Fuzhou, told straight.

The Three Lanes and Seven Alleys are free to walk — only the old courtyard-house museums inside cost money, and you don't have to buy them. Add Gushan's temple and cable car, the banyan-shaded streets and a hot-spring soak, and Fujian's capital is an easy, low-stress China stop most travelers skip.

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.

Three Lanes & Seven Alleys (Sanfang Qixiang)

2026-06-13
Price
¥70
Foreigners
Passport works

The lanes themselves are free and open — you just walk in, no ticket and no reservation to stroll the old streets. What costs money is the handful of former-residence museums tucked inside (the Yan Fu Former Residence, the Little Yellow House / Xiaohuanglou, the Water Pavilion Stage and a few others). Those are individually ticketed; buy them singly at each gate or as a combined ticket, with a passport as your real-name ID. You decide which, if any, you want — most people happily wander the whole quarter without paying for a single museum.

officialBookingUrl is null — the free lanes need no booking, and the paid museums sell at their own gates and on OTAs with no official deep link we could verify. Per the Fuzhou Development & Reform Commission's May 2025 notice, the combined ticket for the paid museums was cut from ¥90 to ¥70 (valid 2 days), and the operator must keep selling single-attraction tickets so you're never forced into the bundle — single examples quoted around that time were the Yan Fu Residence ~¥15 and the Little Yellow House ~¥20. Confirm current prices and which houses are open on the day.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Gushan & Yongquan Temple (cable car or hike)

2026-06-13
Price
¥40
Foreigners
Passport works

Climbing the mountain on the stone path is free — you only pay to enter Yongquan Temple at the top and for any add-ons. Tickets and the cable car are bought through the scenic-area channel (a Chinese-language WeChat mini-program) or at the on-site windows; a passport works as real-name ID. No advance time-slot reservation is normally needed, but if you want the cable car, the official guidance is to buy roughly two hours ahead and exchange for your ticket at the lower station, as it queues at peak times.

officialBookingUrl is null — booking runs through a Chinese WeChat mini-program, not a website with a deep link. Per the Fuzhou DRC (April 2025) the scenic area and Yongquan Temple are sold together at ¥40 per person (an annual pass is ¥50). The Damo Cave 'Eighteen Scenes' garden is a separate ¥10 (¥5 student). The cable car is ¥50 one-way / ¥70 return (no student rate); a sightseeing shuttle to the temple foot is about ¥10. Yongquan Temple opens ~06:30–17:30; the cable car runs roughly 08:10–17:30. Confirm at booking.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Yantai Shan colonial quarter & West Lake Park

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

Both are free public parks — no ticket, no reservation, no passport needed to enter. Just turn up and walk. The pay-for extras are optional add-ons (a boat on West Lake, the odd small exhibit inside a restored Yantai Shan building), not gate fees.

officialBookingUrl null — these are free, walk-in city parks with nothing to book. Yantai Shan, on the Cangqian Hill (Cangshan) side of the Min River, is Fuzhou's old foreign-concession quarter: 19th- and early-20th-century consulates, churches and merchant villas, now a restored strolling district that's open around the clock. West Lake Park (Hubin Road, Gulou district) is open roughly 05:30–22:30, with classical gardens, the lakeside Kaihua Temple and paid pleasure boats. Both are easy, free half-days; only the boat ride and a few interior exhibits cost anything.

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
Works
Police registration
Fuzhou is a big provincial capital but a quiet one for foreign tourists, so book a chain or mid-range hotel that registers foreign guests with the police as routine — most near the West Lake, Sanfang Qixiang and the high-speed station do. Smaller local guesthouses may not be set up for foreign registration; confirm before you pay. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers nearly everything, but keep a little cash for buses and small stalls.

Eat like a local

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

Fish balls and Buddha-jumps-the-wallchecked 2026-06-13

Fuzhou's signature is the fish ball (yuwan) — springy fish-paste spheres, often stuffed with minced pork, in a clear broth, sold cheap at hole-in-the-wall shops all over town. The grand local dish is fotiaoqiang, 'Buddha jumps the wall', a slow-simmered pot of seafood, meat and broth so rich the monk supposedly leapt the wall to get at it; it's a splurge done properly, so order it at a sit-down restaurant, not a stall, and check the price first.

Lychee pork and guobianchecked 2026-06-13

Look for lizhirou ('lychee pork') — crosshatched pork fried so it curls into lychee-like nuggets in a sweet-sour glaze, a genuine Fuzhou classic rather than a tourist invention. For breakfast or a snack, guobian (rice-batter 'pot-edge' soup) is the local comfort food: thin rice sheets cooked on the edge of a wok and slid into a savoury broth. Both are everyday dishes — find a busy local place over anything dressed up for tourists in the lanes.

Eat off the main lanes for fair priceschecked 2026-06-13

Sanfang Qixiang's South Back Street is lined with snack stalls, and they're fine for a fish ball on the move, but they're priced for the crowd. Step a block or two out into the ordinary neighbourhoods and the same bowl is cheaper and usually better. A translation app and pointing at what looks good will get you a long way; Fuzhou dining is solidly local, with little Western food outside the bigger hotels.

The honest layer

The part a tourism board will never print.

Sanfang Qixiang is free to wander — the museums are the only ticketchecked 2026-06-13

The single most useful thing to know about Fuzhou's headline sight: walking the Three Lanes and Seven Alleys costs nothing. The whitewashed walls, the banyan-shaded stone lanes, the shops and the streetscape are all open and free. The only things you pay for are the former-residence museums dotted inside — the Yan Fu house, the Little Yellow House, the Water Pavilion Stage and a couple more. Buy the ones you actually want, singly or as the ~¥70 two-day combined ticket, and don't let anyone make you feel you've 'missed' the quarter by skipping them. Most visitors haven't.

It's a livable city stop, not a checklist blitzchecked 2026-06-13

Fuzhou isn't a place you race around ticking boxes. It's a green, low-key provincial capital — old banyan trees over the streets, a free lake park, a colonial quarter, hot springs in town and a temple mountain on the edge. The pleasure is the wandering, much of it free. Give it a relaxed day and a half rather than trying to 'do' it in an afternoon, and it rewards you far more than its thin foreign-tourist profile suggests.

Gushan: pay for the temple, not the mountainchecked 2026-06-13

The walk up Gushan on the old stone path is free, and plenty of locals do it for the morning exercise. You only pay to go into Yongquan Temple at the top (¥40, sold together with the scenic area), plus optional extras — the ¥10 Eighteen Scenes garden, the cable car (¥50 up / ¥70 return) and a ¥10 shuttle. If you'd rather not climb, take the cable car; if you'd rather not pay much, hike up and just enjoy the views and the forest. Decide which you want before the lower cable-car station, where it queues at busy times.

Mawei and the out-of-centre sights need planningchecked 2026-06-13

Fuzhou sprawls. Gushan is on the eastern edge (Metro Line 2 gets you close, then a shuttle or short ride to the foot), and the Mawei shipyard-history district sits well downriver to the southeast — interesting if naval and Qing-modernisation history grabs you, but a deliberate trip, not a casual hop. Don't assume everything is a short walk from Sanfang Qixiang; check the metro map and budget a DiDi for the longer legs.

Straight answers

Do I have to buy a ticket for the Three Lanes and Seven Alleys?

No. Walking the lanes is completely free and needs no reservation — you just stroll in. The only paid parts are the former-residence museums inside (the Yan Fu house, the Little Yellow House, the Water Pavilion Stage and a few others), sold singly at each gate or as a combined ticket of about ¥70 valid for two days. A passport works as ID for those. Buy only the ones you want; many visitors pay for none and still see the whole quarter.

Is Gushan free, and how do I get up?

Hiking up Gushan on the stone path is free; you pay ¥40 only to enter Yongquan Temple at the top (sold together with the scenic area). Optional extras are the ¥10 Eighteen Scenes garden, the cable car (¥50 one-way / ¥70 return) and a roughly ¥10 shuttle. If you'd rather ride than climb, take the cable car — buy it about two hours ahead at peak times. Tickets go through the scenic-area WeChat channel or on-site windows, with a passport as ID.

What's worth doing in Fuzhou for free?

Quite a lot. The Three Lanes and Seven Alleys, Yantai Shan's restored colonial quarter and West Lake Park are all free to wander, and the climb up Gushan itself costs nothing. Fuzhou is a green, banyan-shaded city, so a relaxed day and a half of walking — lake, lanes, old concession streets and a temple mountain — barely costs anything beyond the temple ticket and a hot-spring soak if you want one.

Can a foreigner use a card and a hotel easily here?

Yes. A foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay covers tickets, taxis, restaurants and most stalls; keep a little cash for buses and the smallest vendors. For hotels, pick a chain or mid-range place that registers foreign guests with the police — most near the West Lake, Sanfang Qixiang and the high-speed station do this routinely, while some small local guesthouses aren't set up for it, so confirm when you book.

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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.