List of tallest buildings in Wuhan
| Tall buildings in Wuhan | |
|---|---|
Wuchang District, featuring Wuhan Greenland Center under construction on the left of the Yangtze | |
| Tallest building | Wuhan Greenland Center (2023) |
| Height of tallest building | 475.6 m (1,560 ft) |
| First 150 m+ building | Truroll Plaza (1996) |
| Buildings above 150 m | 193 (2025) (7th) |
| Buildings above 200 m | 71 (2025) (5th) |
| Buildings above 300 m | 7 (2025) (5th) |
| Buildings above 400 m | 2 |
This list of tallest buildings in Wuhan ranks skyscrapers in the Chinese city of Wuhan, Hubei by height. Wuhan is the capital and largest city in Hubei, with a population of over 13 million people as of 2022 and an urban area population of over 10.3 million. Wuhan is the largest city in Central China and a major financial, economic, cultural, and transportation hub. Most of Wuhan's tallest buildings are located in the central districts of Jiang'an, Jianghan, Qiaokou and Wuchang, lining both sides of the Yangtze River.
Wuhan is one of the cities with the most tall buildings in the world; it has the seventh-most skyscrapers taller than 150 metres (492 feet), with 193 of them as of 2025. 71 skyscrapers rise above 200 m (656 ft) in height, the fifth most in the world. Wuhan has a total of seven completed supertall skyscrapers, the fifth-most in the world, which is tied with Chicago, Nanjing, and Shanghai. A further three are under construction. Since 2023, the tallest building in Wuhan has been the Wuhan Greenland Center, a supertall skyscraper that reaches a height of 476 m (1,650 ft). It was originally planned to reach a height of 636 m (2,087), earning it the status of a megatall skyscraper, but was redesigned owing to airspace restrictions.
Wuhan's earliest skyscrapers were built in the late 1990s. The Wuhan World Trade Tower, built in 1998 at a height of 273 m (896 ft), was the tallest building in Wuhan for ten years until 2008, upon the completion of Wuhan's first supertall skyscraper, the Minsheng Bank Building, at 331 m (1,086 ft) in height. During the 2010s, the rate of skyscraper construction accelerated significantly. Despite being the starting point of the COVID-19 pandemic, the rate of construction increased further. Wuhan is mainland China's fourth-largest skyline and the largest in Central China.