Key takeaways
- The Bund is a free, open-24/7 riverside promenade — no ticket, no gate.
- Go 6:30–9pm for the night view, when both the colonial buildings and the Pudong skyline are lit.
- Take Metro Line 2 or 10 to Nanjing East Road, then a 5–7 minute walk east to the water.
- Allow 1–2 hours; many visitors come twice — once by day for the architecture, once after dark.
- Skip the ¥50 Sightseeing Tunnel and refuse the “art student” / tea-ceremony touts.
What the Bund is
The Bund — 外滩, romanized Waitan, meaning roughly “outer bank” — is a roughly 1.5 km stretch of waterfront on the west bank of the Huangpu River in central Shanghai. Behind the promenade stands a continuous row of grand buildings: banks, trading houses, consulates and hotels built mostly between the 1900s and the 1930s, when Shanghai was a treaty port and this was the financial heart of East Asia. The styles run from neoclassical to Art Deco, and the row is sometimes called a “museum of international architecture.”
Across the river is Lujiazui — the Pudong skyline, with the Oriental Pearl Tower, the Jin Mao Tower, the Shanghai World Financial Center and the Shanghai Tower. The Bund is where the Shanghai of a century ago and the Shanghai of today stand face to face, and that contrast is exactly why it is the city’s defining view.

When to go
The Bund is worth seeing twice if time allows. The three windows compared:
| Window | Why | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Evening 6:30–9pm | The headline view | Both banks lit — colonial buildings behind you, Pudong towers across the water. Busiest window; Pudong lights switch off late, so don’t arrive too late. |
| Daytime | See the architecture | Facades, the Customs House clock tower, domes and columns — all lost in the dark. |
| Early morning 7–8am | The calm alternative | Quiet promenade, locals doing tai chi and walking, soft light for photography. |

How to get there
Take Metro Line 2 or Line 10 to Nanjing East Road station (南京东路) and walk 5–7 minutes east along the pedestrian streets to the waterfront. The Bund also connects on foot to the rest of central Shanghai:
- About 800 m / 11 minutes from Yu Garden through the Old City (per Amap).
- An easy walk from People’s Square along the East Nanjing Road pedestrian street.
- To cross to the Pudong side, Metro Line 2 runs one stop under the river for a few yuan, and there is a cheap public ferry.
Do not use the Bund Sightseeing Tunnel as transport — see “What to skip” below.
What to do along the Bund
The core experience is simply the walk — the full promenade end to end and back is about an hour with photo stops. Beyond that:
- Look up at the buildings. The Customs House (with its clock), the former HSBC Building, the Peace Hotel and the rest of the row are worth slowing down for. Several have lobbies or rooftop bars open to visitors.
- Rooftop bars and terraces. Some of the historic buildings house bars and restaurants with terraces facing Pudong — a drink at sunset is a classic Shanghai splurge (see the Shanghai city guide for the dining context).
- A Huangpu River cruise — optional; covered next.
The Huangpu River cruise question
A Huangpu River cruise is optional. Standard evening sightseeing boats run ¥120–150 and give you both the Bund and Pudong skylines from the water — a genuinely different angle and pleasant on a clear evening. But the free view from the promenade is already excellent, and the cruise adds about an hour. Take it if you want the on-water experience; skip it if your time is tight, because the walk along the Bund delivers most of the payoff for free.
Book a Huangpu River evening cruiseNASDAQ: TCOM
Want both skylines from the water? Trip.com lists the standard evening Huangpu River sightseeing cruises along the Bund and Pudong waterfront — compare departures and boats, booked in English on a foreign card.
Affiliate links — booking via Trip.com costs you nothing extra and helps fund our independent research. How we’re funded.

What to skip
- The Bund Sightseeing Tunnel (外滩观光隧道) — a ¥50 ride through a tunnel of flashing lights under the river that most visitors find kitsch. To cross to Pudong, Metro Line 2 does it for a few yuan.
- The “art student” and tea-ceremony touts. Friendly English-speaking strangers approach tourists near the Bund and East Nanjing Road, invite you to a gallery or a traditional tea ceremony, then present an enormous bill — a long-running Shanghai scam. A polite “no thank you” and keep walking; genuine attractions do not need street recruiters.
- Street vendors selling laser pointers and toys — harmless but persistent.
Where to stay near the Bund
The Bund side — Huangpu district, around Nanjing East Road and People’s Square — is the classic first-timer base: walking distance to the waterfront and on Metro Lines 2 and 10. The sensible call for a first China trip is a home-grown mid-range chain in that core; the heritage towers on the river itself are the splurge.
Where to book these: China’s home-grown chains — 全季 (JI) and 亚朵 (Atour) — are listed most completely on Trip.com, with English checkout and foreign-card payment. It’s the main booking platform for mainland hotels; Western sites like Booking and Agoda carry only a fraction of their branches.
Best value — mid-range near the Bund (recommended)
The Bund side (Huangpu district, around Nanjing East Road and People's Square) is the classic first-timer base: walking distance to the waterfront, on Metro Lines 2 and 10. Most foreign visitors do best in a home-grown mid-range chain like 全季 (JI) or 亚朵 (Atour) — reliable, English-app booking, and a fraction of the riverfront five-star rate.
- Around the Nanjing East Road / People's Square area — a short walk or one Metro stop from the Bund.China's most popular home-grown mid-range chain — modern, spotless, easy English-app booking, roughly a third the price of the riverfront five-stars.
- In the Nanjing East Road pedestrian-street area — walk to the Bund waterfront in well under 10 minutes.Design-led mid-range chain that foreign guests rate highly — comfortable, well-run, and far better value than the heritage towers on the river.
On the riverfront (the splurge)
Full-service hotels actually on or beside the Bund promenade, with Pudong-skyline rooms — listed if you want the landmark address, but the mid-range picks above are the better value for most first trips.
- On the Bund itself at the Nanjing Road corner — the 1929 Art Deco landmark; some rooms face the river.
- At the south end of the Bund, partly in the former Shanghai Club building — riverfront promenade on your doorstep.
Related Shanghai guides
The Bund anchors a walkable cluster of central-Shanghai sights — pair it with these to fill a day or an evening:
- Shanghai city guide — the full hub: things to do, getting around, where to stay, what to eat, practical essentials.
- Things to do in Shanghai — the 11 curated picks with a 3-day timeline.
- Yu Garden & Yuyuan Bazaar — the Ming garden an 11-minute walk from the Bund.
- Pudong skyline: Shanghai Tower vs Oriental Pearl — the towers you see across the river, and which deck to choose.
- Where to stay in Shanghai — the Bund side is the first-timer base; here is the full comparison.
Frequently asked questions
Is the Bund free to visit?
Yes — the Bund is completely free. It is a public waterfront promenade, open 24 hours a day with no tickets and no entry gate. You only pay if you choose to add something: a Huangpu River cruise (¥120-150), a paid observation point inside one of the historic buildings, or food and drink. The promenade itself, including the famous night view, costs nothing.
What time is best to visit the Bund?
Between about 6:30pm and 9pm. That is when both sides of the river are lit — the colonial buildings behind you on the Bund side and the Pudong skyline across the water — and the contrast is the whole point. The promenade is busiest then too. For a calmer experience, arrive around sunset before the crowds peak, or come early morning (7-8am) when locals are out exercising and the light is soft. The Pudong skyline lights are typically switched off late at night, so do not leave the night view too late.
What exactly is the Bund?
The Bund (外滩, Waitan) is a roughly 1.5 km waterfront stretch on the west bank of the Huangpu River in central Shanghai. Behind it stands a row of grand early-20th-century buildings — banks, trading houses and hotels built between the 1900s and 1930s in neoclassical, Art Deco and other European styles, a legacy of Shanghai's treaty-port era. Across the river is Lujiazui, the modern Pudong skyline. The Bund is where old and new Shanghai face each other, which is why it is the city's signature view.
How do I get to the Bund?
Take Metro Line 2 or Line 10 to Nanjing East Road station (南京东路) — from there the Bund waterfront is a 5-7 minute walk east down the pedestrian streets. The Bund is also an easy walk from Yu Garden (about 800 m / 11 minutes through the Old City, per Amap) and from People's Square. Avoid the Bund Sightseeing Tunnel as 'transport' — it is a ¥50 novelty light tunnel under the river; Metro Line 2 crosses to Lujiazui for a few yuan.
Should I take a Huangpu River cruise?
It is optional. A Huangpu River cruise (¥120-150 for the standard evening sightseeing boats) gives you the Bund and Pudong skylines from the water, which is a genuinely different angle and pleasant on a clear evening. But the free view from the promenade is already excellent, and the cruise adds an hour. Take it if you want the on-water experience; skip it if your time is tight — the walk along the Bund delivers most of the payoff for free.
What should I skip at the Bund?
Skip the Bund Sightseeing Tunnel (外滩观光隧道) — a ¥50 ride through a tunnel of flashing lights that most visitors find kitsch. Be wary of 'art student' and tea-ceremony touts who approach English-speaking tourists near the promenade and East Nanjing Road; the friendly invitation to a gallery or tea house is a known overcharging scam. A polite refusal and keep walking. The street vendors selling laser pointers and toys are harmless but persistent.
How long should I spend at the Bund?
Allow 1-2 hours. Walking the full promenade end to end and back, taking photos, and pausing to look at the buildings fills about an hour; add time for a drink at a rooftop bar in one of the historic buildings, or a river cruise, and it becomes an evening. Many visitors do the Bund twice — once by day to see the architecture and once after dark for the lights.
Verification scope
This guide is editorial-aggregated by a team based in Chongqing. The editor has lived in mainland China since 2018 but is not a Shanghai resident — Path-2 with a disclosed knowledge boundary (see about page).
It draws on first-hand visits to the Bund and central Shanghai by day and after dark (2023–2026) for the layout, the night-view timing, and the walking routes, plus aggregated 2024–2026 r/shanghai reports and Amap (高德地图) walking-routing (queried 2026-05-22). Current opening details of individual Bund buildings, rooftop bars and river-cruise operators change — confirm on the day.