REVIEW · BEIJING
Chaoyang Acrobatics Ticket
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Sunflower Tours China · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Two million fans can’t be wrong. This Chaoyang acrobatics show at Red Theatre turns a simple evening plan into world-class acrobatics you can enjoy whether you’re traveling with kids or not. I also like how much help you get from the operator team, including a guide named Li who sends clear instructions by WhatsApp. One real catch: the GetYourGuide QR code isn’t your theatre ticket, so you’ll want to follow the QR instructions closely.
The show runs every day at 4:00pm and 5:40pm and lasts 60 minutes, which makes it easy to plug into your Beijing schedule. I like that the recommended seating is Standard, and it’s practical to arrive 20 minutes early so you can get your tickets without a scramble. If you need hotel pickup and drop-off as part of the plan, double-check the transfer option, because the default setup is no pickup.
In This Review
- Key things I’d plan around before you go
- A 60-Minute Acrobatics Fix in Northern Beijing
- When the Show Runs: 4:00pm and 5:40pm Every Day
- Red Theatre Tickets and QR Codes: What You Really Need
- Inside the Performance: Plate Bowls to Universal
- Seats and Arrival Timing: Standard Seating Done Right
- Getting There: Address, Taxi Costs, and Optional Transfers
- Price and Value: Is $39 a Good Deal?
- Language and Messaging: WhatsApp Matters in China
- Who This Works For (and Who Should Skip It)
- Should You Book This Chaoyang Acrobatics Ticket?
- FAQ
- What time does the Chaoyang acrobatics show start?
- How long is the performance?
- Where is the Red Theatre located?
- Is the GetYourGuide QR code the same as the theatre ticket?
- Do I need to arrive early?
- Can I cancel and get a refund?
Key things I’d plan around before you go

- Two daily start times: 4:00pm and 5:40pm performances keep your schedule flexible.
- Tickets arrive the same day: you receive a theatre QR by WhatsApp/iMessage, not the GetYourGuide QR.
- Arrive 20 minutes early: this is the difference between calm seating and last-minute stress.
- Built for both kids and adults: the stunt variety keeps attention even if you’re not an acrobatics superfan.
- Stage lineup is packed: plate spinning, Jujitsu, partner stunts, high chair, ballgame, shoulder ballet, and universal.
- Li’s communication helps: multiple bookings highlight detailed guidance that helps you get it right.
A 60-Minute Acrobatics Fix in Northern Beijing

Chaoyang acrobatics is one of those Beijing experiences that doesn’t require you to be an expert in anything. You just need a seat and willingness to watch hands, timing, and trust—because the show leans hard into teamwork and precision.
What makes this one especially appealing is the mix of disciplines. You’re not only seeing flips and balance. You’ll also see martial-arts flavor (Jujitsu), partner work, chair stunts, and performance dance moments. That variety is why this style of show works for a family—kids get the visual wow, and adults get the skill and control.
You also get a built-in “time-box” advantage: it lasts 60 minutes. In Beijing, evenings can get complicated with traffic and finding places, so knowing your show ends on schedule helps you plan dinner and the rest of your night without guessing.
One thing I’d keep in mind: the experience description emphasizes cultural spectaculars along with the acrobatics, with the show reportedly entertaining over two million guests. Even if you’re skeptical of big numbers, it hints at what you’re walking into: this isn’t a random school performance. It’s staged like a professional show.
A few more Beijing tours and experiences worth a look
When the Show Runs: 4:00pm and 5:40pm Every Day

This Red Theatre performance has two daily showtimes: 4:00pm and 5:40pm, and both run for 60 minutes. That’s a big help because you can pick what fits your day—early evening if you want daylight sightseeing, or later if you’re pacing your energy.
Timing matters because you’re instructed to arrive about 20 minutes before the performance so you can get your tickets. The show also has strict rules if you arrive late or don’t attend. In other words, this is not the type of event where you want to “maybe show up.”
Also note the ticketing rhythm. The theatre tickets QR is sent on your travel day by WhatsApp/iMessage. That means you’re not just planning the show time—you’re planning the time window where you’ll be able to check your messages and follow the instructions right away.
If your schedule changes, you’ll want to choose the showtime accordingly. Once you’re in the right day/time window and have the theatre QR in hand, the actual experience is very straightforward: take your seat and enjoy.
Red Theatre Tickets and QR Codes: What You Really Need

Here’s the part that can trip people up, and it’s worth reading twice: the GetYourGuide QR code is only a booking reference. It is not your Red Theatre ticket.
Instead, you receive the actual theatre ticket QR on your travel day through WhatsApp, iMessage, or WeChat. The info you get is meant to help you pick up and enter correctly at Red Theatre. You’re also encouraged to select Standard Seats.
This is why I like booking something like this when the operator communicates well. In several experiences, the guide named Li is credited with sending all the useful instructions via WhatsApp. That kind of messaging doesn’t make the show better, but it can save you from the classic travel problem: arriving at the wrong door with the wrong code.
Another practical detail: your tickets are not changeable and not refundable if you don’t attend or arrive late. So treat this like a real appointment. Plan a buffer, keep your phone accessible, and make sure your messaging app is working before you leave your hotel.
Finally, you’ll find the theatre address is clearly stated as:
No.44 Xingfu Avenue, Dongcheng District, Beijing (北京东城区幸福大街44号).
Knowing the exact street address helps if you’re using a driver or navigating with maps.
Inside the Performance: Plate Bowls to Universal

The show starts with a sequence of acts that lean into showmanship as much as athletic skill. The performance lineup listed for Chaoyang includes:
- Plate spinning pagoda bowls
- Jujitsu
- Partner stunt
- High chair
- Ballgame
- Shoulder ballet
- Universal
That order matters because it keeps pacing strong. Early on, plate spinning gives you that immediate “how is this even balanced” reaction. It also sets expectations: the show isn’t just flips; it’s control and rhythm.
Then Jujitsu and partner stunts shift the focus toward teamwork and coordination. If you watch closely, you’ll notice how much of the drama comes from timing—when one person commits to the move, the other has to meet it exactly.
The high chair and ballgame acts are where audience attention usually locks in. Chairs and balls are simple objects, which makes the skill feel even more unreal. Shoulder ballet adds a softer, dance-like element, so the program doesn’t feel like straight adrenaline nonstop.
The show wraps with Universal. Even without extra explanation, the title suggests a broader closing act that ties the performance together. The overall package—skills, music, dancing, lighting, and backdrop—is designed to keep the effect bigger than the sum of individual tricks.
This is also where the “for kids and adults” claim makes practical sense. Kids tend to react to moments that look impossible. Adults tend to appreciate when the performers hit clean timing repeatedly. This lineup gives you both.
Seats and Arrival Timing: Standard Seating Done Right

The information you’re given recommends Standard Seats. I’m glad they say that, because it saves you from the common problem of overthinking seating categories when the main goal is simply to watch the action clearly.
Since you’re arriving about 20 minutes before, you should also assume you’ll need a little time to retrieve your ticket QR and get seated. That’s part of the value of doing the “arrive early” step: it reduces stress and keeps you from missing the opening beats.
Also, note what you’re told about pickup. There’s no pickup and no drop-off service in the default setup. The info even notes that these seats are not recommended—so plan to handle getting there yourself unless you select an option that includes a transfer.
What I’d do in your shoes: commit to being early, keep your phone charged, and confirm your theatre QR instructions the day of the show. If you do those three things, the experience becomes very low-friction. You walk in, get your seat, and watch the acts roll.
Getting There: Address, Taxi Costs, and Optional Transfers

Your location for the show is Red Theatre, No.44 Xingfu Avenue, Dongcheng District. This is in central Beijing in terms of planning, but the exact experience of getting there will depend on where you’re staying.
There is an option mentioned for hotel transfer if you like. If you don’t select it, you’re working with a no-pickup/no-drop-off reality. That means you’ll want to plan your own route and transportation.
Cost-wise, the info also notes: taxi fare outside of 4th ring road is at your own expenses. That’s useful if you’re staying farther out. If you’re not sure where your hotel sits relative to the ring roads, it’s worth checking before the day of the show so you can avoid surprise costs.
In practice, I treat this kind of show like a “go directly, return easily” plan. Pick the taxi/route that gets you there with enough time to retrieve your ticket QR, then enjoy the show and head back the same way.
Price and Value: Is $39 a Good Deal?

At around $39 per person for a 60-minute professional acrobatics show, the value depends on what you care about.
If you want a high-output performance with stunts and multiple acts, this price can feel fair. You’re not paying for a long event where you might get bored. You’re paying for concentrated spectacle, and the act list is packed from start to finish.
Where the value gets even better is the support around ticketing. Since the theatre QR is sent by WhatsApp and the guide team (including Li) is praised for detailed instructions, you get help smoothing out the hardest travel part: matching your booking reference to the actual theatre ticket.
One reason you should think carefully before buying is the strict attendance policy. Tickets are non-changeable and non-refundable if you don’t attend or arrive late. So if your schedule is shaky or you don’t like committing to fixed start times, the $39 can turn into wasted money quickly.
My rule: if you can be on time and you’ll have working messaging (WhatsApp/iMessage), the price looks like a solid cultural experience per hour. If your communications setup is uncertain, you might want to sort that first.
Language and Messaging: WhatsApp Matters in China

This experience depends on communication. If you can’t speak English, the instruction is clear: please don’t book. The operator’s guidance is intended to be usable, not vague.
The most important practical requirement is messaging. You’re told: if your WhatsApp isn’t working in China, don’t book. The alternative mentioned is that iMessage works.
This matters because your theatre ticket QR is sent on your travel day. If you can’t receive that message, you can’t reliably complete entry. So before you head out, do a simple check: make sure your phone can receive WhatsApp messages or use iMessage successfully.
A small benefit you might not expect: multiple bookings highlight that Li communicates well and gives detailed guidance on ticketing and seating. That can save you from the uncertainty of figuring it out at the venue.
And yes—one booking notes Li upgraded seats for free. That’s not something you should plan on, but it does reinforce the idea that the operator pays attention to making your evening go smoothly.
Who This Works For (and Who Should Skip It)

This show is a strong match for families because it’s built to keep eyes on the stage. The act list moves between balance, martial-arts style motion, partner work, chair stunts, and performance dance. That mix reduces the chance of kids losing interest.
It also works for adults who just want a great show without heavy homework. You don’t need to study the culture for months. You just need to arrive, sit down, and watch.
You should consider skipping (or at least think twice) if any of these are true:
- You can’t manage the messaging requirement (WhatsApp not working, for example).
- You need guaranteed hotel pickup and drop-off in the default plan.
- Your schedule might make it hard to arrive about 20 minutes early.
- You’re not comfortable with fixed showtimes (4:00pm or 5:40pm) and strict ticket rules.
If you’re the kind of traveler who likes low-effort evenings with a clear start time and an ending that you can count on, this fits well.
Also, the provider is Sunflower Tours China, and the support they give is part of what makes the plan feel workable in a big city like Beijing. Good communication turns the show from complicated into simple.
Should You Book This Chaoyang Acrobatics Ticket?
Book it if you want a high-skill, action-packed 60-minute show that’s genuinely easy to enjoy with kids or on your own. The $39 price makes sense for what you get—multiple acts, professional stage production, and practical guidance from Li via WhatsApp so you can handle the ticket QR correctly.
Skip it if you know you’ll struggle with the messaging requirement, can’t speak English, or you’re likely to run late. The ticket rules are strict enough that being casual about timing can cost you.
If you’re ready to show up early, keep your phone handy, and watch the full lineup—from pagoda bowl spinning to the closing Universal act—this is the kind of Beijing evening that pays off fast.
FAQ
What time does the Chaoyang acrobatics show start?
The show starts at 4:00pm and 5:40pm every day.
How long is the performance?
The performance lasts 60 minutes.
Where is the Red Theatre located?
It’s at No.44 Xingfu Avenue, Dongcheng District, Beijing (北京东城区幸福大街44号).
Is the GetYourGuide QR code the same as the theatre ticket?
No. The GetYourGuide QR code is only a booking reference. You receive a separate theatre ticket QR on your travel day by WhatsApp, iMessage, or WeChat.
Do I need to arrive early?
Yes. You should arrive about 20 minutes before the show to get your tickets.
Can I cancel and get a refund?
Yes. Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.


























