Hotel in Daxi, Taiwan
The Westin Tashee Resort\u002c Taoyuan
150ptsFoothills-Integrated Resort Scale

About The Westin Tashee Resort\u002c Taoyuan
The Westin Tashee Resort in Daxi, Taoyuan carries a 2025 Michelin Selected distinction, placing it among a small cohort of Taiwanese resort hotels recognised for consistent quality beyond the capital. Positioned in the Daxi hills east of Taoyuan city, the property trades on scale, landscape integration, and the kind of self-contained retreat infrastructure that differentiates full-service resorts from urban business hotels.
Where the Taoyuan Hills Define the Architecture
Taiwan's resort hotel tier divides cleanly between urban towers that happen to have pools and genuinely landscape-integrated properties where the site does most of the heavy lifting. The Westin Tashee Resort in Daxi belongs to the second category. Situated on Rixin Road in the Daxi district of Taoyuan — a stretch of rolling foothills that separates the congested Taoyuan basin from the Shimen Reservoir watershed — the property is designed to work with its elevation rather than against it. Approach roads rise through stands of subtropical greenery before the building mass comes into view, a sequencing that functions almost architecturally: the resort arrives as a destination, not as a roadside billboard.
This matters for a specific kind of traveller. Daxi sits roughly an hour southeast of Taipei Songshan and about forty minutes from Taoyuan International Airport, which makes the resort accessible from either direction without requiring the commitment of a remote mountain escape. That middle-distance positioning is a studied choice shared by several of Taiwan's more successful resort formats, where proximity to infrastructure allows the property to serve both leisure weekenders from Taipei and international arrivals looking to decompress immediately after landing.
Design Logic in a Resort Context
The architectural framework at properties of this scale in Taiwan's western foothills tends to follow one of two orientations: inward-facing around a central amenity core, or outward-facing to capture reservoir and ridge views. The Westin Tashee leans outward, with the surrounding terrain treated as a continuous visual element rather than a backdrop to block out. This approach, common to mid-century Japanese resort design and later absorbed into Taiwanese hospitality architecture during the 1990s expansion of mountain and reservoir-adjacent properties, gives the property a spatial generosity that purely urban hotels cannot replicate regardless of room count.
Westin's global design language, which trends toward warm neutrals, organic materials, and the brand's recognisable Heavenly Bed program, translates into this setting without the visual dissonance that sometimes affects international chain properties dropped into regional contexts. The resort format allows more square footage per guest, which in turn permits the kind of corridor-to-room spatial transitions that communicate quality before the guest ever opens a door. These transitional spaces , lobbies that open onto garden terraces, corridors that frame hill views through end-glass , function as design signals in their own right.
The 2025 Michelin Selected distinction, listed under the Michelin Hotels guide covering Taiwan, positions the Westin Tashee within a peer set defined by consistent service delivery and physical plant quality rather than boutique exclusivity. Michelin's hotel selection in Taiwan has concentrated heavily on Taipei properties such as the urban flagships that populate the capital's Xinyi and Zhongshan corridors, making a Daxi inclusion notable as a signal that the guide is extending its regional coverage. For context on how Taiwanese urban luxury hotels compare, see properties like [W Taipei in Taipei](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/w-taipei-taipei-hotel) or [Hotel Indigo Taipei North in Zhongshan District](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/hotel-indigo-taipei-north-zhongshan-district-hotel), which represent the capital-city end of the same recognition spectrum.
The Resort's Position in Taiwan's Wider Hotel Geography
Taiwan's non-urban resort tier has expanded significantly over the past decade, with properties targeting three distinct audiences: domestic weekenders from Taipei and Taichung, Japanese leisure travellers drawn to Taiwan's Onsens and mountain environments, and international visitors arriving via Taoyuan who prefer a softer landing than a Taipei city hotel. The Westin Tashee's Daxi positioning captures all three segments to varying degrees, though the domestic weekend market arguably drives the most consistent occupancy.
Compared to reservoir and hot-spring resort developments further south, such as [Grand Hilai Sun Moon Lake in Yuchi](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/grand-hilai-sun-moon-lake-yuchi-hotel) or the spa-focused format at [Volando Urai Spring Spa & Resort in Wulai District](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/volando-urai-spring-spa-resort-wulai-district-hotel), the Westin Tashee operates closer to metropolitan infrastructure. This proximity shapes the guest profile and, consequently, the amenity mix: the property carries the full-service expectations of the Westin brand rather than the stripped-back tranquility that defines more remote alternatives.
Eastern Taiwan's resort model, represented by properties like [Hualien Farglory Hotel in Yanliau](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/hualien-farglory-hotel-yanliau-hotel) and coastal options such as [YOHO Beach Resort in Pingtung](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/yoho-beach-resort-pingtung-hotel), requires longer travel commitments and serves a different itinerary logic entirely. The Westin Tashee's comparative advantage is convenience without sacrificing the sense of physical remove from the city, a balance that fewer properties manage to sustain as Taoyuan's suburban footprint continues to expand northward.
For travellers oriented toward design-forward smaller properties, Taiwan's independent hotel scene offers alternatives worth considering: [The Old England Manor in Ren'ai](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/the-old-england-manor-ren-u0027ai-hotel) and [The One Nanyuan in Xinpu](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/the-one-nanyuan-xinpu-hotel) occupy a different scale and aesthetic register entirely, while [Grasse Grace Manor in Miaoli](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/grasse-grace-manor-miaoli-hotel) demonstrates what smaller operators in Taiwan's mid-island hill country are doing with European-inflected design language. The Westin Tashee makes no claim to that independent-hotel register; it is a full-service chain resort operating at the leading of its format category, and the Michelin recognition reflects assessment within that frame.
Planning a Stay
Daxi is accessible from Taipei via National Freeway 3 and the Provincial Highway 7 corridor, with the drive from Taipei city centre running approximately seventy to ninety minutes depending on traffic conditions on the Freeway 3 interchange near Daxi. From Taoyuan International Airport, the route is more direct and considerably shorter. Public transport options into Daxi are limited relative to Taipei's MRT network, and most guests arriving without private vehicles will rely on taxi or ride-share services from Taoyuan HSR station or the airport. Weekend bookings, particularly over national holidays and the October-November period when hill temperatures moderate, book ahead more aggressively than midweek stays.
For travellers using the resort as a base for regional exploration, [Our full Daxi restaurants guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/cities/daxi) covers the town's historic old street, traditional tofu producers, and the lower-key dining scene that distinguishes Daxi from more tourist-saturated Taiwanese day-trip destinations. The Westin Tashee functions well as a headquarters for that kind of slow, town-and-countryside itinerary rather than as a transit stop.
Across Taiwan's broader Michelin-recognised hotel tier, international comparison points exist at properties like [Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/badrutts-palace-hotel-st-moritz-hotel) and [Hôtel de Paris Monte-Carlo in Monte Carlo](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/htel-de-paris-monte-carlo-monte-carlo-hotel) for a sense of how Michelin's hotel selection criteria translate across very different price points and geographic contexts. The Westin Tashee sits in a more accessible band than either of those properties, which is precisely the point of the Michelin Selected tier as a recognition category.
Frequently Asked Questions
- What should I expect atmosphere-wise at The Westin Tashee Resort, Taoyuan?
- The atmosphere is defined by the hillside setting rather than urban energy. The property reads as a self-contained retreat oriented around its natural surroundings, with design and spatial planning that emphasise views and outdoor access over city-hotel density. It carries the 2025 Michelin Selected distinction, placing it within a recognised tier of consistently performing Taiwanese hotels. Pricing follows Westin's full-service resort positioning, which sits above the midscale domestic resort market but below the ultra-premium rates of Taipei's top-tier urban properties.
- What room category do guests tend to prefer at The Westin Tashee Resort, Taoyuan?
- Specific room-category data is not available in our current records. However, at resort properties of this format and Michelin Selected standing in Taiwan, rooms oriented toward hillside or reservoir views consistently command preference over courtyard-facing options. The Westin brand's tiering typically prioritises the Heavenly Bed experience across all categories, with upper-floor rooms carrying the stronger case for the price differential. For style comparisons within Taiwan's resort tier, [The Moment Hotel Yilan by Lakeshore in Wujie](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/the-moment-hotel-yilan-by-lakeshore-wujie-hotel) and [Deer Chaser in Lugu Lake](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/hotels/deer-chaser-lugu-lake-hotel) represent smaller properties where room-category decisions follow a different logic based on limited inventory rather than tier selection.
Recognized By
Similar venues by awards
Related editorial
- Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2026: The Chairman and Wing Go 1-2 from the Same BuildingThe Chairman takes No. 1 and Wing climbs to No. 2 at Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2026. Both operate from the same Hong Kong building. Here's what it means.
- Four Seasons Yachts Debut: 95 Suites, 11 Restaurants, and a March 2026 Maiden VoyageFour Seasons I launches March 20, 2026, with 95 suites, a one-to-one staff ratio, and 11 onboard restaurants. Worth tracking if you want hotel-grade service at sea.
- LA Michelin Guide 2026: Seven New Restaurants from Tlayudas to Uzbek DumplingsMichelin's March 2026 California Guide update adds six LA restaurants and one Montecito newcomer, spanning Oaxacan tlayudas, Uzbek manti, and Korean-Italian pasta.
Save or rate The Westin Tashee Resort\u002c Taoyuan on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.


