Taipei: Food Tours w/ Top 10 Taiwan Food (Breakfast/Dinner)

REVIEW · TAIPEI CITY

Taipei: Food Tours w/ Top 10 Taiwan Food (Breakfast/Dinner)

  • 4.7517 reviews
  • 150 - 270 minutes
  • From $44
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Operated by TourMeAway · Bookable on GetYourGuide

Traveller rating 4.7 (517)Duration150 - 270 minutesPrice from$44Operated byTourMeAwayBook viaGetYourGuide

Taipei food has a built-in shortcut. This is one of those tours that turns street snacks into a clear plan, with bubble tea know-how and Michelin-rated bites folded into a guided walk. I like that you’re not just eating, you’re learning how to choose, order, and understand what you’re tasting.

My favorite part is the mix of big-name Taiwan classics plus the everyday places locals use. You may even spot guides like Mina and Cornelia leading groups with tight pacing and real local context. One drawback to consider: the lunch option does not offer vegetarian, and the dinner option is vegetarian-friendly only if you eat eggs.

Key things that make this tour worth your time

Taipei: Food Tours w/ Top 10 Taiwan Food (Breakfast/Dinner) - Key things that make this tour worth your time

  • 7+ tastings that feel like a full meal, not a few token samples
  • Bubble tea 101, including how it started and how to order like a local
  • Michelin-rated street food built into both breakfast and dinner plans
  • Taiwan’s convenience store culture, with a dedicated stop to compare brands and snacks
  • Old Taipei neighborhoods on foot, from Dihua Street to the historic night market area
  • English-speaking guides who keep the group moving and the mood up

How This Taipei Food Tour Turns You Into a Taipei Eater

Taipei: Food Tours w/ Top 10 Taiwan Food (Breakfast/Dinner) - How This Taipei Food Tour Turns You Into a Taipei Eater
What you’re paying for here is not just food. You’re paying for someone to line up the places, keep the walk efficient, and translate what to do at each stop. The tour is a walking experience, running about 150 to 270 minutes depending on which option you choose.

That matters in Taipei because street food is everywhere, but figuring out what’s worth your money can take time. With this format, you get a structured path through Taipei’s oldest food streets and night market zones, so you’re eating instead of wandering and second-guessing.

The best value is the No Hunger Guarantee. Tastings are described as equivalent to a full meal, and guides are expected to manage pacing well, including on warm days or light rain. If you come hungry, you’ll likely leave comfortably full, not just mildly impressed.

Lunch on Dihua Street: Taipei Bridge to Cisheng Temple

Taipei: Food Tours w/ Top 10 Taiwan Food (Breakfast/Dinner) - Lunch on Dihua Street: Taipei Bridge to Cisheng Temple
If you pick the lunch option, you’re getting Taipei’s old food spine: Dihua Street (Golden Lane). It’s tied to the city’s prosperity in the 1800s, and the tour uses that setting to explain why these streets became a daily food hub in the first place.

The walk starts at the historic Taipei Bridge, then moves through the Dihua lanes toward the Cisheng Temple. Along the way, you’ll sample a run of Taiwan breakfast-and-snack staples that go beyond the usual tourist picks.

Here’s the kind of spread you can expect at lunch:

  • Beef noodles (a comfort classic where you learn what to look for in flavor and texture)
  • Taiwanese wontons (often a quick, satisfying bite that’s easy to love once you try the right version)
  • Rice cakes (the chewy, comforting side of Taiwanese breakfast)
  • Castella egg cakes (a sweet stop that’s a lot more memorable than it sounds)

On top of the “top Taiwanese foods” idea, there’s also a Michelin-rated street-food stall included in the experience. That’s a big deal because it gives you a benchmark: you can taste something that’s widely recognized, then understand how the rest of your picks fit into Taiwan’s wider food logic.

A practical note: the tour includes more than 7 tastings, and some groups report totals around the 10-item range. That’s where the “comes out feeling like a full meal” promise becomes real, because you’re not bouncing from one tiny bite to the next.

Bubble Tea 101: How to Order Like a Local

Taipei: Food Tours w/ Top 10 Taiwan Food (Breakfast/Dinner) - Bubble Tea 101: How to Order Like a Local
Bubble tea is the headline on this lunch option, but the teaching is what makes it useful. You’ll learn the origin story and you’ll get insider tips for ordering, so you’re not stuck staring at a menu like it’s a puzzle.

Why this part is worth your time: Taiwanese tea culture is more than sweetness. The structure of how you choose (tea base, topping, sweetness level, and texture) affects the whole drink. Once you understand what the options mean, it gets way easier to order confidently at other shops after the tour.

You may also find that your group tasting includes favorites like winter melon tea, which tends to hit that sweet-but-not-cloying spot. It’s the kind of drink that can recalibrate your expectations for what “tea” tastes like in Taiwan compared to what you’re used to.

If you’re a first-timer in Taipei, I’d treat this as your bubble tea foundation. After one solid lesson, you can branch out on your own without wasting money on drinks that don’t match your taste.

Dinner in Taipei Old District: Night Markets and Michelin Street Food

Taipei: Food Tours w/ Top 10 Taiwan Food (Breakfast/Dinner) - Dinner in Taipei Old District: Night Markets and Michelin Street Food
The dinner option shifts you from day-market energy to Taipei’s classic nighttime rhythm. This part of the tour is aimed at Taipei’s oldest district and focuses on a night market setup where the food is the main show.

You’ll be guided to a popular Michelin-rated street food spot inside the market, then you sample a variety of iconic Taiwanese dishes. This is the section that helps you stop making awkward choices like ordering the same thing everyone else is ordering, or getting stuck at a stall where you don’t know what to ask for.

Dishes you may see included (based on the kinds of tastings the tour is known for):

  • Popcorn chicken
  • Dumplings
  • Stinky tofu (for the brave, and also for the curious)
  • Sausage-style street foods
  • Taiwan beer
  • Other savory market bites that tend to mix crispy, chewy, and saucy textures

The big benefit of the guided night market format is that you get the “what and why,” not just the “what.” You learn how ingredients show up in local flavors, and the guide helps you figure out what to expect before you take the first bite.

Diet note for dinner: it’s described as suitable for vegetarians who eat eggs, and non-pork / non-seafood options are available. So you’re not completely locked out if you avoid pork or sea creatures, but you should plan around the reality that this is still a meat-forward night market environment.

The Convenience Store Stop: How Taipei Snacks Work Day to Day

Taipei: Food Tours w/ Top 10 Taiwan Food (Breakfast/Dinner) - The Convenience Store Stop: How Taipei Snacks Work Day to Day
One of the most underrated parts is the dedicated traditional Taiwanese convenience store visit. This isn’t a tourist souvenir run. It’s there to show you why these stores matter for daily life in Taiwan.

You’ll learn how local brands and products fit into normal routines: quick meals, late-night snacks, tea, sweets, and those small grab-and-go items you’d never think to buy unless someone explained the logic. In practice, it’s also a fast way to test your preferences because convenience store items are usually easy to sample and easy to compare.

Some groups get a stop that can feel like a mini “Taiwan grocery education,” including a detour to 7-Eleven. You’ll see why winter melon tea and other drinks show up constantly, and you’ll likely come away with a better sense of what locals reach for when they’re not cooking.

If you’ve ever thought, I want to understand daily Taiwan life without a language barrier, this convenience store stop is a strong answer. It’s culture you can hold in your hands.

Price and Time: Is $44 Good Value for This Much Food?

Taipei: Food Tours w/ Top 10 Taiwan Food (Breakfast/Dinner) - Price and Time: Is $44 Good Value for This Much Food?
The price is listed as $44 per person, with duration in the 150–270 minute range. For a city where street food can be cheap but random, the value here comes from coordination.

You’re getting:

  • Walking tour structure
  • An English-speaking guide
  • Introduction to the area and food tastings
  • 7+ Taiwanese tastings that are described as full-meal equivalent
  • The No Hunger Guarantee framing

Transportation is not included, so factor that into your day plan. If you’re staying far from Dihua Street or the old night market district, you’ll want to budget time to get there.

But if you’re already in Taipei and you want results fast, $44 makes sense because it buys you two things that are hard to price: confidence and flow. Instead of spending half a day “figuring it out,” you spend the time eating, learning what the next bite should taste like, and leaving with a mental map of what Taiwan does best.

Dietary Fit: Non-Pork, Non-Seafood, and Egg Vegetarian Limits

Taipei: Food Tours w/ Top 10 Taiwan Food (Breakfast/Dinner) - Dietary Fit: Non-Pork, Non-Seafood, and Egg Vegetarian Limits
This tour is practical about options, but you should read the rules closely before you go.

Lunch option:

  • Non-pork and non-seafood options are available
  • No vegetarian options are offered for lunch

Dinner option:

  • Suitable for vegetarians who eat eggs
  • Non-pork and non-seafood options are available
  • Everyone is welcome if they eat meat or eggs

If you avoid pork or seafood, you’ll likely be fine on both tours. If you’re a strict vegetarian, lunch won’t work as offered, and dinner depends on eggs.

My advice: pick your option based on your diet first, then build the rest of your Taipei meals around what the tour teaches you. If you know you’ll need flexibility, dinner tends to be the safer bet for egg-eaters.

What the Guides Actually Do That Changes the Experience

Taipei: Food Tours w/ Top 10 Taiwan Food (Breakfast/Dinner) - What the Guides Actually Do That Changes the Experience
A big theme in the feedback is how guides run the group: organized routes, pacing that keeps you eating, and context that makes the food make sense.

Guides you may encounter include names like Liam, Chi, Mina, Cornelia, Leo, Lina, Vincent, Ale, and Mina again across different tours. Even when the exact guide changes, the goal is the same: get you fed and get you informed.

You also get practical ordering help. Bubble tea ordering tips are one example. Another is how the guide helps you understand what to expect at night market stalls so you don’t waste time asking the same questions at every stop.

If you’re the kind of person who worries you’ll feel lost at street-food places, you’ll probably feel calmer here because you know what comes next and why.

Who Should Book This Taipei Breakfast and Dinner Food Tour

Taipei: Food Tours w/ Top 10 Taiwan Food (Breakfast/Dinner) - Who Should Book This Taipei Breakfast and Dinner Food Tour
This works best if you want a fast on-ramp to Taiwanese food, not just a scatter of snacks.

Book it if:

  • It’s your first trip to Taipei and you want a clear list of what to try
  • You like street food but want structure so you don’t waste time
  • You want bubble tea lessons and convenience store insights in the same trip
  • You like Michelin-rated food, but still want the street version of it

Skip or reconsider if:

  • You need fully vegetarian food for lunch (it’s not offered)
  • You hate walking or night markets
  • You only want one or two dishes and would rather shop solo

If you can fit both options, you’ll get the biggest payoff: lunch covers Dihua Street’s classic breakfast foods and bubble tea, while dinner shows you Taipei’s old night market rhythm plus convenience store culture.

Tips I’d Use Before You Go (So You Don’t Miss Anything)

Come hungry. The tastings are described as equivalent to a full meal, and that promise only works if you’re ready for it.

Wear comfortable shoes. You’re walking through old Taipei streets and market areas, and the tour is structured around keeping movement smooth between stops.

Be open-minded about smells and textures. Night markets often include foods like stinky tofu, and once you know what you’re tasting for, it stops being scary and starts being curiosity.

If you’re a foodie who likes learning, ask questions about what changes the flavor. The tour is set up to explain ingredients and ordering choices, so you can use that knowledge later when you’re exploring on your own.

Should You Book This Taipei Breakfast/Dinner Food Tour?

Yes, I’d book it if you’re looking for a low-stress way to eat like a local across both day and night Taipei. The combination of 7+ tastings, a Michelin-rated street-food stop, bubble tea 101, and a convenience store visit makes this more than a food sample run.

Choose your option based on diet. Lunch is great for non-pork and non-seafood eaters, but it doesn’t offer vegetarian. Dinner supports egg-eating vegetarians and also offers non-pork / non-seafood alternatives.

If you’re planning your first days in Taipei, this tour is a smart way to build your personal “what I like here” list quickly. You’ll leave with a practical map of flavors to hunt down again later.

FAQ

What food is included on the tour?

You’ll taste over 7 Taiwanese dishes, and the tastings are described as equivalent to a full meal. Both options also include a stop tied to Michelin-rated street food.

How long does the Taipei food tour last?

The duration is listed as 150 to 270 minutes, depending on which option you book.

Are transportation costs included?

No. Transportation is not included, so plan to get yourself to the meeting point.

Is the tour available in English?

Yes. The tour is conducted in English with an English-speaking guide.

Does the tour include bubble tea?

For the lunch option, yes. You’ll get bubble tea 101, including an origin story and tips on ordering.

Are there non-pork and non-seafood options?

Yes. For lunch, non-pork and non-seafood options are available. For dinner, non-pork and non-seafood options are also available.

Is there vegetarian food?

Lunch does not offer vegetarian options. Dinner is suitable for vegetarians who eat eggs.

Do I have to worry about leaving hungry?

You shouldn’t. The tour includes a No Hunger Guarantee, promising you won’t leave hungry.

FAQ

What is the cancellation policy?

Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.

Can I reserve now and pay later?

Yes. The listing offers a reserve now & pay later option.

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