Can foreigners book Caishiji (Caishi Rock) scenic area & Taibai Tower (采石矶风景区·太白楼) with a passport?
Buy at the gate or reserve through the scenic area's official WeChat/Alipay mini-program with your passport as real-name ID; OTAs such as Trip.com also list it. There's no reliable English-language window, so if you book online the simplest path is to have your hotel reserve it with your passport details. Worth checking the day before whether timed reservation is required in holiday peaks.
Can foreigners book Li Bai's Tomb & Daqingshan Li Bai Cultural Tourism Area (李白墓·大青山李白文化旅游区) with a passport?
Walk-up gate ticket with your passport as ID in normal periods; the surrounding Daqingshan cultural area and Peach Blossom Village are reached the same way. No reliable English booking channel, so reserve through the mini-program or an OTA, or just buy at the gate. Bring your passport.
Do I need to book Ma'anshan Museum (马鞍山市博物馆) (Ma'anshan) in advance?
No reservation wall here — walk-up works. officialBookingUrl is mas-museum.com, the museum's own site as listed on its Wikivoyage entry (mas-museum.com / 马鞍山市博物馆) — verify it's live when you go, as small municipal-museum sites lapse. Entry is free; you collect a free timed ticket at the door. It's a national second-grade local museum on Taibai Avenue in Yushan District, integrated with the library and grand theatre in the Municipal Park. Open roughly 09:00-17:00 (no entry after 16:00), normally closed Mondays unless Monday is a public holiday — confirm current hours. A sensible rainy-afternoon stop and good context on local history, but a supporting act, not the reason you came. (officialBookingUrl set to null: the Ma'anshan Museum site (mas-museum.com) was unreachable on check — buy at the gate or via the official mini-program.)
Can I buy Ma'anshan Museum (马鞍山市博物馆) tickets from a third-party app or OTA?
No — only the official channel works. Third-party listings are markup or scams.
Can foreigners book Ma'anshan Museum (马鞍山市博物馆) with a passport?
Free entry, but you collect a free ticket at the ticket office before going in, with your passport as ID. No advance booking needed in normal periods; just turn up within opening hours.
How much does Ma'anshan Museum (马鞍山市博物馆) cost?
Entry is free.
Do I need to book Yangtze riverfront & Evernight City night street (长江采石矶·长江不夜城) (Ma'anshan) in advance?
No reservation wall here — walk-up works. officialBookingUrl null — there's no ticket to book; the promenade and the Evernight City street are free to enter, with paid food, shows and attractions inside. This is the river itself: the broad lower Yangtze, walkable embankments near the Caishiji area, and a modern night-economy entertainment street (open evenings, longer hours at weekends) built around light shows, snack stalls and immersive performances. It's a pleasant evening wander and a way to see the river after dark, not a heritage sight — pair it with a Caishiji visit earlier in the day. Hours skew to evenings (roughly 17:00-22:00 weekdays, from late morning at weekends); confirm locally.
Can I buy Yangtze riverfront & Evernight City night street (长江采石矶·长江不夜城) tickets from a third-party app or OTA?
No — only the official channel works. Third-party listings are markup or scams.
Can foreigners book Yangtze riverfront & Evernight City night street (长江采石矶·长江不夜城) with a passport?
The riverfront promenade is open and free to walk. The 'Evernight City' (长江不夜城) leisure street is also free to enter; individual rides, shows or food stalls inside are paid on the spot. Carry your passport for the city generally; no booking needed to stroll.
How much does Yangtze riverfront & Evernight City night street (长江采石矶·长江不夜城) cost?
Entry is free.
Can I pay with a foreign card (Visa/Mastercard) in Ma'anshan?
It's hit-and-miss in Ma'anshan. Don't rely on swiping a foreign card — set up Alipay or WeChat Pay for mobile payment and carry cash as a fallback.
Do hotels in Ma'anshan accept foreign passports?
It varies in Ma'anshan — mid-range and chain hotels usually register foreigners, while cheaper local guesthouses may not. Confirm foreign registration when booking.
What should foreigners know about hotels and registration in Ma'anshan?
Ma'anshan is an industrial Yangtze city in eastern Anhui, just across the river from Nanjing, and it sees very few independent foreign visitors, so foreign registration is hit-or-miss at smaller properties. Your safest bet is a mid-range or international chain (the city has the usual Home Inn, GreenTree, Vienna, Elan and Starway-type hotels, mostly around Yushan and Huashan districts) near the city centre or the high-speed station, where staff are more likely to be set up to register a foreign passport with the police; budget local guesthouses often aren't. Confirm the property takes foreign passports before you pay. Because Nanjing is barely 15-20 minutes away by high-speed train, many travellers actually base themselves in Nanjing, where foreigner-friendly hotels are far more plentiful, and day-trip to Caishiji and the Li Bai sites. Carry your original passport — it's your ID for hotel check-in and for the real-name ticketing many sights use. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works for most tickets, taxis and meals, but keep some cash for small vendors and local buses.
What's the main thing to know before visiting Ma'anshan?
Come for Li Bai, and know what that means. Ma'anshan's real draw is literary, not scenic-blockbuster. It markets itself hard as the city of Li Bai (李白) — the towering Tang poet who spent his last days nearby in Dangtu, died there in 762, and is buried at Qingshan. The legend that he drowned at Caishiji trying to embrace the moon's reflection in the river is the romantic hook the whole city leans on. If you love Tang poetry, walking the riverside cliff at Caishiji and visiting the tomb is a genuine, quietly moving pilgrimage. If you don't, be honest with yourself: this is otherwise a working steel city, and the sights are modest. Manage expectations and it delivers; arrive expecting a Huangshan or a Suzhou and you'll be flat.
Any tourist traps or surprises to watch for in Ma'anshan?
It's a steel city, and that's the honest backdrop. Ma'anshan grew up around Ma Steel (Magang) and is one of China's major iron-and-steel and Yangtze-port bases. It only became a city in the 1950s. That means a clean, modern, prosperous-but-industrial urban core rather than an old town — the historic interest is concentrated at Caishiji, the tomb and a couple of museums, not spread through atmospheric streets. The upside: it's tidy, easy and cheap, with little tourist crush. The downside: outside the Li Bai sites there isn't a deep sightseeing bench, so one full day (or a Nanjing day-trip) covers the headline attractions comfortably.
What should I eat in Ma'anshan?
Caishiji dried tea — the local snack to actually try. The one genuinely local thing to seek out is Caishiji dried tea (采石矶茶干 / 'chá gān') — pressed, seasoned dried tofu, dark red and chewy, flavoured with things like chicken stock, star anise, cinnamon and osmanthus. It's a Qing-era specialty with a couple of centuries of history behind it, sold packaged all over the city, and it makes a cheap, very portable edible souvenir. Buy it as a snack for the train; it travels far better than anything you'll eat hot.
Where do locals eat in Ma'anshan, and what else is worth trying?
Yangtze river fish and Anhui-meets-Jiangsu cooking. Ma'anshan sits where Anhui (Hui) cooking blends with neighbouring Jiangsu flavours, and being a Yangtze port, freshwater fish is the thing to order — locals prize dishes like the fish heads from Xuejiawa, and river fish cooked simply so the freshness carries. You'll also see hearty local plates like old-goose soup (老鹅汤), famously cooked near Taihu Mountain. Order the river fish and a soup over anything generic; this is where the city quietly eats well.
What's actually worth seeing in Ma'anshan?
The Li Bai heritage. Caishiji (采石矶) is the headline: a wooded riverside cliff over the Yangtze with the Taibai Tower honouring the poet, plus the legend that Li Bai drowned here reaching for the moon's reflection. The second half is Li Bai's tomb at Qingshan out in Dangtu, where the poet spent his final days. Add the free Ma'anshan Museum and a Yangtze riverfront walk and you've covered the city. It's a modest, literary-pilgrimage destination rather than a big scenic draw — come for the poetry and the river, not for an untouched old town.
How do I get to Ma'anshan, and is Nanjing close?
Very close. Ma'anshan is across the Yangtze from Nanjing — roughly 15-20 minutes on a high-speed train, or just over an hour by bus to downtown Nanjing. It's on the high-speed network, so Shanghai and Hangzhou are around 1.5 hours and the provincial capital Hefei a couple of hours. Many foreign travellers base in Nanjing, where foreigner-friendly hotels are plentiful, and day-trip over for Caishiji and the Li Bai sites.
Do I need to book tickets ahead, and can a foreigner do it?
For most Ma'anshan sights you can buy at the gate with your passport as ID, and a passport works. Caishiji and the tomb area use real-name entry, so you can also reserve through their WeChat or Alipay mini-program (Chinese-first) or on an OTA such as Trip.com; the simplest path is to have your hotel book with your passport details. The Ma'anshan Museum is free but you collect a free ticket at the door. We couldn't verify current ticket prices for the paid sights, so reconfirm them when you book — and whether timed reservation is needed in holiday peaks.
How do I reach Li Bai's tomb at Qingshan?
It's at Daqingshan in Dangtu, roughly 20-30 km south of the city centre — not a quick bus ride. The practical option is a DiDi or a negotiated taxi for a half-day, ideally combined with anything else on that side of the city. Bring your passport for the gate, and treat it as a quiet literary-heritage stop rather than a big attraction. If the tomb is the reason you're coming, build your day around the transport, not just the entry ticket.
Rules change. We re-check these facts on a schedule and date-stamp every page — but always confirm on the official channel before relying on a time.