The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Weizhou Island (Weizhou Dao)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Book the ferry a few days ahead in summer and on Chinese holidays — daily sailings are capped and do sell out; online sales close 30 minutes before each departure, the port window 15 minutes before
- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Two charges, not one: a real-name ferry ticket across, and a separate island entrance fee (shang dao fei) to set foot on the place. Both are real-name and a passport is explicitly an accepted ID for boarding — bring the physical passport, a photo won't clear the gate. The official channel is the ferry company's own platform (Laiu8 / 来游吧, web and WeChat) or the port ticket windows; the interface is Chinese-first, so the easy path is to have your hotel book it for you. Don't assume you can just walk up to the pier in season and get on the next boat.
officialBookingUrl is the ferry operator's official Laiu8 (来游吧) site — book the boat there or through your hotel, not a tout at the port. Crossing is from the Beihai International Passenger Port to Weizhou's Xijiao Pier. Expect roughly ¥150–300 each way depending on cabin class, plus an island entrance fee on top (commonly quoted around ¥98 for adults); treat both numbers as indicative and confirm current pricing when you book. It's a volcanic island with a national geopark, lighthouse and a quiet Catholic church — genuinely worth the trip, but it's a half- to full-day commitment because of the boat schedule, and the last sailing back is in the afternoon.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Silver Beach (Yintan)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- Free (still needs booking)
- Foreigners
- Passport works
It's a free public beach — just walk on, no ticket and no booking. Parking, loungers, jet-skis and other rentals are the only paid extras, and those are optional.
officialBookingUrl null — there's nothing to book, the beach is open and free. The name comes from the fine pale sand, and the headline draw is how shallow and flat the water stays a long way out, which makes it gentle for families but not dramatic. The sand is the appeal; the sea here is calm and shallow rather than the deep turquoise of a tropical resort. Manage expectations and it delivers a pleasant, cheap beach day.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Beihai Old Street (Laojie)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- Free (still needs booking)
- Foreigners
- Passport works
An open public street, free to wander — no ticket, no reservation. Come for a stroll and the architecture; you only spend money if you eat or buy something.
officialBookingUrl null — it's a free, open street. A roughly one-kilometre arcade of late-19th and early-20th-century colonial-era shophouses from Beihai's treaty-port days, now lined with snack stalls, pearl shops and souvenir sellers. The buildings are the real, atmospheric part; much of the retail is standard tourist-street fare. Worth an hour or two, ideally early or late when it's cooler and less crowded, not a half-day.
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
- Beihai is a domestic beach-holiday town, not an international resort, so the foreigner-registration picture is mixed. Mid-range and chain hotels in the city and near the international passenger port generally take foreign passports and handle the police registration; cheap local guesthouses, and especially the family minsu (homestays) out on Weizhou Island, often aren't set up to register foreigners — confirm before you pay, particularly for an island stay. Foreign Visa/Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay covers most tickets, taxis and restaurants, but carry some cash for small island vendors and seafood stalls.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
Beihai is a working fishing port, so the seafood is the reason to eat here — but the same buy-and-cook game as other Chinese beach towns applies. Prices on tanks are usually per jin (500g), and a fish can be several jin, with a separate cooking fee on top. Agree the per-jin price and the cooking charge before anything goes in the pot, watch the scale, and you'll eat very well and cheaply. The overcharging only works on people who don't ask first.
The taste of Beihai that you won't find inland is sha xie zhi — a pungent, fermented sauce made from tiny local sand crabs, used as a dip or to dress vegetables and meat. It's an acquired, funky-savoury flavour and very much a regional thing; try it on the side rather than ordering a whole dish blind. Locals are quietly proud of it, and it's a more authentic souvenir of the place than anything in the pearl shops.
Beihai sits in Guangxi, so beyond the seafood you're in rice-noodle country — look for local noodle bowls and the fresh, light, slightly tangy southern style rather than heavy northern food. It's cheap, everywhere, and a good cool-down from the coastal heat. Pick a busy local shop over anything aimed squarely at tour groups and you'll do fine.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Almost everyone comes to Beihai for Weizhou Island, and the thing that catches people out is the boat. Sailings are capped and real-name, and in summer and over Chinese holidays they sell out days ahead. Book the ferry early through the official Laiu8 channel or your hotel, bring your physical passport for boarding, and plan around the schedule — the last boat back leaves in the afternoon, so a day trip is tight. If the island is why you're here, lock the ferry in before anything else.
Your ferry ticket only gets you across the water. To actually go onto Weizhou you also pay an island entrance fee (shang dao fei) — commonly quoted around ¥98 for adults, charged on top of the boat. You can usually buy both together in the official app or at the port, but budget for two charges, not one, and don't be surprised at the second gate.
Yintan's selling point is the wide, fine, pale sand and how shallow and calm the water stays. That makes it safe and easy for a family paddle, but if you're picturing clear deep turquoise like Sanya or Southeast Asia, recalibrate — this is a gentle, shallow domestic beach. It's free and pleasant; just come for what it is rather than what the brochure photos imply.
This is a subtropical coast: summer is hot, humid and crowded with domestic holidaymakers, and it sits in the South China Sea typhoon belt, so a storm can scrub the Weizhou ferry entirely for a day or two. Spring and autumn are kinder — warm enough for the beach, calmer seas, easier ferry tickets and lighter crowds. If your dates are flexible, avoid the peak-summer and national-holiday crush.
Straight answers
How do I book the Weizhou Island ferry as a foreigner?
The ferry is real-name and a passport is an accepted boarding ID. Book through the ferry company's official Laiu8 (来游吧) website or WeChat account, or buy at the Beihai International Passenger Port ticket window — or simply have your hotel book it for you, since the official flow is Chinese-first. Bring the physical passport for boarding, not just a photo, and book a few days ahead in summer or over holidays because sailings are capped and sell out.
How much does Weizhou Island cost in total?
Two separate charges. The ferry runs roughly ¥150–300 each way depending on cabin class, and there's a separate island entrance fee on top (commonly quoted around ¥98 for adults). You can usually pay both together when you book. Treat these as indicative figures and confirm the current prices in the official channel, but plan for the boat plus the island fee, not just one ticket.
Is Silver Beach free, and is the water good?
Yes, Silver Beach (Yintan) is a free public beach — no ticket, no reservation, with only optional paid extras like loungers and rentals. The draw is the wide, fine, pale sand; the water is shallow and calm a long way out, which is great for families but not the deep turquoise of a tropical island. Come for an easy, cheap beach day and it delivers.
Can I use a foreign card, and will hotels register me?
Foreign Visa/Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay covers most things — ferry and attraction bookings, taxis, restaurants — so set those apps up before you arrive, and carry some cash for small island vendors and seafood stalls. Hotel registration is mixed: city and port-area mid-range hotels take foreign passports fine, but cheap guesthouses and island homestays often can't register foreigners, so confirm before you pay, especially for a night out on Weizhou.