DiTrip · Taiwan Travel Intelligence · Updated 2026
Flying to Taiwan in 2026? Here’s the short answer: before you board, sort out four things — your entry paperwork (passport, arrival card, any visa), your money (a card that works overseas plus some backup cash), your connectivity (an eSIM you activate before landing), and a light packing list tuned to Taiwan’s weather. Get these right and your first day is smooth instead of stressful. Below is the full 2026 checklist.

What documents do I need to enter Taiwan?
Most short-term visitors need three things: a passport valid for at least 6 months, a completed online Taiwan Arrival Card (fill it in before you fly), and proof of onward travel. Many nationalities enter visa-free for 14–90 days, but rules change, so confirm your country’s status before departure.
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Passport | Valid 6+ months beyond arrival |
| Arrival Card | Complete the online Taiwan Arrival Card before landing |
| Visa | Check if your nationality is visa-exempt; if not, apply early |
| Onward ticket | Keep proof of your exit flight handy |
How should I handle money in Taiwan?
Taiwan is increasingly card-friendly in cities, but night markets, small eateries and local buses still love cash (New Taiwan Dollar, TWD). Bring a debit/credit card with no foreign-transaction fee for hotels and shops, and withdraw some cash from an airport ATM on arrival. Tell your bank you’re travelling so your card isn’t blocked.
How do I get internet the moment I land?
This is the item most travellers leave too late. The cleanest solution is an eSIM you install before you fly and switch on when you land — no queuing at the airport, no swapping tiny SIM cards. Your phone connects to a Taiwan network within a minute of landing, so your maps, translation, ride-hailing and messaging all work immediately.
If you’re deciding between grabbing a SIM at the airport counter or using an eSIM, we compare both in Taiwan Airport SIM vs eSIM.

What should I pack for Taiwan’s weather?
Taiwan is warm and humid most of the year, with a rainy typhoon season roughly June–October. Pack light, breathable clothing, a compact umbrella or rain jacket, comfortable walking shoes, and a power bank. Taiwan uses Type A/B sockets at 110V, so US-style plugs fit; travellers from Europe/UK/Australia need an adapter.
- Compact umbrella / light rain jacket
- Comfortable walking shoes (you’ll walk a lot)
- Power bank + charging cables
- Plug adapter (if not using Type A/B)
- Any personal medication + a small first-aid kit
Taiwan pre-flight checklist (save this)
- ✅ Passport valid 6+ months
- ✅ Online Arrival Card completed
- ✅ Visa status confirmed
- ✅ Travel-friendly card + backup cash plan
- ✅ eSIM installed, ready to activate on landing
- ✅ Weather-appropriate packing + adapter
- ✅ Hotel address saved offline

FAQ
Do I need to complete the Taiwan Arrival Card before flying?
It’s strongly recommended. Completing the online Arrival Card in advance speeds up immigration and avoids filling forms after a long flight.
Should I buy a Taiwan eSIM before or after arriving?
Before. Install it at home on Wi-Fi and switch it on when you land, so you have internet immediately without airport queues.
Is Taiwan a cash or card country?
Both. Cities take cards widely, but keep cash for night markets, small shops and local transport.
What power plug does Taiwan use?
Type A/B, 110V (same as the US). Bring an adapter if your devices use other plug types.
Land ready, not rushed
Taiwan is one of the easiest places in Asia to travel — get the basics sorted before you board and you’ll spend day one exploring, not troubleshooting. DiTrip helps you land connected: install your Taiwan eSIM before you fly, and grab our free Taiwan Travel Information Pack for maps, tips and arrival know-how.
