Anqing, told straight.

The granite spire of Mount Tianzhu is the headline here, but it's an hour out of town in Qianshan, where a gate ticket, a shuttle and a cable car stack on top of each other before you reach the summit ridge. Back in the old city on the Yangtze sits a Ming-era pagoda, and the whole place is the birthplace of Huangmei Opera. How a foreigner reaches Anqing from Hefei or Wuhan, what the Tianzhushan fees really add up to, and where the genuinely old things are.

Field-verified · last checked 2026-06-13

The booking wall verified

These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.

Mount Tianzhu / Tianzhushan scenic area (天柱山风景区), Qianshan

2026-06-13
Release
Real-name entry with your passport; reserve ahead through the official scenic-area channel on weekends and in holiday peaks
Price
Foreigners
Passport works

Tianzhushan runs on real-name entry, so you book with your passport through the official Tianzhushan WeChat or Alipay mini-program (Chinese-first), or buy on an OTA that lists foreigner-bookable tickets. Crucially the gate, the in-park shuttle bus and the cable car are three separate purchases — the sights are spread up a mountain you can't realistically walk, so budget for all three. The simplest path is to have your city hotel reserve the entry plus shuttle with your passport details before you make the trip out to Qianshan. Don't assume there's an easy English window at the gate.

officialBookingUrl set to null: we could not load or verify a single clean official ticketing domain for the scenic area during research, so we are not publishing one — sales run through the scenic-area company's mini-program plus listed OTAs, and you should reconfirm every price at booking. Prices are left null deliberately rather than invented. What's certain about the geography: Mount Tianzhu (also called Mount Wan / 皖山, the source of Anhui's one-character abbreviation 'Wan') is a UNESCO Global Geopark of dramatic granite peaks, with 45 summits over 1,000 m and the 'pillar of heaven' Tianzhu Peak topping out at 1,760 m. It sits in Qianshan County, about an hour from Anqing city proper, so treat it as a day trip out and back, not a city walk. The fees stack in the now-standard Chinese big-mountain pattern: a gate admission, a compulsory in-park shuttle from the gate to the cable-car base, and the cable car itself up toward the summit ridge — confirm the current figure for each when you book, and budget them together so the shuttle and cableway aren't a surprise.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Yingjiang Temple & Zhenfeng Pagoda (迎江寺·振风塔)

2026-06-13
Price
Foreigners
Passport works

A walk-up city temple on the Yangtze riverfront in the old town; bring your passport as ID. Climbing the pagoda is usually a small extra fee paid on site. No advance booking needed in normal periods.

officialBookingUrl null — this is a working riverside temple sold at the gate, with no official ticketing site we could verify; price left null rather than guessed (it's a modest gate fee, with a small extra charge to climb the pagoda — confirm on site). Yingjiang Temple was founded in 974 under the first Song emperor, and its centrepiece is the Zhenfeng Pagoda (振风塔), a brick Buddhist pagoda built in 1570 in the late Ming, holding more than six hundred small Buddha statues in its niches. It stands right on the north bank of the Yangtze in the old city — historically the 'first pagoda of the Yangtze' as a landmark for river boats — and you can climb it for a view over the river and the rooftops. It's a focused one- to two-hour stop, the genuine old monument of the city, and the natural anchor for a wander through the old riverfront quarter.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Huangmei Opera in Anqing (黄梅戏) — Anqing old town & opera venues

2026-06-13
Price
Foreigners
Passport works

There's no single 'attraction' here — Anqing is the cradle of Huangmei Opera (黄梅戏), and the way to experience it is a staged performance at a city theatre or a cultural venue rather than a ticketed park. Programmes are irregular and in Chinese; ask your hotel or the local culture centre what's on, and book a seat through whatever channel they point you to. Bring your passport in case a venue runs real-name entry.

officialBookingUrl null and prices null — this is a performance tradition, not a fixed-fee gate, so there's nothing to invent. Huangmei Opera originated in Anqing and the city bills itself as its home, periodically hosting a Huangmei Opera Festival (editions ran in 1992, 1996 and 2003, among others). The music is famously lyrical and accessible — 'The Married Couple Returning Home' and 'The Heavenly Match' are the standards — and even without Chinese you can follow the staging. Realistically, catching a live performance depends on timing and what's programmed while you're in town; outside festival periods you may find it easier to see a short staged excerpt at a cultural venue or hear it at the old-town theatre. Treat it as a cultural bonus woven into a day in the old city around Yingjiang Temple, not a guaranteed scheduled show.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Tongcheng & the Six-Foot Lane (桐城·六尺巷)

2026-06-13
Price
Free (still needs booking)
Foreigners
Passport works

Tongcheng is a small historic city about an hour north of Anqing, reached by bus or train; the Six-Foot Lane and the town's literary-heritage sites are mostly free or small walk-up tickets. Bring your passport for any real-name entry, but no advance booking is needed in normal periods.

officialBookingUrl null and price treated as effectively free/nominal — the Six-Foot Lane is an open historic alley, not a ticketed park, so no price is invented. Tongcheng (桐城), administratively part of greater Anqing, was the home of the influential Qing-era 'Tongcheng School' of classical prose, and its best-known sight is the Six-Foot Lane (六尺巷): a narrow alley tied to a famous story of two feuding families who each gave up three feet of land to settle a boundary dispute, now a small heritage site and a parable of neighbourly compromise. It's a modest, quietly literary half-day for travellers already drawn to Chinese history rather than a headline sight; pair it with Tongcheng's old streets and Confucian temple if you make the trip. If your time is tight, it's the first thing to cut in favour of the mountain and the pagoda.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Landing & registration

The first-24-hours facts: hotels, police registration, and whether your card works.

Hotels take foreigners
Mixed — check first
Foreign card via Alipay/WeChat
mixed
Police registration
Anqing is a mid-sized Yangtze city in southwestern Anhui that sees relatively few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is hit-or-miss and worth confirming before you pay. The safer bases are mid-range and chain hotels in the city centre near the riverfront and the Anqing railway station, and around the high-speed Anqing West station, where registering a foreign passport with the police is more routine. If you plan to stay out at the mountain, note that Tianzhushan is about an hour away in Qianshan (also written Qianshan City), and the small guesthouses and farmstays clustered at the scenic-area gate are aimed at domestic tour groups — many aren't set up to register a foreigner, so call ahead. Carry your original passport: it's your ID for every gate ticket, for any real-name online booking, and for hotel check-in. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers tickets, taxis and restaurants in the city, but keep some cash on you, since acceptance and signal can thin out up on the mountain and on local buses.

Eat like a local

What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.

Hairy tofu — the fermented Anhui signaturechecked 2026-06-13

If you try one regional thing in Anhui, make it hairy tofu (毛豆腐 máo dòufu): tofu deliberately fermented until a fuzzy white fungus grows over its surface, then usually pan-fried until golden and served with a chilli-and-soy dip. It looks alarming and smells pungent, but the frying mellows it into something savoury and almost cheese-like — a genuine provincial speciality rather than a tourist gimmick. Look for it at busy local restaurants and street griddles, where it's cooked to order, rather than off a hotel buffet.

River fish, straight from the Yangtzechecked 2026-06-13

Anqing is a Yangtze town, and freshwater fish is the natural thing to order — usually steamed or braised simply so the freshness carries, sometimes done as a clear fish soup. Riverbank and old-town restaurants do it well and cheaply. As with river fish everywhere, expect bones and eat slowly; the point is the clean, fresh flavour rather than heavy sauce. Pair it with a plate of local greens and you've got the honest version of an Anqing meal.

Anhui cooking runs savoury, fermented and a little funkychecked 2026-06-13

Beyond the headline dishes, Anhui (Hui) cuisine leans into preserved and fermented flavours, braises, and wild mountain ingredients — bamboo shoots, dried and salted vegetables, stinky-style fermented preparations that reward an open mind. It's less about chilli heat than Sichuan or neighbouring Jiangxi and more about deep, slow, savoury depth. Eat where the locals queue, point at what looks good, and use a translation app for the menu; you'll eat well and cheaply, and you'll taste why Hui cooking counts among China's regional schools.

The honest layer

The part a tourism board will never print.

Tianzhushan is an hour out of town — and the fees stack three deepchecked 2026-06-13

The granite spire you came for isn't in Anqing city; it's about an hour west in Qianshan, so plan it as a full day out and back rather than an afternoon stroll. Once there, the costs come in layers in the now-standard Chinese big-mountain way: a gate admission, then a compulsory in-park shuttle bus from the gate up to the cable-car base (the access road is long and you can't walk it sensibly), then the cable car itself toward the summit ridge — each a separate ticket. Budget all three together so the shuttle and cableway aren't a nasty surprise at the counter, and be honest with yourself about fitness: even off the cable car there's real climbing among the peaks. We've left exact prices out below because we couldn't verify a clean official source; reconfirm each fee when you book.

There's no clean official booking site we could confirmchecked 2026-06-13

Unlike some big scenic areas, Tianzhushan's ticketing runs through the scenic-area company's WeChat/Alipay mini-program (Chinese-first) plus the usual OTA resellers, and we could not load or verify a single clean official ticketing domain during research. So we publish no 'official' link rather than risk pointing you at a reseller or a dead page. The practical workaround for a foreigner is the same one that works across rural China: have your city hotel reserve the entry and shuttle with your passport details before you head out to Qianshan, and keep the booking confirmation on your phone.

The real old monument is the riverside pagoda, not a rebuilt 'old town'checked 2026-06-13

In the city itself, the standout is genuinely old: the Zhenfeng Pagoda at Yingjiang Temple, a late-Ming brick pagoda from 1570 on the north bank of the Yangtze, attached to a temple founded back in 974. You can climb it for a river view, and it anchors a pleasant wander through the old riverfront quarter. Set expectations for the rest of the 'old' streetscape, though — like most Chinese river cities, much of it is reconstructed or workaday modern. Come for the pagoda, the river, and the Huangmei Opera heritage rather than an untouched historic centre.

Getting there: easiest via Hefei, with Wuhan and Nanjing as alternateschecked 2026-06-13

Anqing sits on the north bank of the Yangtze in southwestern Anhui, well connected by rail. The simplest approach for most travellers is from the provincial capital Hefei by frequent train; the city is also linked west toward Wuhan and east toward Nanjing (the Nanjing–Anqing intercity high-speed line opened in December 2022), and there's a small airport, Anqing Tianzhushan Airport, with domestic flights. Arrive at the central Anqing railway station for the old city and the pagoda, or the high-speed Anqing West station; from either, taxis and DiDi handle the city, and a hired car or the long-distance bus gets you out to Tianzhushan in Qianshan. Confusingly, the airport carries the 'Tianzhushan' name but the mountain itself is still an hour's drive from the city.

Straight answers

Is Mount Tianzhu in Anqing city, and how do I get there?

No — the mountain is about an hour west of the city, in Qianshan County (Qianshan City), so plan it as a day trip out and back. From Anqing, take a hired car, taxi or long-distance bus to the Tianzhushan scenic-area gate. Note the quirk that Anqing's airport is named 'Anqing Tianzhushan Airport' even though it's near the city, not the mountain. The peak itself is a UNESCO Global Geopark of granite spires, topping out at 1,760 m, so allow a full day and reasonable fitness.

What does Tianzhushan actually cost, and can a foreigner book it?

Entry is real-name, so you book with your passport — through the official Tianzhushan WeChat or Alipay mini-program (Chinese-first) or an OTA that lists foreigner-bookable tickets — and a passport works as ID. Budget for three separate fees that stack: the gate admission, a compulsory in-park shuttle bus, and the cable car up toward the summit. We've deliberately not published exact prices because we couldn't verify a clean official source; reconfirm each fee when you book. The simplest path is to have your hotel reserve the entry and shuttle with your passport details before you head out to Qianshan.

What's worth seeing in Anqing city itself?

The standout is Yingjiang Temple on the Yangtze riverfront and its Zhenfeng Pagoda — a brick Buddhist pagoda built in 1570 in the late Ming, holding over six hundred Buddha statues, which you can climb for a river view; the temple was founded back in 974. Anqing is also the birthplace of Huangmei Opera, so if a performance is on while you're in town it's worth catching. About an hour north, the small literary city of Tongcheng and its Six-Foot Lane make a quiet half-day for history-minded travellers.

Can I use a foreign card, and is registration a problem?

Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers most things in the city — tickets, taxis, restaurants — but carry some cash, since acceptance and signal can thin out up on the mountain and on local buses. For lodging, stick to mid-range or chain hotels in the city centre or near the high-speed station, where registering a foreign passport is more routine; the small guesthouses out at the Tianzhushan gate are aimed at domestic groups and may not be set up to register a foreigner, so confirm before you pay. Carry your original passport for check-in and for every gate ticket.

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These facts were field-verified on 2026-06-13. Rules change — if you saw different on the ground, help the next traveler.