10 Best Sights in Macau, China

Background Illustration for Sights

Macau is a small place, where on a good day you can drive from one end to the other in 30 minutes. This makes walking the ideal way to explore winding city streets, nature trails, and long stretches of beach. Most of Macau's population lives on the peninsula attached to mainland China. The region's most famous sights are here—Senado Square, the Ruins of St. Paul's, A-Ma Temple—as are most of the luxury hotels and casinos. As in the older sections of Hong Kong, cramped older buildings stand comfortably next to gleaming new structures.

Casa do Mandarim

Downtown Fodor's Choice

Macau’s largest representation of Guangdong residential architecture spans 43,055 square feet and has more than 60 lovingly restored rooms. Built in 1869 and refurbished in 2010, the compound blends Chinese and Western architectural elements. It was the home of Zheng Guanying, a late Qing Dynasty literary figure, who completed his influential Words of Warning in Times of Prosperity here. Just steps away, Lilau Square, a banyan-shaded plaza near one of Macau’s first Portuguese residential quarters, reflects the city’s deep cultural ties.

Coloane Village

Coloane Island West Fodor's Choice

Quiet, relaxed Coloane Village is home to traditional Portuguese-style houses painted in pastels, as well as the baroque-style Chapel of St. Francis Xavier and the Taoist Tam Kung Temple, dedicated to the god of seafarers. The narrow alleys reveal surprises at every turn; you may well encounter fishermen repairing their junks or a baptism at the chapel. At the village’s heart is a small square adorned with a fountain with a bronze Cupid. The slow-moving pace picks up a bit on weekends, when travelers swarm the streets seeking for the perfect photo op beside wall murals and the Portuguese and Chinese restaurants fill up.

Fortaleza da Guia

Downtown Fodor's Choice

This fort, built between 1622 and 1638 on Macau’s highest hill, was key to protecting the Portuguese from invaders. You can take a short cable-car ride from the entrance of Flora Garden on Avenida Sidónio Pais or walk the winding road up to it—a journey made easier thanks to elevators inside a pedestrian tunnel linking the Flora Garden and Avenida Dr. Rodrigo Rodrigues. On the hill, follow the signs for the Guia Lighthouse—you can’t go in, but you can get a good look at the gleaming white exterior that's lit every night. Next to it is the Guia Chapel, built by Clarist nuns to provide soldiers with religious services. Restoration work in 1996 uncovered elaborate frescoes mixing Western and Chinese themes. They’re best seen when the morning or afternoon sun floods the chapel, which is no longer used for services. The views from here are among the best, sweeping across all of Macau. Beneath the lighthouse, you’ll find exercise paths popular with runners, walkers, and tai chi practitioners in the morning and evening.

Macau, Macau
853-8399–6699
Sight Details
Free

Something incorrect in this review?

Recommended Fodor's Video

Largo do Senado

Downtown Fodor's Choice

Paved with swirling calçada portuguesa (black-and-white mosaic tiles), this pedestrian-only plaza has been Macau’s beating heart for centuries. Lined with pastel-hued neoclassical buildings, Largo do Senado offers a picture-perfect backdrop. Across Avenida Almeida Ribeiro, the Edifício do Leal Senado (“Loyal Senate” building)—erected in 1784 as Macau’s original city hall—still serves as the Municipal Affairs Bureau today. Open to the public, it features a Portuguese-style garden adorned with striking azulejos (blue-and-white glazed tiles), a foyer hosting art and history exhibits, and an elegant meeting room that leads to a magnificent library inspired by Portugal’s Convent of Mafra. Nearby alleys brim with restaurants and shops, although they are increasingly branches of Koi Kei Bakery and health and beauty chain Mannings.

Visit early on weekdays to avoid crowds, and try to come back at night, when the square is beautifully lit.

The Londoner

Cotai Fodor's Choice

Following a full-scale overhaul, the former Sands Cotai Central hotel, shopping, and casino complex re-emerged as The Londoner in 2021. Architects reconstructed the exterior to resemble, appropriately, London, complete with a replica of Big Ben along the Cotai Strip. Inside, British rock pumps through speakers as guests flit from venues like the Gordon Ramsay Pub & Grill to Churchill’s Table, enjoy retail therapy at 150-plus shops and boutiques, and take selfies with black cabs, double-decker buses, and a replica of a royal carriage. There are five hotels, including The St. Regis, The Londoner, and The Londoner Grand, a high-end “resort within a resort,” not to mention 14 invitation-only suites brought to life by David Beckham and British designer David Collins.

Ruínas de São Paulo

Downtown Fodor's Choice

Only the towering facade, with its intricate carvings and bronze statues, remains from the original Church of Mater Dei, built between 1602 and 1640 and destroyed by fire in 1835. The sanctuary, an adjacent college, and Mount Fortress—all Jesuit constructions—once formed East Asia’s first Western-style university. Now a tourist attraction, the ruins are the widely adopted symbol of Macau. Tucked behind the facade of São Paulo is the small Museum of Sacred Art and Crypt, which contains statues, crucifixes, and the bones of Japanese and Vietnamese martyrs. There are also some intriguing Asian interpretations of Christian images, including samurai angels and a Chinese Virgin and Child. Note that admission to the site isn't allowed after 5:30 pm.

Taipa Village

Taipa Fodor's Choice

Taipa’s narrow, winding streets are packed with restaurants, bakeries, souvenir stores, temples, coffee shops, and heritage buildings defined by their traditional South Chinese and Portuguese design elements. All roads lead to perpetually busy Rua do Cunha, Taipa’s famed food street. This little lane is lined by shops selling everything from matcha ice cream to pork chop buns and stewed offal. Be sure to get some egg tarts from Lord Stow’s here. As you wander around the neighborhood, you’ll find several Macanese and Portuguese restaurants—almost all worth a visit—alongside popular Thai, Chinese, and Western options. Come hungry, come curious. Taipa village is best explored street by street, and you’ll have no shortage of tasty options to refuel.

teamLab SuperNature Macao

Cotai Fodor's Choice

Created by the renowned Japanese art collective teamLab, this immersive art experience features large-scale digital installations that blend design, technology, and nature. Visitors can walk through expansive, ever-changing environments—many of them floral-theme, some even perfumed—where light, color, and movement respond to their presence. Unlike traditional exhibitions, this one is designed as a “body-immersive” space. That means you can physically engage with the artwork, influencing how it evolves in real time. Highlights include floating light orbs, infinite mirror rooms, and surreal digital landscapes, as well as a space for kids to create their own artwork. Best of all, it’s a choose-your-own-adventure without a set route or map.

Templo de A-Ma

Downtown Fodor's Choice

The tiered A-Ma Temple (Ma Kok Miu) is one of Macau’s oldest and most striking landmarks, as well as its likely namesake. Built during the Ming Dynasty (1368–1644) into the slopes on the Barra hill, it blends Confucian, Taoist, Buddhist, and folk influences. Vivid red calligraphy on massive boulders recounts the legend of the sea goddess A-Ma (Tin Hau). A small gate leads to prayer halls, pavilions, and caves carved directly into the hillside.

Macau, Macau
Sight Details
Free

Something incorrect in this review?

Wynn Macau

Downtown Fodor's Choice

Every 30 minutes, from noon until 10 pm, punters and passersby flock to the Wynn to witness flames and fountain jets flicker to tracks like “Diamonds Are Forever” at Performance Lake outside Macau’s first Vegas-style casino-hotel. Inside, they crowd around the rotunda to watch the “Tree of Prosperity” unfold with feng shui glitz, every hour on the dot from noon until 10 pm. Elaborate shows aside, the Wynn’s expansive, brightly lit gaming floor, exquisite fine dining options, luxury boutiques, deluxe spa, and trendy suites make this one of the finer resorts in Macau. Its 1,000 rooms span the glamorous suites in the Encore Tower, all offering views of Nam Van Lake and no less than 1,100 square feet, and the Wynn Tower’s luxurious suites and guestrooms, clad with marble-floored bathrooms, subdued cream-and-gold palettes, and Chinese artwork.