train.
Frequently Asked Questions
For dim sum restaurants: Dim Sum in Guangzhou. For evening: Canton Tower and Pearl River Guide. For HK connection: HK Bullet Train guide.
