Macau Travel Essentials

Visa-free entry, MOP currency, casino shuttles, heritage walking routes, SIM cards, packing lists, and the cultural context that makes Macau genuinely make sense.

Topics 7
Updated Feb 2026
Trips 25+
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Macau is small, safe, and easy to navigate — but there are things nobody tells you: which casino shuttles to use instead of taxis, where the egg tarts are actually fresh in the morning, what to wear in temples, and why you should explore Coloane before anyone else wakes up. This is the practical guide we wished we'd had.

— Scott & Jenice
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Visa & Entry Requirements

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Visa-Free Entry

Citizens of most countries (including USA, UK, Canada, Australia, EU, Japan, South Korea) can enter Macau visa-free for 30–90 days depending on nationality. Americans, British, and EU citizens get 90 days. You just need a valid passport and a return or onward ticket. Check the specific duration for your nationality at the DSI (Direcção dos Serviços de Identificação).

Arriving from Hong Kong

The most common route for visitors from further afield is to fly into Hong Kong International Airport and take the ferry or cross via the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge. High-speed ferry services run from Hong Kong Airport and Central Ferry Piers throughout the day. Journey time is about 60 minutes.

Macau International Airport (MFM)

MFM has direct connections to mainland China, Taiwan, Southeast Asia, Japan, and South Korea. It's small and easy to navigate. Taxis to the Peninsula cost MOP 80–100; free casino shuttles serve Cotai. Note: US visitors typically fly HKG then ferry to Macau.

Documents to Carry

Always lock your passport in your hotel safe when exploring — carry a photo on your phone instead. Hotels will ask for it at check-in; after that it should stay locked up. Macau is extremely safe, but your passport is your most important document.

Global Entry for US Citizens

Get Global Entry before your trip — it's about $120 for five years and pays for itself on the return home through any US international airport. After a long Pacific crossing, skipping the immigration queue is genuinely worth it.

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Money & ATMs

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Macau Pataca (MOP)

The official currency is the Macau Pataca (MOP). The exchange rate is approximately MOP 8 to USD 1. Hong Kong Dollars (HKD) are widely accepted in Macau at 1:1 (the MOP and HKD are pegged at roughly that rate). Chinese Yuan (CNY/RMB) is accepted at many larger establishments.

ATM Strategy

ATMs are widely available throughout Macau, including at the airport, major hotels, and banks. Use bank ATMs from BNU (Banco Nacional Ultramarino) or ICBC for the best rates. Your international debit card will work fine — fees are typically MOP 20–50 per withdrawal. Some US banks reimburse ATM fees internationally.

Cash vs Cards

Major hotels, casinos, and upscale restaurants accept credit cards widely. Markets, street food vendors, smaller restaurants in Taipa Village, and local shops are often cash-only. Always carry MOP 200–500 in cash for daily expenses. The 7-Eleven and Pak On convenience stores are everywhere and accept both.

Casino Cash

Casinos operate in HKD and chips — you'll exchange at the cage, not at ATMs. Bring the amount you're comfortable gambling with as cash; don't use your card at casino cages for cash advances (extremely high fees). Casino currency exchange desks often offer decent rates for legitimate currency exchange.

Daily Budget Ranges

Budget: MOP 400–700/day ($50–90 USD) — guesthouses, local restaurants, public transport. Mid-range: MOP 1,200–2,400/day ($150–300 USD) — 3-4 star hotels, restaurant dining, some activities. Luxury: MOP 4,000+/day ($500+ USD) — 5-star casino resorts, fine dining, high-limit gaming.

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Getting Around

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Free Casino Shuttles

The single best transport hack in Macau: every major casino resort operates free shuttle buses from the ferry terminals, airport, and border gates. Galaxy, Venetian, MGM, Wynn, City of Dreams — they run every 10–20 minutes all day. You don't need to be a guest. This is genuinely the most efficient way to travel between the Peninsula, Cotai, and Taipa.

Taxis

Macau taxis are metered, air-conditioned, and relatively affordable. Flag fall is MOP 19; most trips within the Peninsula are MOP 40–80. Peninsula to Cotai runs MOP 80–120. Taxi drivers often speak limited English — have your destination written in Chinese. Hail on the street or use 99Taxi app.

Public Buses

Macau's public bus network is comprehensive and very cheap — MOP 6 for most routes. Routes 3/3A, 10, 10A cover the Peninsula. Routes 25, 26, 26A serve Taipa and Cotai. Line 21A, 25, 26 reach Coloane. Bus stops have English signage. Download the Mobi.Macau app for real-time tracking.

Ferries from Hong Kong

TurboJet and Cotaijet run high-speed ferries between Hong Kong (Central or Airport) and Macau's Outer Harbour or Taipa Ferry Terminals. Journey is 55–65 minutes. Economy fares from HKD 170–230 ($22–30 USD). Book online at turbojet.com.hk or cotaijet.com.mo — you don't need to book far in advance except on weekends and Chinese public holidays.

Walking the Heritage Trail

The Historic Centre of Macau is extremely walkable — all the major UNESCO sites on the Peninsula are within a 1.5 km radius of Senado Square. Wear comfortable shoes (the cobblestones are beautiful but uneven), bring water, and plan for the heat if visiting in summer. The heritage trail maps are available free from the MGTO (Macau Government Tourism Office).

Search Routes & Book Transport

Search ferry and transport routes from Macau — connections to Hong Kong, Guangzhou, and nearby cities.

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SIM Cards & Connectivity

4 tips

Your US Carrier Probably Works

T-Mobile, Google Fi, and AT&T International Day Pass all include Macau. Roaming data is fine for maps and messaging. Install WhatsApp before your trip — it's universal in Macau for hotel communications and restaurant bookings.

Local SIM or eSIM

CTM (Companhia de Telecomunicações de Macau) is the main carrier. Tourist SIMs are available at the airport for MOP 50–100 with several GB of data. Many phones now support eSIM — you can purchase a Macau/China eSIM in advance through Airalo or Nomad for convenience.

Data Coverage

Macau has excellent 4G/5G coverage throughout the territory — even underground in casinos and the tunnels under the Cotai bridges. Connectivity is generally better than most destinations. You won't have signal problems here.

WiFi

All major hotels, casino resorts, and most cafes have fast free WiFi. The Macau Government Tourism Office provides free "Hello Macau" WiFi at tourist spots throughout the historic centre. Coverage is genuinely excellent — Macau punches above its weight on connectivity.

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Safety & Health

5 tips

Travel Insurance

Still worth having even in a safe, well-developed destination like Macau. Kiang Wu Hospital and the public Hospital Conde de São Januário provide good medical care. Get a policy that covers trip cancellation and medical emergencies. We use SafetyWing for every trip.

General Safety

Macau is one of the safest destinations in Asia. Violent crime is extremely rare. The main risks are pickpocketing in very crowded areas (rare) and casino-related scams — if someone approaches you outside a casino offering tips or "guaranteed wins," walk away. Keep your belongings secure in casinos as you would anywhere with large crowds.

Tap Water

Tap water in Macau is technically safe to drink (it's treated to WHO standards), but most locals and visitors use bottled water due to pipe quality in older buildings. Bottled water is inexpensive at any convenience store — MOP 5–8 per 1.5L bottle.

Health & Clinics

The Health Bureau (SSM) operates public health centres throughout Macau. Private clinics are available throughout the city. Most casino hotels have in-house medical staff. For non-emergency issues, the public Centro de Saúde system is accessible and affordable.

Typhoon Season

Typhoon season runs June–November, with August–October being peak risk. Typhoon 8 signal means all non-essential services close (including casinos). Monitor the Macau Meteorological and Geophysical Bureau (SMG) app. Typhoon Hato (2017) was destructive — take warnings seriously and follow official signals.

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Packing Essentials

8 tips

📋 Interactive Packing Checklist

Before you read our gear picks below, use our interactive Macau packing list — 50+ items you can check off as you pack, filtered by season and activities. It's the fastest way to make sure nothing gets left behind.

Walking Shoes Are Non-Negotiable

The UNESCO heritage zone is all cobblestones and uneven stone surfaces. You will walk 15,000+ steps a day exploring the Peninsula. Wear comfortable closed-toe shoes — save the flip-flops for the hotel pool and Hac Sa Beach. Keen Newport sandals work well for the combination of walking and occasional beach days.

Rain Jacket

Macau gets significant rainfall, especially in the May–September wet season. A lightweight packable rain jacket is compact, packable, and far more useful than an umbrella when you're walking the heritage streets.

Power & Adapters

Macau uses Type G plugs (same as UK/HK) at 220V. If you're from the US, you'll need a plug adapter. Your phone charger and laptop are dual-voltage so no converter needed — just an adapter. Bring a GaN charger and a universal travel adapter to cover all your devices from one plug.

Smart Casual Clothing

Casino resorts often have dress codes for restaurants and high-limit gaming areas — no flip-flops, no sleeveless shirts. Pack at least one smart casual outfit. For everyday heritage walking: lightweight breathable fabrics, sun hat, sunscreen. Summer temperatures hit 33°C (91°F) with high humidity.

Sunscreen

The subtropical sun is intense from April through October. Bring SPF 50+ sunscreen — you'll be walking outdoors for hours at a stretch and burn faster than you expect. Available in Macau but more expensive than bringing your own.

Electrolytes & Hydration

Summer heat and humidity combined with long walking days and (optionally) casino air conditioning will dehydrate you faster than you expect. Bring electrolyte tablets and drink water constantly. 7-Eleven and Pak On convenience stores are everywhere and sell cold drinks cheaply.

Day Bag

A compact crossbody sling bag is ideal for Macau — secure enough for casino areas, compact enough for cobblestone streets, and fits your camera, water bottle, and day essentials. Keep your passport copy, backup credit card, and any casino chips separate from your daily carry.

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Language & Cultural Etiquette

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Languages in Macau

Cantonese is the dominant daily language. Mandarin (Putonghua) is increasingly common. Portuguese remains an official language — used in government, some signage, and by the Macanese community. English is widely spoken in tourist areas, casinos, major hotels, and restaurants. You can navigate the entire heritage district comfortably in English.

Essential Cantonese

Mùh'gōi (mm-goy) — thank you / excuse me. Gèichín? (幾錢, gay-chin) — how much? Jóusàhn (早晨, joh-sahn) — good morning. Mùh sái (mm-sai) — no need. Even a few words earn immediate goodwill and warmer service.

Tipping Norms

Service charges (typically 10%) are added to bills at most hotels and restaurants — check before tipping extra. Casino dealers do not accept tips in Macau (different from Las Vegas). Tour guides and taxi drivers appreciate a small tip but it's not obligatory. Rounding up on taxi fares is common and appreciated.

Temple & Heritage Site Etiquette

Dress modestly when visiting temples (A-Ma Temple, Kun Iam Temple) — cover shoulders and avoid shorts if possible. Do not touch offerings or religious objects. Photography is generally permitted but be respectful and ask at working temples. The ruins of St. Paul's and most UNESCO sites have no specific dress codes.

Casino Etiquette

Macau casinos are predominantly Chinese in culture — Baccarat is king, not Blackjack. Minimum bets are generally much higher than Las Vegas. Drinks are not free (unlike Vegas). Dress codes at VIP rooms are enforced. Photography is prohibited on the casino floor. Observe what other players are doing and follow their lead.

Food Culture

Macanese food is one of the world's rarest fusion cuisines — a blend of Portuguese, Cantonese, Indian, African, and Malay influences from centuries of maritime trade. Don't leave without trying: Portuguese egg tarts (Lord Stow's Bakery), pork chop buns, minchi (seasoned ground meat with egg), African chicken, and caldo verde. Dim sum culture from Cantonese tradition means morning hours at local teahouses are a genuine experience.

Some links on this page are affiliate links — we earn a small commission if you purchase through them, at no extra cost to you. We only recommend gear we personally use on our Macau trips. Full disclosure.

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