AbstractSparse felsic microgranitoid enclaves (FMEs) in the Shangshuiquan granite of the Zhangjiakou district, the north margin of the North China Craton, are fine‐grained, dark‐colored and exhibit subangular to subspherical shapes. They share similar mineral assemblages, chemical compositions, and zircon Hf isotope compositions to the host granite. New zircon U‐Pb geochronology reveals that the FMEs crystallized at 156–153 Ma, while the Shangshuiquan granite formed at ca. 146 Ma. The FEMs are, therefore, 10 to 7 Ma older than the host granite. Combined with petrological evidence, we suggest that the FMEs are fragments of rapidly crystalized magmas, which were captured by the younger Shangshuiquan magma. Magmas of the FMEs and Shangshuiquan granite originated from the same reservoir. The Shangshuiquan granite is the result of small batches of magma being built up incrementally, and the FMEs belong to the earlier batches of magma. The lifespan of the Shangshuiquan magma reservoir exceeds 10 Ma. FMEs derived from cogenetic fragments have the potential to offer critical information about the formation process and timescale of granitic plutons.