Metro
Usually the easiest default for many visitors: affordable, predictable, and useful for moving between central city zones.
English travel guide for international visitors
Getting Around
Chengdu is a large city, but it becomes easy to navigate once you stop thinking in terms of covering everything in one day. The best approach is simple: choose the right transport for each kind of day, and let the route stay calm.
Planning lens
Built for first-time international visitors who want both confidence and atmosphere.
• Clear English-first structure
• Route-ready internal links
• Practical travel framing, not just inspiration
Most visitors do best with a mix of metro, short direct car rides, and neighborhood-based walking rather than trying to rely on only one transport mode.
Usually the easiest default for many visitors: affordable, predictable, and useful for moving between central city zones.
Best when you want direct routes, easier hotel transfers, or less walking after long sightseeing or dinner days.
Often the best Chengdu pattern. Use transport to reach an area, then explore food, parks, or streets at a slower pace.
Treat day trips separately from city movement. They need a fuller plan and should not be mixed into a normal city-routing mindset.
The smoothest Chengdu days usually start with one longer move into the right area, then become much more local from there.
Yes. Chengdu is generally manageable for first-time visitors, especially if you rely on a mix of metro, direct ride-hailing, and a realistic day structure rather than trying to optimize every transfer.
Use metro as the basic default for simple city movement, then switch to taxis or ride-hailing when convenience, weather, or time pressure matters more than cost.
Trying to cover too many distant neighborhoods in one day. Chengdu usually feels much better when transport supports a calm route instead of forcing a packed one.