Macau, China

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

Macau is a 32.9-square-kilometre Chinese Special Administrative Region where 442 years of Portuguese administration left a UNESCO Historic Centre of cobbled squares and pastel churches that backs onto a five-kilometre corridor of Cotai Strip megaresorts — and where the Macanese kitchen tradition (galinha à Africana, minchi, pastéis de nata at Lord Stow's) has been refining itself since the sixteenth century.

Heritage Walker — Peninsula Focus

Senado Square, Ruins of St. Paul's, Monte Fort, A-Ma Temple and the lesser-visited churches — a UNESCO World Heritage walk most rewarding at unhurried morning pace, with a Macanese lunch at A Lorcha or Riquexó.

Cotai Casino & Resort Hopper

The Venetian, Wynn Palace, City of Dreams, Studio City and the Parisian — connected by free casino shuttles, with Robuchon au Dôme and Don Alfonso 1890 fine dining and the House of Dancing Water aquatic spectacle in the evenings.

Foodie Pilgrim — Macanese to Michelin

Lord Stow's pastéis de nata at Coloane Village, A Lorcha for Macanese fine-casual, Long Wa Tea House for traditional pushcart dim sum, plus 17+ Michelin-starred venues including The Eight and Don Alfonso 1890.

Day-Tripper from Hong Kong

55 minutes by ferry from Sheung Wan or Kowloon, or 40 minutes by HZMB shuttle bus from Tung Chung — a compressed one-day Macau itinerary covers Senado Square, the Ruins of St. Paul's, a Cotai casino-mall walk and a Macanese dinner.

Family & Kid-Friendly — Cotai + Coloane

Wynn Palace's over-lake cable-car loop and Performance Lake fountain show, Studio City's figure-eight Ferris wheel, Macao Science Center's interactive exhibits, and Hac Sa Beach in Coloane for sand, BBQ pits and warm-month swimming.

History

Portuguese merchants began trading from the Macau Peninsula in 1557 with tacit Ming permission, making Macau Portugal's first lasting trading post in China and the longest-held European colony in Asia. The Italian Jesuit Alessandro Valignano founded the College of St. Paul (Colégio de São Paulo) at Macau in 1594, establishing the Jesuit mission that sent European scholar-missionaries — including Matteo Ricci, who spent his first Asian year here in 1582–1583 learning Chinese — into Ming and Qing China; the Italian Jesuit architect Carlo Spinola supervised the design of the church facade whose ruins are today Macau's defining photograph. The territory remained under Portuguese administration for 442 years until its return to China on 20 December 1999 under the "One Country, Two Systems" framework, which preserves a separate immigration system, the Macanese pataca currency, Portuguese-civil-law tradition and casino industry until 2049. Senado Square, the Ruins of St. Paul's, Monte Fort, Portuguese as official co-language, the Catholic religious infrastructure (the Macau Diocese is the oldest in East Asia, founded 1576), and the Macanese cuisine all date from this period and remain part of daily life under Chinese sovereignty.

Culture

Macanese cuisine combines Portuguese, Cantonese, African, Indian, Malay and Brazilian elements developed over 450 years — the world's oldest Eurasian fusion. Defining dishes: galinha à Africana (African chicken in a piri-piri-coconut-garlic sauce), minchi (minced beef-and-pork with potato, onion, soy and a fried egg), bacalhau preparations, tacho (Portuguese-Chinese stew), serradura. Best egg tarts: Lord Stow's Bakery (Coloane Village original) or Margaret's Cafe e Nata (Peninsula). Macanese sit-down: A Lorcha (Inner Harbour) or Riquexó (St. Lazarus). Macanese institutional: Restaurante Litoral (Taipa). Pork chop bun: Tai Lei Loi Kei (Taipa). Cantonese fine: Wing Lei (Wynn, one Michelin) or The Eight (Grand Lisboa, three Michelin). French fine: Robuchon au Dôme (Grand Lisboa, three Michelin). Italian fine: Don Alfonso 1890 (Grand Lisboa). Traditional dim sum: Long Wa Tea House (Peninsula, pushcart service). Festivals: Macau Grand Prix (mid-November) — Formula 3 World Cup and the Guia Race, Macau International Music Festival (October–November), Macau Food Festival (mid-November, Sai Van Lake), A-Ma Festival (March/April, A-Ma Temple), Lunar New Year fireworks over the harbour (January/February), Procession of Our Lady of Fátima (May 13), Macau Light Festival (December). Museums: Macau Museum (inside Monte Fort, the heritage walk anchor), Maritime Museum (next to A-Ma Temple), Macao Museum of Art (MAM, in the Cultural Centre), Taipa Houses Museum (five colonial villas in Taipa Village), Macao Science Center (modern interactive, near the ferry terminal), Macau Wine Museum (Outer Harbour, Portuguese wine and Macau heritage), Grand Prix Museum (Outer Harbour, Macau motorsport).

Practical Info

Safety: Macau is one of the safest urban destinations in Asia — violent crime against tourists is extremely rare, the territory is well-policed, well-lit and heavily monitored by casino security. Standard urban precautions apply: watch for occasional pickpockets in Senado Square and at peak ferry-terminal hours. Casinos are over-21 with strict ID checks at gaming-floor entrances. The territory drives on the LEFT (like Hong Kong, unlike mainland China); pedestrians should look RIGHT first when crossing roads. Power outlets are British-style three-pin (Type G) with European Type C/F as a secondary standard. Tap water is technically safe but most residents drink bottled water; hotels provide it in rooms. Typhoon season runs June through October — Signal 8 or above closes ferries and most attractions. Language: Cantonese and Portuguese are both official languages, with bilingual government documents and street signage everywhere. English is widely used in casino resorts, hotels and tourist sites but limited in Coloane Village and at small local restaurants. Mandarin is understood by most under-40s but Cantonese remains the daily language. For visitors who read any Romance language (Spanish, French, Italian, Portuguese), the bilingual Portuguese-Chinese signs are an unexpected accessibility advantage in Asia. Currency: Macanese pataca (MOP), pegged 1:1 to the Hong Kong dollar (HKD); both circulate in parallel at a de facto 1:1 rate. Foreign Visa, Mastercard and UnionPay cards work directly at casinos, hotels, restaurants, shops and ATMs — no Alipay-link friction as on the mainland. Apple Pay and Google Pay function at NFC terminals across casino resorts and chain retailers. Wise, Revolut and similar cards work normally in ATMs. Cash (HKD or MOP) remains essential for Coloane Village, Taipa Village street stalls and minibuses. MOP has no value outside Macau — spend before leaving.
Travel Overview

Macau rewards two to three unhurried days. Most visitors arrive by ferry from Hong Kong (Sheung Wan or Kowloon, roughly 55 minutes) or by bus across the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge (about 40 minutes from Tung Chung); the third option is a regional flight into Macau International Airport at Taipa. Where to base depends on the trip's emphasis: the Macau Peninsula is the right choice for travellers focused on the UNESCO Historic Centre and Macanese restaurants on foot (the Mandarin Oriental, Sofitel and Grand Lisboa cluster around the heritage core), while the Cotai Strip is right for casino-resort comfort and the integrated luxury-mall infrastructure (the Venetian, Wynn Palace, City of Dreams, MGM Cotai, Studio City and the Parisian face each other along a single corridor). The free inter-casino shuttle network — open to everyone, not just hotel guests, running every 10–30 minutes from the Outer Harbour Ferry Terminal, Taipa Ferry Terminal, the airport, the Lotus Bridge and the Gongbei border — makes inter-region transport effectively free. The classic two-day itinerary is a heritage day on the Peninsula (Senado Square → Ruins of St. Paul's → Monte Fort → A-Ma Temple, with a Macanese lunch in Taipa Village in between) and a Cotai day for the megaresorts, the House of Dancing Water spectacle at City of Dreams, and dinner at Robuchon au Dôme or Don Alfonso 1890 in the Grand Lisboa. A third day — strongly recommended — opens up Coloane Village for Lord Stow's egg tarts at the original 1989 bakery, the Chapel of St. Francis Xavier, and the recalibrating quiet of Hac Sa Beach. Foreign Visa and Mastercard cards work directly at casinos, hotels, restaurants and shops; Apple Pay and Google Pay function normally at NFC terminals; the Macanese pataca and the Hong Kong dollar circulate in parallel at a de facto 1:1 rate.

Discover Macau

Start at Senado Square at 9am, before cruise-ship groups arrive. The wave-patterned Portuguese calçada pavement spreads before the cream-and-green Leal Senado Building (free to enter, with rotating exhibitions inside the colonnaded courtyard); duck into salmon-pink St. Dominic's Church on the square's north side for the cool stone interior. Walk uphill via Rua de São Domingos through the lanes — fifteen minutes, with a coffee stop at one of the Patio cafes — to the Ruins of St. Paul's, the elaborately carved seventeenth-century Jesuit church facade where the front face catches the morning sun cleanly. Climb the steps beside the Ruins to Monte Fort (the seventeenth-century Portuguese citadel that repelled a 1622 Dutch invasion) and the Macau Museum inside the fort walls (90 minutes, Portuguese-Chinese-English signage, well curated). Descend southwest to the Inner Harbour, follow the waterfront fifteen minutes to A-Ma Temple — the 1488 sea-goddess temple that gave Macau its name — for incense coils and harbour views. The Maritime Museum is five minutes further along the same waterfront if you have time. End at one of the Macanese restaurants in the surrounding Inner Harbour streets — A Lorcha is the local institution, family-run since 1985, with the Bacalhau and Galinha à Africana that explain why Macanese cooking is its own category.