Have a layover at Beijing Daxing (PKX) and wondering whether to leave the airport or stay put? Here is the honest answer first. If your connection is under about 5 hours, stay inside: Daxing sits 46 km south of central Beijing, so a city trip eats most of a short layover. With 6 to 8 hours you can ride the Daxing Airport Express into town and back comfortably, and many travelers from 54 countries can now do this visa-free under China's 240-hour transit rule. With 10 hours or more you can see a real slice of Beijing. What you cannot realistically do from Daxing is a Great Wall trip; the Wall is far north of the city and that itinerary belongs to Beijing Capital (PEK), not Daxing.
Should you leave the airport? The layover math
The single thing that decides your layover is time, and the clock is tighter than it looks because you spend it three times: clearing immigration, getting to the city, and getting back with a safety buffer for your flight.
- Under 5 hours: stay airside. Daxing itself is worth the walk (more below), and leaving risks your onward flight.
- 5 to 8 hours: one focused outing is doable. The Airport Express reaches Caoqiao in 22 minutes; add metro time and you are in central Beijing in roughly 50 to 60 minutes each way.
- 8 hours or more: a genuine half-day in the city, with time for a sit-down meal and one sight.
Always count from your actual arrival at immigration, not your scheduled landing, and be back at the terminal at least 3 hours before an international departure.
The 240-hour visa-free transit, in plain terms
Since 18 December 2024 China runs a 240-hour (10-day) visa-free transit scheme, and Beijing Daxing is one of the official ports of entry. If you hold a passport from one of the 54 eligible countries, are transiting to a third country (not back to where you came from), and have a confirmed onward ticket within 10 days, you can enter at Daxing with no visa. You complete the formality at the immigration desk in the terminal on arrival. This is what turns a long Daxing layover into a free chance to see Beijing. Full conditions and the eligible-country list are in our 240-hour transit guide.
Getting into Beijing from Daxing
The fast, cheap and predictable option is the Daxing Airport Express:
- Journey: PKX to Caoqiao in about 22 minutes.
- Fare: 35 yuan; pay by Alipay/WeChat QR or at the machine.
- Frequency: roughly every 10 minutes.
- Hours: first train around 06:00, last around 23:00.
At Caoqiao you transfer to Metro Line 10 or Line 19 for the city, or take Line 9 from there toward Beijing West Railway Station. If you would rather not change trains with luggage, a taxi to the center takes about an hour and costs far more; for most layover travelers the express plus one metro hop is the right call. Our guide on getting from Daxing to the city centre breaks down every option with current prices.
What to do without leaving the terminal
Daxing is not dead time. Zaha Hadid's starfish terminal is one of the most photographed airports on earth, and it is built for waiting:
- Five indoor gardens themed on Chinese landscapes, plus skylights that make the central court feel like a plaza.
- A quiet rest and nap area and pay-to-enter lounges if you want a shower or a proper recline. See where to sleep at Daxing.
- Food courts open 24 hours and free airport Wi-Fi throughout; our Daxing Wi-Fi guide has the connection steps.
If you only have a couple of hours, walk the central concourse, grab a bowl of noodles, and treat the building itself as the attraction.
A realistic Beijing half-day (8+ hour layover)
With a long layover and visa-free entry sorted, a clean plan is: Airport Express to Caoqiao, Line 9 or 10 toward the center, and pick one anchor. The Temple of Heaven and the Qianmen and Tiananmen area are the most layover-friendly because they sit on the south side, closer to where the metro brings you in. Forbidden City and the lake districts are doable on a 10-hour-plus layover but tighter. Eat where you are rather than chasing a famous restaurant across town, and start heading back the moment you hit your turnaround time.
At a glance: planning your Daxing layover
| Layover length | Realistic plan | Visa needed |
|---|---|---|
| Under 5 hours | Stay airside: gardens, food court, lounge | No (stay in transit) |
| 5 to 8 hours | Express to Caoqiao, one southern sight, straight back | 240h visa-free if eligible |
| 8 to 10 hours | Half-day: Temple of Heaven or Qianmen plus a meal | 240h visa-free if eligible |
| 10+ hours | Forbidden City or a city neighborhood at a calmer pace | 240h visa-free if eligible |
Frequently asked questions
Can I leave Beijing Daxing airport during a layover?
How long does it take to get to central Beijing from Daxing?
Can I visit the Great Wall on a Daxing layover?
Is the Daxing Airport Express running late at night?
Do I need cash in Beijing?
Sources
Rules, fares and schedules verified in June 2026. Transit policies and train times change; confirm against official sources before you travel. This is an independent guide and is not affiliated with the airport.
Related: Got more than a layover? See our full guide to things to do in Beijing.



