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by isostatic 3019 days ago
I took a taxi in beijing a few years ago. Was in it about 40 mintues, traveled about a mile. Paid the driver a 20 Yuan note (about $3) and went into the hotel. Driver came running after me with 8yuan in change.

I assume taxis are still insanely cheap, and traffic is still insanely bad. Last time I was there I took the train and metro. I do the same in Moscow - why sit in traffic?

1 comments

Have you seen Beijing's subway? I travelled to and from work off hours, so I would go to work around 6:30 and come home around 3:30-4, taking the taxi to and from each day was totally feasible and affordable. Even in peak traffic, you still might win in a taxi vs. a subway depending on where you are going. When the whole system melts down, sure, take the subway as a last resort.
I took Beijing's subway around quite a bit last summer. At least where I was going, it seemed preferable to sitting in traffic. Payment seemed easier to navigate as well compared to the prior time I visited. I'd have said it was a pretty decent subway system overall.
I think if you are exploring the city during rush hour, sure subway makes sense. If you have a fixed route you go between everyday and know when the traffic ebs and flows, taxis are much more convenient. If you are out at night after rush hour, then taxis are the obvious choice.

Beijing's subway system is crowded, some routes are super crowded (line 10, ugh), interchanges can be long and windy, and can also have their own long lines (e.g. transferring at dongzhimen during rush hour). There are a lot more lines definitely then when I started living there (2007, line 10 didn't even exist yet), but there are very good reasons didi is still extremely popular.

The system can be crowded, but not as crowded as Tokyo or even London IME (very limited experience of course)