The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Liukeng Ancient Village (流坑古村), Le'an county
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
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- Foreigners
- Passport works
There is a gate ticket for the village; bring your passport as ID. We could not verify from official sources whether advance online reservation is required, so treat it as a walk-up purchase but be ready to reserve real-name with your passport through a Chinese-first WeChat or Alipay mini-program if the gate directs you to. The hard part is not the ticket but getting there — it is deep in rural Le'an county and you realistically need a car.
officialBookingUrl set to null and prices left null: we could not verify a clean official ticketing domain or a current admission price for the village from a primary source, and we will not invent one — reconfirm at the gate or through the Le'an county tourism channel. The facts we did verify: Liukeng sits in Niutian town, Le'an county (乐安县), in Fuzhou prefecture, Jiangxi. It is a single-surname Dong (董) clan village founded in the Southern Tang period, and it preserves an exceptional concentration of old building fabric — on the order of 19 Ming-era structures (including sites) and 250-plus Qing-era buildings. It is a National Key Cultural Relic Protection Unit (designated 2001) and was named in the first batch of China's Historic and Cultural Villages (2003); locally it carries the billing 'the No. 1 village through the ages' (千古第一村). The Ming traveller Xu Xiake passed through and recorded its bustling market. Plan it as the centrepiece of a day, not a quick stop.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Dajue Mountain (大觉山), Zixi county
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
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- Foreigners
- Passport works
Buy the scenic-area ticket with your passport as ID. The rafting and the glass/skywalk add-ons are typically separate tickets bought on top of entry; a passport is fine, but reserve ahead in summer when the rafting slots fill, and have your hotel help if the booking mini-program is Chinese-only. As with Liukeng, the bigger obstacle is transport — it is out in Zixi county and not on a rail line.
officialBookingUrl null and prices null: we could not verify a single clean official ticketing domain or current fares for Dajue Mountain from a primary source, so reconfirm at the gate or through the official scenic-area channel; the rafting, the cable car and the glass-bridge skywalk are generally each a separate fee on top of admission. Verified facts: Dajue Mountain (大觉山) is in Zixi county (资溪县), Fuzhou prefecture, on the western flank of the Wuyi range, with a main peak around 1,396 m and Dajue Temple on the mountain. It was designated a National 5A scenic area in 2017, and its signature draw is gorge rafting (漂流) through forest, alongside a glass skywalk and cliff walkways. It is a half- to full-day outing; the rafting is seasonal (warm months) and weather-dependent.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Tang Xianzu heritage & Linchuan cultural sites (汤显祖纪念馆 / 临川)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
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- Foreigners
- Passport works
The Tang Xianzu memorial and the literary-heritage sites in the Linchuan district of Fuzhou city are walk-up, often free or low-cost; bring your passport for entry as ID. No advance booking needed in normal periods.
officialBookingUrl null — these are municipal cultural sites with no official ticketing domain we could verify; many are free, so prices are left null rather than invented. Fuzhou's headline cultural claim is Tang Xianzu (汤显祖, 1550-1616), the great Ming playwright born in Linchuan here, author of The Peony Pavilion (牡丹亭) and the 'Four Dreams of Linchuan' (临川四梦), who died the same year as Shakespeare and is often billed the 'Shakespeare of the East'. The city centres a Tang Xianzu memorial / cultural park and theatre around his legacy (his studio was the White Camellia Hall, 玉茗堂). This is the easiest, most central thing to do in Fuzhou itself and the reason the prefecture markets itself as the 'town of talents' (才子之乡); treat it as a city half-day rather than a destination in its own right.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Nanfeng tangerine country (南丰蜜橘), Nanfeng county
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
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- Foreigners
- Passport works
There is no single gate or ticket — this is the orchard countryside of Nanfeng county, best seen as a self-driven or hired-car loop. Bring your passport for any hotel or site that asks. Most rewarding in late autumn/early winter at harvest, or in spring for the orange blossom.
officialBookingUrl null, prices null: this is a rural agricultural area, not a ticketed attraction, so there is nothing official to book and no fare to quote. Nanfeng county (南丰县) in Fuzhou prefecture is famous nationally for its Nanfeng honey tangerines (南丰蜜橘), and the county also has a strong folk-opera/nuo-mask (傩) tradition. It is an add-on for travellers with a car and time, pleasant in citrus season, and not worth a special detour otherwise.
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
- First, get the name right: this is Fuzhou in Jiangxi province (抚州, Fǔzhōu), an inland prefecture east-central in the province, and it is a completely different place from the much better-known coastal Fuzhou (福州) in Fujian, which has its own page. Booking systems, train stations and hotels can confuse the two, so when reserving a room or a ticket make sure you have Jiangxi's Fuzhou (sometimes written Fuzhou, Jiangxi or 抚州). It sees very few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is genuinely hit-or-miss. Mid-range and chain hotels in Fuzhou's main urban district (Linchuan, 临川) and near Fuzhou East high-speed railway station are the safer bet, since they are more used to registering a foreign passport with the police; small county guesthouses out near Liukeng in Le'an, or in Zixi near Dajue Mountain, may not be set up for it at all, so confirm the property takes foreign passports before you pay. Carry your original passport — it is your ID for every gate ticket and for hotel check-in — and keep some cash on you, since mobile pay (a foreign card linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works in town but acceptance and signal get patchy out in the countryside and on rural buses.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
Fuzhou is Jiangxi, and Jiangxi cooking has a reputation as the hottest of China's regional cuisines — sometimes argued to out-spice even Hunan. The chilli here is woven through the braises and stir-fries, fresh and pickled, not just a garnish. If you don't take chilli well, say 'not spicy' (bù là) when you order, but know the local default is properly hot, and toning it right down can flatten the dishes worth coming for. Claypot vegetables and meats, a Jiangxi staple, are a good, reliable order.
Look for the local Fuzhou/Linchuan home cooking rather than generic tourist menus: river fish and freshwater dishes, smoked and cured meats, rice-based snacks and the hearty rural braises typical of inland Jiangxi. As everywhere in the province, a claypot of vegetables — with or without meat — is delicious and dependable. Eat at busy local places in the city; out in the counties near Liukeng or Dajue Mountain the choice narrows to simple village restaurants, which is part of the charm but means fewer English menus, so a translation app earns its keep.
The one thing the wider region is genuinely famous for is the Nanfeng honey tangerine (南丰蜜橘) from Nanfeng county in this prefecture — small, sweet, easy-peeling citrus that's a point of local pride and sold all over in season (late autumn into winter). If you're here at harvest, buy them fresh by the roadside; in spring the same orchards put on orange blossom. It's a cheap, local, only-here treat rather than a restaurant dish — grab a bag for the long drives between the scattered sights.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
The single most important thing to get right: there are two cities called Fuzhou in China. The famous one is coastal Fuzhou (福州), the capital of Fujian, with an airport, a metro and beaches. This page is the other one — Fuzhou (抚州) in east-central Jiangxi, an inland prefecture with no metro and few foreign visitors, known instead for ancient villages and the playwright Tang Xianzu. They are pronounced with different tones (Fújiàn's Fúzhōu vs Jiāngxī's Fǔzhōu) and written with different characters. When you book trains, hotels or tickets, double-check you have the Jiangxi one, or you will end up 600 km away on the coast.
Liukeng (流坑古村) is the reason to come to this corner of Jiangxi: a remarkably intact Ming-Qing clan village of the Dong family, with hundreds of surviving old buildings, ancestral halls and stone-paved lanes, far less polished-up than the famous Huizhou villages and largely free of the tour-bus crush. But it is not near Fuzhou city. It lies out in Niutian town, Le'an county, and the honest travel time is on the order of two to three hours by road from Fuzhou or Nanchang, on roads that thin out as you approach. There is no convenient train. Realistically you hire a car or a driver for the day, or join a tour; budget a full day for the round trip and the village itself, and don't expect to slot it in between two other things.
Dajue Mountain (大觉山) in Zixi county is the area's nature card — a forest-and-gorge 5A scenic area whose signature is the rafting run, backed up by a glass skywalk and cliff walkways, with Dajue Temple on the slopes and a main peak near 1,400 m. It's a fun half- to full-day if the weather cooperates, but the rafting is seasonal (warm months) and gets suspended in heavy rain or low water, so it is not a year-round guarantee. Like Liukeng it's well out of the city, in Zixi county off the rail network, so plan it as its own hired-car outing rather than a casual add-on, and check that the rafting is actually running before you commit the drive.
Fuzhou's draws don't cluster. The Tang Xianzu heritage is in the city (Linchuan), Liukeng is two-plus hours out in Le'an, Dajue Mountain is off in Zixi, and Nanfeng's orange country is somewhere else again. None of the headline rural sights is conveniently on a railway, and rural bus connections are slow and infrequent. The sane way to see more than one of them is a hired car or a private driver by the day, or day-tours out of Fuzhou or Nanchang. Trying to do it all on public transport will eat your trip in waiting and transfers; pick one or two targets and accept the driving.
There's no major international gateway here. The usual approach is to fly into Nanchang (the Jiangxi capital, with Changbei airport) and then take a high-speed train or drive south-east to Fuzhou — the high-speed network reaches Fuzhou East station (抚州东), putting the city within roughly an hour or so of Nanchang by fast train. From Fuzhou you then branch out by road to the county sights. Yingtan and the Shanghai-Kunming line are also nearby if you're combining this with Longhushan. Base yourself in Fuzhou city for the cultural sites and as a launch pad, and treat the rural attractions as day trips radiating out.
Straight answers
Is this the same Fuzhou as the one in Fujian with the airport and metro?
No — and this trips people up constantly. The big coastal city is Fuzhou (福州), capital of Fujian. This page is Fuzhou (抚州) in Jiangxi province, an inland prefecture, a different place written with different characters and around 600 km away. The Jiangxi one is the home of the playwright Tang Xianzu and of ancient villages like Liukeng; it has no metro and few foreign visitors. When you book trains, hotels or tickets, make sure you've selected Jiangxi's Fuzhou (抚州 / 'Fuzhou, Jiangxi'), not Fujian's.
How do I get to Liukeng Ancient Village, and can a foreigner just turn up?
Liukeng is out in Niutian town, Le'an county, roughly two to three hours by road from Fuzhou or Nanchang, with no convenient train, so realistically you hire a car or driver for the day or join a tour. There is a gate ticket for the village; bring your passport as ID. We couldn't verify from official sources whether advance online reservation is required or the current price, so treat it as a walk-up but be ready to reserve real-name with your passport if directed, and reconfirm the fare at the gate. Budget a full day for the round trip.
What is there to do at Dajue Mountain, and is the rafting always running?
Dajue Mountain (大觉山) in Zixi county is a forest-and-gorge 5A scenic area whose signature is the gorge rafting, with a glass skywalk and cliff walkways and a temple on the slopes. Buy the scenic-area ticket with your passport; the rafting and the skywalk are usually separate add-on tickets. The rafting is seasonal (warm months) and gets suspended in heavy rain or low water, so it is not a year-round guarantee — check it is actually operating before you make the drive out from the city, since it's off the rail network and needs a car.
Who is Tang Xianzu and why does Fuzhou make so much of him?
Tang Xianzu (汤显祖, 1550-1616) was a great Ming-dynasty playwright born in Linchuan, the historic heart of today's Fuzhou. He wrote The Peony Pavilion (牡丹亭) and the 'Four Dreams of Linchuan', died the same year as Shakespeare, and is often called the 'Shakespeare of the East'. Fuzhou markets itself as a 'town of talents' on the strength of his legacy and runs a memorial and cultural park around it in the city. It's the easiest, most central thing to see here — a city half-day — while the villages and mountains are the day trips.
Can I use a foreign card here, and do I need cash?
In Fuzhou city, mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers most things — hotels, restaurants, taxis. But out in the counties near Liukeng, Dajue Mountain and Nanfeng, acceptance and mobile signal get patchy, and small village vendors and rural buses may want cash. Carry some yuan in notes for the day trips, keep your original passport on you for gate tickets and hotel check-in, and don't rely on an English-speaking ticket window anywhere outside the city.