Is Hangzhou Safe in August 2026?
August is summer / peak season in Hangzhou. Peak summer season brings maximum tourist density and the highest documented scam activity. All scam types are active and concentrated around major attractions.
Moderate
August risk
13
Scams documented
High
Crowd level
Season
Peak Season
Crowd level
High
August scam risk
Moderate
Year-round scams
13
Safety tips for Hangzhou in August
Season-specific guidance based on summer / peak season conditions and how they interact with documented scam patterns.
August is peak tourist season in Hangzhou — book accommodation and transport well in advance to avoid last-minute desperation that scam operators exploit.
Expect higher prices across the board. If a deal looks significantly cheaper than market rate during August, treat it as a warning sign.
Tourist-dense areas will be at maximum capacity. Pickpocketing and distraction scams spike with crowd density — secure valuables before entering busy areas.
Pre-book tours and activities through verified platforms. Walk-up tour sellers at major sites are at their most aggressive during peak season.
Regardless of season, the documented scams for Hangzhou remain the same — review the full list of 13 warnings before you travel.
Travel insurance is recommended for any trip to Hangzhou. Policies covering theft, medical emergencies, and trip disruption are essential regardless of when you visit.
Top scams in Hangzhou (active in August)
These scams operate year-round and remain active during August. Peak season volume means these are at their most frequent.
Fake Longjing Tea Scam
mediumLongjing (Dragon Well) tea is Hangzhou's most famous product, and fake or low-grade tea sold as premium authentic Longjing is the city's most prevalent tourist scam. Sellers in shops near West Lake, at tea villages, and along Longjing Road present cheap machine-rolled tea or tea from other provinces as hand-picked, first-flush authentic Longjing, charging prices 10–50 times the actual value. Some sellers show genuine samples but pack a different, inferior product.
How to avoid: Purchase Longjing tea only from government-designated stores with official certification, or from the Longjing village cooperative shops with origin labels. Genuine first-grade Longjing is expensive — if the price seems like a bargain, the tea is not authentic. Watch your purchase being packed from the same batch you sampled.
Fake Longjing Tea Plantation Guide Overcharge
mediumAt the Longjing tea plantations in Meijiawu Village and along the Dragon Well Road area, unofficial guides approach tourists offering to explain tea picking and processing. After a walk through the fields and an extended tasting session, they present a bill of 300 to 800 RMB for the guide service and tea consumed, with no price agreed in advance. Some operators use the same inflated-bill structure as tea ceremony scams in city centers but set in a rural plantation environment that makes the transaction feel more legitimate.
How to avoid: Agree on all prices in writing before beginning any tea tasting or guided walk. Legitimate Longjing tea farms near Meijiawu post standard prices per gram for their varieties. If a guide approaches you without a price board, politely decline and visit only registered tea farms with visible menus.
Overpriced Tea House Ceremony Pressure Sales
mediumTea houses near Lingyin Temple and around West Lake offer traditional tea ceremonies that begin with a reasonable cover charge but escalate into aggressive upselling of expensive tea products. Hosts present multiple premium varieties and apply social pressure to purchase, with final bills reaching hundreds of dollars for tea purchases visitors feel obligated to make after the ceremony.
How to avoid: Set a firm budget before entering any tea ceremony experience and state it clearly at the start. Legitimate tea houses will have fixed, published ceremony prices. If hosts begin pressure-selling after the demonstration, it is acceptable to decline all purchases. Book through your hotel for vetted experiences.
Airport Taxi Overcharging
mediumTaxi drivers and unlicensed drivers at Hangzhou Xiaoshan International Airport regularly overcharge tourists, particularly those arriving on international flights. Common tactics include claiming the meter is broken and offering a fixed fare, taking unnecessarily long routes, or stopping short of the destination and demanding extra payment. The city center is approximately 30–35 km from the airport.
How to avoid: Use only metered taxis from the official rank outside arrivals, or book via DiDi from the designated pickup area. The metered fare to Wulin Square area should be approximately 100–130 RMB. Insist on the meter before entering the vehicle; if refused, take the next taxi.
West Lake Restaurant Overcharging
mediumRestaurants bordering West Lake, particularly along Nanshan Road and Hubin Road, apply tourist pricing substantially above menu rates or present bills with items not ordered. Some menus list prices per 50g for expensive dishes without making this clear, resulting in bills many times what visitors expected. The lake-view premium is used to justify inflated charges.
How to avoid: Review the menu carefully and ask about pricing units before ordering — especially for fish, seafood, and specialty dishes sold by weight. Check the bill item by item before paying. Restaurants one or two blocks back from the lake typically charge fair prices for the same Hangzhou cuisine.
What types of scams occur in Hangzhou?
Street Scams
Pickpockets, distraction thieves, fake petitions, and street hustles in tourist areas.
4
Taxi & Transport
Overcharging, meter tampering, fake taxis, and transport cons targeting tourists.
2
Restaurant Scams
Inflated bills, hidden charges, tourist menus, and food service tricks.
2
Tour & Activities
Unlicensed guides, fake tickets, bait-and-switch excursions, and ticket scalping.
2
Accommodation Scams
Fake listings, bait-and-switch hotels, ghost rentals, and check-in fraud.
1
Is Hangzhou safe in other months?
Hangzhou in August — answered
Is Hangzhou safe to visit in August?
Hangzhou is moderate risk for tourists in August. This is summer / peak season for the East Asia region. Our database documents 13 scams year-round — during August, peak summer season brings maximum tourist density and the highest documented scam activity. all scam types are active and concentrated around major attractions. The most common risks are street scams, taxi & transport, restaurant scams.
Is August a good time to visit Hangzhou?
August is the busiest time for tourists in Hangzhou. Expect maximum crowds, highest prices, and the most concentrated scam activity. The trade-off is generally the best weather and full availability of tours and activities.
What scams are most common in Hangzhou during August?
The documented scam types in Hangzhou are consistent year-round: Street Scams, Taxi & Transport, Restaurant Scams, Tour & Activities. During August (summer / peak season), all categories see increased activity as tourist volume peaks. The specific scams and their locations remain the same regardless of season.
Is it crowded in Hangzhou in August?
Tourist crowd levels in Hangzhou during August are high. Major attractions, transport, and tourist areas will be at maximum capacity. Book ahead and expect queues.
Should I get travel insurance for Hangzhou in August?
Travel insurance is recommended for Hangzhou regardless of when you visit. Peak season brings higher theft risk and more travel disruptions from overbooked services. Look for policies covering medical emergencies, theft/mugging, trip cancellation, and 24/7 emergency assistance.
What should I pack for Hangzhou in August?
Beyond weather-appropriate clothing for August in East Asia, pack with scam prevention in mind: a cross-body bag with RFID-blocking (pickpocketing is documented in Hangzhou), photocopies of your passport stored separately from the original, a phone case with a wrist strap (phone theft is reported), and a portable charger to maintain access to transport apps and maps. Avoid visibly expensive jewelry or electronics in high-risk areas.
Editorial note: Seasonal risk assessments for Hangzhou are based on 13 year-round scam reports cross-referenced with regional travel patterns. Scam data is compiled from government travel advisories (US State Dept, UK FCDO, Australian DFAT), verified news sources, and traveler reports. Conditions change — always check current advisories before travel. Read our methodology →
August summary
Moderate Risk
Summer / peak season
Quick stats
Also in East Asia