The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Yungang Grottoes
✓ 2026-06-07- Release
- Same-day tickets ended Mar 2025 — book 1-7 days ahead (not incl. today)
- Price
- ¥120
- Foreigners
- Passport works
There is no ticket counter anymore: you must reserve online in advance through the official 云冈研究院 / 云冈石窟 WeChat or Alipay mini-program, real-name, with a time slot. A passport works as the ID. The interface is Chinese-first, so have your hotel help if you're not comfortable in the app, and don't show up expecting to buy at the gate.
No standalone official website: the official channel is the Yungang WeChat mini-program (Chinese only). Trip.com works for foreigners and is on the officially listed platforms; book a day or more ahead. Roughly ¥120 peak (Apr–Oct) / ¥100 off-season (Nov–Mar); half price for students and 6–18s with ID
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Hanging Monastery (Xuankong Si) + Mount Heng, Hunyuan
✓ 2026-06-07- Release
- The 'climbing' ticket that lets you go up onto the temple is capped (around 3,260/day) and real-name reserved up to 7 days ahead via the 北岳云游 mini-program; it can sell out on busy days
- Price
- ¥100
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Two separate things: a base entry, and a limited 'climbing/登临' ticket to actually walk up onto the cliffside structure. The climbing ticket is real-name, daily-capped, and bookable online (北岳云游 mini-program) or at the Hengshan visitor-centre window; passport ID applies. Reserve the climbing ticket ahead if walking onto the temple matters to you.
officialBookingUrl is byhs.net.cn (the Mount Heng / 北岳恒山 scenic-area management site). The monastery is about 65 km from Datong near Hunyuan; most people hire a DiDi or a taxi for the day, often combined with the Yingxian Wooden Pagoda. Without the capped climbing ticket you can still see and photograph it from below, just not walk up onto it. Climbing ticket roughly ¥100 full / ¥50 half, on top of base entry; confirm current split at booking
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Huayan Monastery (in the Ancient City)
✓ 2026-06-07- Price
- ¥50
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Buy at the gate; passport required for entry as ID, as with most Datong sights. No advance booking needed in normal periods.
officialBookingUrl set to null: this temple sells at the gate and through OTAs, with no dedicated official ticketing site I could verify. The largest surviving Liao-Jin timber temple in China, inside the walled Ancient City, walkable alongside Shanhua Monastery and the free Guandi Temple. Around ¥50 peak / ¥40 off-season
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Shanhua Monastery (Shanhua Si)
✓ 2026-06-07- Price
- ¥50
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Buy at the gate with your passport; no advance booking in normal periods. Just inside the south wall of the Ancient City, an easy walk from Huayan Monastery.
officialBookingUrl null — gate sale and OTAs only, no official ticketing site I could verify. The other great Liao-Jin timber temple in Datong, with a near-complete Jin-dynasty main hall and a famous set of clay Heavenly Kings. Quieter and, to many, more atmospheric than Huayan; the two pair naturally in a half-day of the Ancient City. Around ¥50 (you'll see ¥40 quoted in some 2026 notices); confirm at the gate.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Nine-Dragon Wall (Jiulongbi)
✓ 2026-06-07- Price
- ¥10
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Small gate ticket, passport fine, no booking. On Da Dong Jie in the Ancient City, a short walk from the Huayan/Shanhua cluster.
officialBookingUrl null — a walk-up gate ticket. The oldest and largest of China's three famous glazed-tile nine-dragon walls (early Ming, 1392), 45 m long — older than the better-known ones in Beijing. It's a single screen wall, so it's a 15-minute stop, not a half-day; worth it if you're already walking the Ancient City. A few yuan; confirm at the gate.
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
- Datong is a smaller northern city with relatively few foreign visitors. Mid-range and chain hotels near the Ancient City and the high-speed station generally take foreign passports; cheaper local guesthouses may not be set up for it. Confirm foreign registration when booking. Note also that, as of 2026, foreigners can't load the city bus card in Alipay (it needs a mainland ID) — carry ¥1 notes for buses, no change given.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
Wide, jagged wheat noodles shaved straight off a dough block into boiling water, served with a meat-and-vinegar topping.
A Shanxi staple; add the local aged vinegar yourself, locals do.
Lamb organs and broth simmered in one pot, a cold-weather breakfast Datong has eaten since the Yuan dynasty.
Order it with a piece of flatbread to dip; ask for chili if you want heat.
A dense, chewy steamed cake of yellow glutinous millet, eaten with a meat-and-vegetable sauce.
A homestyle staple; it is filling, so order it to share with a stew.
Shanxi is the heartland of daoxiao mian — noodles shaved off a dough block straight into the pot — and Datong does a hearty, often tomato-and-egg or braised-meat version. Cheap, filling, everywhere. Pick a busy local shop over anything inside the rebuilt Ancient City, where it's pricier for the same bowl.
This is old border country, and the food leans hearty and northern: mutton, yellow millet (huangmi), hot-pot and braises to handle the cold. Mutton is done well here. In winter especially, a mutton soup or hotpot is the right call, and it's local rather than a tourist menu item.
Datong sees relatively few foreigners and the dining is solidly local Shanxi. That's a feature, not a problem — but if you need Western food or English menus, you'll mostly find them only in the bigger hotels. Use a translation app, point at what looks good at busy noodle shops, and you'll eat well and cheap.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Since the start of 2025 the grottoes are online-reservation-only; they tore out the on-site counters. Foreigners regularly turn up at the gate and can't get in because they assumed they could pay there. Reserve a time slot in the official mini-program (or have your hotel do it) before you set out. A passport is fine as ID; the only real obstacle is the Chinese-only app.
Datong rebuilt a huge walled 'ancient city' in the 2010s — fresh walls, restored temples, and a lot of shopping-street reconstruction in the now-standard Chinese tourist-old-town style. The genuinely old, high-value buildings are real and worth it (Huayan, Shanhua, the Liao and Jin halls), but the wall and much of the streetscape are modern recreations. Come for the temples and the grottoes, not for an untouched medieval city.
Photos of the temple glued to the cliff are the draw, but actually walking up onto it needs a 'climbing' ticket that's capped at a few thousand a day and reserved in advance. On a busy day it's gone. If you don't get one, you've still made a long trip to look up at it from the ground. Decide whether the walk-up matters and book the climbing ticket early if it does.
Yungang is 16 km west; the Hanging Monastery is ~65 km southeast near Hunyuan, often paired with the Yingxian Wooden Pagoda further out. Public transport to the far sights is slow and fiddly. The sane move is a DiDi or a negotiated taxi for a half- or full-day loop. It costs more than the bus but saves hours, and the city's distances are deceptively large on foot too.
Straight answers
Can I just buy a Yungang Grottoes ticket at the entrance?
No. Since January 2025 the grottoes are online-reservation-only and the physical ticket windows are gone. You must book a real-name, time-slotted ticket in advance through the official 云冈石窟 / 云冈研究院 WeChat or Alipay mini-program. A passport works as ID; have your hotel help if the Chinese-only app is a barrier.
How do I get to the Hanging Monastery and is it worth booking ahead?
It's about 65 km from Datong near Hunyuan, usually reached by a hired DiDi or taxi for the day, often combined with the Yingxian Wooden Pagoda. The 'climbing' ticket that lets you walk up onto the temple is capped at a few thousand a day and reserved up to a week ahead — book it in advance if going up onto the structure matters, since it can sell out.
Do I need my passport for Datong's attractions?
Yes — as in much of China, most sights (even some free ones) use real-name entry, and a passport is your ID since you won't have a mainland ID card. Carry it for the grottoes, the temples and the Hanging Monastery, and expect to enter your passport details when booking online.
Can I use a foreign card, and what about the city bus?
Mobile pay (foreign Visa/Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers most things — tickets, taxis, restaurants. The city bus is the exception: as of 2026 you can't load the Datong bus card in Alipay without a mainland ID, so carry ¥1 notes for the ¥1 cash fare, with no change given. Or just use DiDi.