ABSTRACT This paper presents a complete map of the Mesozoic volcanic-plutonic complexes in the Taiwan Strait and its adjacent areas in terms of seismic profiles, ages, geochemistry, isotopic systematics, and published data. Two periods of igneous activity in the Taiwan Strait can be distinguished by seismic profiles: Jurassic (200.4–148.2 Ma); and Latest Jurassic/Cretaceous to Maastrichtian (144–66 Ma), of which the Cretaceous is the best preserved and could possibly be the most widespread. Mesozoic magmatic activity with the NE-striking distribution was migrating southeastward (oceanward). LA-MC-ICPMS zircon U – Pb dating yields the age data of 109.5 ± 0.4 Ma for PTDH1 granodiorite and 92.6 ± 0.4 Ma for PTDH4 rhyolite in the Taiwan Strait, respectively. The 581.66-m-thick Upper Jurassic volcanic rocks of the Chuan2 well are the thickest Mesozoic igneous rocks in the Taiwan Strait. The petrogenetic discrimination diagram of the Cretaceous volcanic-plutonic complexes along the coast of South China and the Taiwan Strait generally is belonging to volcanic arc or intraplate type calc-alkaline rock series. The high potassium calc-alkaline rock series of the Cretaceous volcanic-plutonic complexes that is most widely distributed in the coastal areas of South China and the Taiwan Strait. They are controlled by the subduction of the Palaeo-Pacific domain.