2 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.

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

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Fortaleza do Monte

Downtown

Perched on a hill overlooking the Ruins of St. Paul’s, this 17th-century Jesuit fort played a pivotal role in Macau’s history. In 1622, during Macau’s most legendary battle, a priest’s lucky cannon shot struck a Dutch ship’s powder supply, thwarting an invasion. Though fire destroyed the interior buildings in 1835, the outer walls, cannons, and artillery pieces still stand. Next door, the Macau Museum traces the territory’s history, from its origins to modern-day development.