REVIEW · BEIJING
Beijing Evening Tour: Chaoyang Acrobatic Show with Peking Duck Dinner
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Four hours of tricks, duck, and easy logistics. This Beijing night plan pairs a Chaoyang-area acrobatic show with a classic Peking duck dinner, with pickup and a guide to keep the evening from turning into a taxi hunt.
What I like most is the built-in flow: you go to the show first or the dinner first depending on your chosen time, and the whole thing is timed to feel like a real Beijing night out rather than a rushed stop-and-go. I also like that the acrobatics are billed as a top show in Chaoyang (60 minutes), performed by a Chinese team with Guinness World Records—so you’re not just buying tickets, you’re buying show power.
One thing to consider is food pacing and portion size. One review specifically suggests checking the menu so the duck dinner fits your family’s eating habits, and wine isn’t included, so plan on soft drinks with your meal if that matters to you.
In This Review
- Key things to know before you go
- A 4:30 pm start that keeps Beijing evenings simple
- Chaoyang/Red Theatre acrobatics: the show is the main event
- What to watch for
- Possible drawback
- Bianyifang Roast Duck: what you’re really buying with the dinner
- Food + atmosphere
- Drinks
- Pickup and mobile tickets: the logistics that protect your night
- Private-group feel
- Guides in the real world: names you might recognize
- Price and value: why $138 can make sense here
- Who should book this Beijing evening combo
- Who might pause first
- Should you book the Beijing Evening Tour with acrobatics and Peking duck?
- FAQ
- What time does the tour start?
- How long does the tour last?
- Is hotel pickup included?
- Is the acrobatic show included, and how long is it?
- Where does the dinner happen?
- Can I do the dinner before the show?
- Is bottled water included?
- Is wine included with dinner?
- Is this tour private?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key things to know before you go

- Hotel pickup keeps the evening stress-free: you meet in your hotel lobby and head out with a guide.
- You can switch the order: early show means show first; late show means dinner first.
- A full 60-minute acrobatic performance: the show portion is timed, not a quick peek.
- Guinness World Records acrobats: the performers are known for record-setting skills.
- Peking duck at Bianyifang: dinner is part of the package, not an add-on.
- Private-group feel: it’s described as private, with only your group participating.
A 4:30 pm start that keeps Beijing evenings simple
This tour is designed for people who want the classic Beijing night experience without spending energy on logistics. The start time is 4:30 pm, and the tour runs about 4 hours total. That timing matters in Beijing: you get enough daylight to get moving, and then you’re set up for the show and dinner while the city shifts into evening mode.
The biggest scheduling detail is the order. If you book the early show, you’ll drive to the theater first. If you book the late show, you’ll enjoy your Peking duck dinner first and then head to the performance. Either way, you’re not stuck waiting around alone. A guide keeps the timing smooth, and you’ll have bottled water during the tour.
If you’re traveling with parents or kids, this structured schedule is often what makes the evening enjoyable rather than chaotic. Reviews also praise how organized everything felt, with guides making the handoffs between taxi, show, and restaurant feel effortless.
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Chaoyang/Red Theatre acrobatics: the show is the main event

The acrobatic portion is the heart of the evening: a 60-minute performance at the Chaoyang Theater area, specifically referred to alongside Red Theatre Beijing. This isn’t one of those “blink-and-you-miss-it” performances. You’ll have a full hour to watch the stunts, control, and speed that Chinese acrobatics are famous for.
The tour description frames it as one of the oldest performing arts practiced in China, with skills honed over centuries. That matters because it helps you understand what you’re watching: this is craft. Expect feats of dexterity and high-skill routines where timing is everything—where a small misstep would mean the whole sequence fails.
You’ll also appreciate the credibility behind the cast. The acrobatic team is described as having received lots of Guinness World Records, which is a strong clue that you’re seeing polished, practiced, “stage-ready” performances rather than a general variety show.
What to watch for
I’d go in with two expectations:
- Watch the transitions. The transitions are where the skill shows, not only the big finale moves.
- Don’t just look for the highest flip. Look for control—balancing, precision, and how quickly they reset between sequences.
Possible drawback
Some people may want the show to run longer than an hour. One review notes that older guests expected a longer performance. So if you’re the type who likes marathon show nights, this package may feel time-limited. Still, the upside is that it protects your energy and keeps the dinner portion from getting dragged into late-night timing.
Bianyifang Roast Duck: what you’re really buying with the dinner

After the performance (for early-show bookings) or before it (for late-show bookings), you’ll go to Bianyifang Roast Duck Shop for your Peking duck dinner. Dinner is included, and the stop is scheduled for about an hour—so you get time to eat without the evening slipping away.
Peking duck is one of those foods that works best when you understand the basic “why.” This tour description emphasizes that it’s been prepared since the imperial era, and it also mentions the duck is roasted by fruit tree. Even if you don’t obsess over the cooking method, that framing helps you connect the dish to Beijing tradition rather than treating it like a touristy checklist.
From a practical standpoint, the dinner portion is where you’ll notice whether the package fits your group:
- If you’re hungry after the show, the timing is good and the experience keeps moving.
- If you’re with kids or a small-eating group, portion expectations matter.
One review is very direct: check the menu so it fits your family’s eating amount. That’s solid advice. Duck dinners can be heavier than people expect, especially when you’re dealing with multiple dishes or set menus. If you’re unsure, look closely at what’s included in the meal and how it’s portioned.
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Food + atmosphere
More than one review points out that the restaurant experience felt smooth and high quality, with a nice atmosphere and top cuisine. That lines up with what you want after an hour of acrobatics: a calm, properly run dinner where service doesn’t collapse the moment the show crowd arrives.
Drinks
Wine is specifically listed as not included. That doesn’t mean you won’t be able to order it, but it does mean you shouldn’t build your budget around it being covered.
Pickup and mobile tickets: the logistics that protect your night

This tour includes a professional guide, plus transportation by private van or bus for groups larger than five, or a taxi/Uber-style car in other cases. The key detail is the pickup: you’re picked up from your hotel lobby. That’s a big value point in Beijing, where getting from point A to point B on your own can be time-consuming—especially at night.
You’ll also have a mobile ticket, which is handy for a city where carrying paper can be a hassle. It’s the kind of small convenience that matters when you’re moving quickly between theater and restaurant.
Bottled water is included. Again, that’s not glamorous, but it’s one of those “small things that keep the evening pleasant” when you’re in a venue and then out again.
Private-group feel
The experience is described as private: only your group participates. In practice, that often means less waiting, fewer “tour herding” moments, and a smoother pace between stops. It also makes the evening feel more personal, especially if you’re traveling as a family or a small group.
Guides in the real world: names you might recognize
Guides are part of the package, and the difference shows up in reviews. One review specifically praises a guide named Maggie for making things smooth. Another thanks Lydia, describing her presence as discreet but reassuring between taxis and activities.
That kind of praise tells you something useful: you’re not just paying for transportation and tickets. You’re paying for someone to keep the night running. When a show ends, timing matters. When you’re switching from theater to restaurant, timing matters. A good guide reduces the chance you’ll spend your dinner queue checking your phone for confirmations.
If you’re someone who wants clear direction without being overwhelmed, this is the kind of tour structure that tends to work well.
Price and value: why $138 can make sense here
At $138 per person, this isn’t the cheapest way to spend a Beijing evening. But you’re also not just buying a show ticket. The package includes:
- The acrobatic show ticket (60 minutes)
- Peking duck dinner
- Entrance ticket(s) as part of the itinerary
- Hotel pickup and round-trip transfer to your hotel
- Professional guide
- Bottled water
- Transportation by van/bus or taxi/Uber car
- Mobile ticket
When you add up what you’d otherwise pay separately—show tickets, a meal at a well-known duck shop, plus transportation and time—you can see how it can work out as practical value, especially for first-timers. The guide and pickup are the parts that often justify the price, because they remove friction. In cities like Beijing, friction has a cost even when the prices are “normal.”
Two notes that affect value:
- Wine is not included, so budget for drinks if you want alcohol.
- If you’re extremely price-sensitive, you could theoretically build your own night. But you’ll spend more time coordinating and you’ll be more exposed to delays.
For most people planning their first China trip, the “less brain work” part is worth real money.
Who should book this Beijing evening combo
This tour is a good fit if you:
- Want a classic Beijing night without planning each piece
- Like live performance and want a full, timed show segment
- Are excited by Peking duck and want dinner built into the schedule
- Prefer hotel pickup and a guide over figuring out theater logistics yourself
It also fits multi-generational groups. One review mentions enjoying the experience with parents and children, and the guide helped make the timing enjoyable.
Who might pause first
You may want to think twice if:
- Your group expects a show much longer than an hour
- You’re very picky about food portions and menu format (again: check the menu for fit)
- You’re hoping for wine or other upgrades to be included automatically
Should you book the Beijing Evening Tour with acrobatics and Peking duck?
Book it if you want a well-paced Beijing evening where the big moments are handled for you: hotel pickup, a real acrobatic performance, and Peking duck dinner at Bianyifang. The structure is the value. You trade some flexibility for smoother timing, and reviews repeatedly mention how organized it felt.
Skip or shop carefully if your group is food-fragile—meaning you need precise portion control—or if you prefer longer performances than a 60-minute show. In that case, check the dinner menu details and consider whether the show length matches your expectations.
If you’re a first-timer trying to check Beijing’s “must-do” nightboxes without the stress of planning, this one is a solid, practical choice.
FAQ
What time does the tour start?
The tour start time is 4:30 pm.
How long does the tour last?
It lasts about 4 hours.
Is hotel pickup included?
Yes. Pickup is offered in your hotel lobby.
Is the acrobatic show included, and how long is it?
Yes. The acrobatic show is included and lasts 60 minutes.
Where does the dinner happen?
Dinner is at Bianyifang Roast Duck Shop.
Can I do the dinner before the show?
Yes. If you book the late show, you’ll enjoy the Peking duck dinner first, then go to the show. If you book the early show, the show comes first.
Is bottled water included?
Yes. Bottled water is included.
Is wine included with dinner?
No. Wine is listed as not included.
Is this tour private?
Yes. It’s described as private, and only your group will participate.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.




























