Showing 1 - 20 of 1331 Hotels in Shanghai, China |
|  No. 1 Jinling East Road, Shanghai User Rating from 309 reviews - 9.3 / 10 | | from $107 |
| |  No. 595 Jiu Jiang Road, Shanghai User Rating from 1032 reviews - 8.7 / 10 | | from $61 |
| |  No. 535 Pudong Avenue, Pudong New Area, Shanghai User Rating from 243 reviews - 8.8 / 10 | | from $66 |
| |  88 Henan Central Road, Shanghai User Rating from 110 reviews - 9.4 / 10 | | from $110 |
| |  330 Meiyuan Rd., Shanghai User Rating from 461 reviews - 8.4 / 10 | | from $48 |
| |  No. 505 Nanjing Road East, Shanghai User Rating from 274 reviews - 8.5 / 10 | | from $61 |
| |  No. 20 North Suzhou Road, Shanghai User Rating from 350 reviews - 8.3 / 10 | | from $48 |
| |  No. 118 Shi Men No. 1 Road, Shanghai User Rating from 260 reviews - 8.5 / 10 | | from $69 |
| |  No. 123 Xi Zang Road (South) , Shanghai User Rating from 656 reviews - 8.1 / 10 | | from $49 |
| |  No. 1 Yu Yuan Road, Jingan District, Shanghai User Rating from 143 reviews - 8.9 / 10 | | from $82 |
| |  No. 88 Nanjing Road, Shanghai User Rating from 122 reviews - 9 / 10 | | from $68 |
| |  No. 339 Guanddong Road, Shanghai User Rating from 1384 reviews - 8 / 10 | | from $38 |
| |  15 Huangpu Road, Shanghai User Rating from 468 reviews - 8.1 / 10 | | from $44 |
| |  No. 1 Fenyang Road, Xuhui District, Shanghai User Rating from 232 reviews - 8.4 / 10 | | from $66 |
| |  No. 2727 Riverside Avenue, Pudong District, Shanghai User Rating from 444 reviews - 8.1 / 10 | | from $45 |
| |  No. 88 Yongshou Road, Shanghai User Rating from 1031 reviews - 7.8 / 10 | | from $53 |
| |  488 West Yan An Road, Shanghai User Rating from 170 reviews - 8.4 / 10 | | from $65 |
| |  No. 59 Mao Ming Road South, Shanghai User Rating from 204 reviews - 8.3 / 10 | | from $46 |
| |  No. 250 Hua Shan Road, Shanghai User Rating from 144 reviews - 8.5 / 10 | | from $96 |
| |  No. 1100 Qi Hang Road, Pudong International Airport, Shanghai User Rating from 544 reviews - 7.8 / 10 | | from $73 |
|
Like this place? Why not tell your friends! » | |
|
Shanghai Guide
Shanghai’s cuisine is quite distinctive and if you don’t like pork or chicken, tofu is also much-used though if vegetarian, do be aware that many tofu and soy dishes are served as an accompaniment to meat, so check before eating! There are also numerous international restaurants too and mostly affordable ranging from £20-£40 per head. Shanghai has some amazing bars and clubs but as with any major city, the hip places change frequently so do check listings before you head out. Accommodation in the city is plentiful too and genuinely caters for all budgets.
Puxi has both new and old hotels though you may wish to go for one of the many older, more charming hotels which preserve their colonial reputations. Pudong has excellent modern hotel amenities too. |
| | CHECK RATES & AVAILABILITY |
About ShanghaiShanghai is China’s second city with almost 25 million inhabitants but it was the most prosperous city in the Far East up until the Second World War and has remained China’s most developed city and has seen further economic growth over the past two decades and heightened its international position further in 2010 by hosting the World Expo and recorded the greatest ever number of visitors to the event. Shanghai is the face of modern China and has a fast-paced energy and sophistication making it hugely attractive to international visitors.
The city is split in two by the Huangpu River and Puxi on the West Bank is home to the older city centre with the Bund being its colonial riverside which traditionally housed the city’s financial institutions and trading houses whilst the futuristic skyline of the Pudong is on the East Bank and is now the hub of commerce and finance, along with a number of museums and shopping and entertainment facilities, serving the visitors coming in to Pudong International airport.
Back on the West Bank, further along from the Bund is the Old City where much of the old wooden architecture of Shanghai is still prevalent and is also home to a number of historic attractions including Yu Garden, the City God Temple and Huxingting Tea House. Further along still is Huangpu which is the traditional centre of Shanghai and includes the main people-watching spot of the city, People’s Square and People’s Park, the Shanghai Museum, City Hall and Shanghai’s largest metro station underneath the huge East Nanjing Road shopping Mall. |
|