Hongcun & Xidi, told straight.

The two UNESCO-listed Huizhou villages near Huangshan — Hongcun is the 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' moon-pond village, Xidi is its quieter twin. Both cost about ¥104 on a real-name, passport-friendly ticket that's good for roughly three days, but each village is a separate ticket, and the day-trip-from-Huangshan crush is real. The honest version.

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.

Hongcun (宏村)

2026-06-13
Price
¥104
Foreigners
Passport works

Buy with your passport. The official online channel is the 徽黄游 WeChat mini-program (Chinese-first, built around the Chinese ID-card flow), so the most reliable path for a foreigner is the staffed ticket window at the village gate with a passport — same price, no app barrier. The ticket is real-name, so carry the passport you bought it under for the gate check.

officialBookingUrl set to null: Hongcun has no standalone official ticketing website we could verify; the official operator is 黟县徽黄旅游发展(集团)有限公司 and its official online channel is the 徽黄游 mini-program. Full price is about ¥104 per person, valid roughly three days with multiple entries — so you can come back for the dawn and dusk light on the same ticket. This is the famous one: the crescent Moon Pond (月沼) and South Lake (南湖) mirroring the white walls and black tiles, and the village where parts of 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' were filmed. In 2025 the operator ran promotions including a half-price spell for overseas visitors (incl. HK/Macau/Taiwan) — treat any such discount as a time-limited promo to confirm, not a standing rate. About 11 km from Yixian county town and ~65 km from Huangshan City.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Xidi (西递)

2026-06-13
Price
¥104
Foreigners
Passport works

A separate ticket from Hongcun — buy it at Xidi's own gate with your passport, or in the same 徽黄游 mini-program. The official Xidi scenic-area site even has English/Korean/Japanese versions, but the actual booking flow is the Chinese mini-program, so plan on the manual window with a passport. Real-name ticket; carry your passport for the gate.

officialBookingUrl is chinaxidi.com.cn, the official Xidi operator site (黟县徽黄西递旅游开发有限公司, part of the 徽黄 group). Important: Xidi is NOT included in your Hongcun ticket — it's its own ~¥104 ticket, also valid roughly three days with multiple entries. Xidi is the older, more lived-in village: intact Ming-Qing residences, the stone memorial archway (胡文光牌坊) and ancestral halls, and noticeably fewer tour buses than Hongcun. There's also a paid evening light/performance show in season. Pair the two villages over a day or two rather than trying to rush both in a morning.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Tachuan & Mukeng Bamboo Forest (塔川 / 木坑竹海)

2026-06-13
Price
Foreigners
Passport works

Small separate gate tickets, passport fine, no advance booking needed in normal periods. Both are run by the same 徽黄 group as Hongcun and Xidi but are not bundled into either village ticket.

officialBookingUrl null — minor scenic spots sold at their own gates and via OTAs, with no standalone official booking site we could verify; the operator is the same 徽黄旅游集团. Tachuan (塔川) is the autumn-colour hillside a few km from Hongcun — its window is roughly mid-November, and outside that it's just a quiet village, so don't make a special trip in the wrong season. Mukeng Bamboo Forest (木坑竹海, 3A) is the sea-of-bamboo hillside also used in 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon'. Both are short hired-car or e-bike hops from Hongcun. Prices are modest but we won't quote a figure we couldn't pin to the official source — 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
Works
Police registration
Hongcun and Xidi are tiny old villages, and most of the charming places to sleep are family-run guesthouses (客栈/民宿) inside the walls — many of which may not hold the foreign-guest (涉外) licence needed to register a foreign passport. As of mid-2026 a national policy has been broadening online registration for foreigners in non-hotel stays, but per-property capability is not something you should assume here. The safe play is a licensed/branded hotel in Yixian county town or in Huangshan City (Tunxi), and day-trip into the villages; if you want to sleep inside Hongcun or Xidi for the dawn light, message the specific guesthouse first and confirm it can register a foreign passport (可登记外宾) before you book. Foreign Visa/Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay works for tickets, taxis and meals.

Eat like a local

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

Stinky mandarin fish (臭鳜鱼) is the dish to orderchecked 2026-06-13

Huizhou cuisine (徽菜) is one of China's eight great traditions, and its signature here is chou guiyu — lightly fermented mandarin fish that smells pungent and tastes deep, savoury and tender, nothing like its reputation suggests. It's the regional must-try. Order it at a busy local place rather than the first lane-side tourist spot, where the same dish costs more for less fish.

Mao tofu and one-pot Huizhou braiseschecked 2026-06-13

Look for mao doufu (毛豆腐) — 'hairy' tofu cultured with an edible white mould, then pan-fried crisp and eaten with chilli — a proper local specialty, not a tourist gimmick. The wider Huizhou table leans into preserved meats, bamboo shoots, wild greens and slow earthen-pot braises; it's hearty mountain-and-river cooking. A translation app and pointing at what locals are eating will serve you better than any English menu.

Eat a lane back from the pondchecked 2026-06-13

As in every photogenic Chinese old town, the restaurants right on the Moon Pond and the main lane charge a view tax. Step one or two lanes back, or eat in Yixian county town or Tunxi, and the same Huizhou plates cost noticeably less, with menus aimed at locals rather than tour buses.

The honest layer

The part a tourism board will never print.

It's genuinely beautiful — and genuinely a ticketed, touristed villagechecked 2026-06-13

Hongcun deserves the postcards: the Moon Pond and South Lake reflecting the Huizhou white-and-black houses are as good as the photos. But go in with eyes open. This is a fully ticketed 5A scenic area (~¥104), the central lanes fill with tour groups and art students sketching by mid-morning, and a chunk of the ground floors are now souvenir shops and cafes. The magic is real; so is the management. Come early or late on your multi-day ticket to catch it quiet, and don't expect a sleepy untouched hamlet at noon.

Hongcun and Xidi are two separate tickets, not one combochecked 2026-06-13

People assume the two famous Yixian villages share a pass. They don't. Hongcun is about ¥104 and Xidi is its own ~¥104 ticket; there's no single 'both villages' combo at the official price. Budget for two tickets if you want both, which most people should — they're different in character, Hongcun the lake-and-postcard one, Xidi the older lived-in one. The minor spots (Tachuan, Mukeng, Nanping, Pingshan) are each separate again.

The 'three-day validity' is a real perk — use itchecked 2026-06-13

The village ticket is good for roughly three days with multiple entries, not a single timed entry. That's unusually generous, and it's the key to a good visit: buy once, then come back across the same trip for the dawn mist over the pond and the lantern-lit evening lanes without paying again. The trap is the reverse assumption — treating it as a one-shot ticket and rushing through in two hot midday hours when the light and the crowds are at their worst. Slow down and spread it out.

Most people do this as a day-trip from Huangshan — mind the logisticschecked 2026-06-13

The villages sit at the southwest foot of Huangshan (Yellow Mountain), and the classic combo is the mountain plus Hongcun/Xidi over a few days, often based in Tangkou (mountain) or Tunxi (Huangshan City). It's doable by bus, but services are limited and the village-to-village and village-to-mountain legs are slow; a hired car or DiDi for the day saves real hours. At the high-speed station and bus stops you'll get touts offering 'cheaper' tickets — that's just the normal OTA online price, not a scam discount, so there's no need to deal with them.

Straight answers

Is one ticket good for both Hongcun and Xidi?

No. They're two separate scenic areas with separate tickets — Hongcun is about ¥104 and Xidi is its own ~¥104 ticket, with no single combined pass at the official price. Most travellers visit both because they're quite different in feel (Hongcun the lake-and-postcard village, Xidi the older lived-in one), so budget for two tickets. The minor spots like Tachuan and Mukeng Bamboo Forest are charged separately again.

How long is the ticket valid, and can I re-enter?

Each village ticket is real-name and valid for roughly three days with multiple entries, per the official Yixian operator. That means you can buy once and return across your trip — ideal for catching the quiet dawn light and the lantern-lit evening without paying again. Treat it as a multi-day pass, not a single timed entry, and don't rush the whole village into one hot midday.

Can foreigners buy tickets, and do I need my passport?

Yes, with your passport. The official online channel is the Chinese-first 徽黄游 WeChat mini-program, built around the Chinese ID-card flow, so the simplest path for a foreigner is the staffed ticket window at each village gate with a passport — same price, no app barrier. The ticket is real-name, so carry the passport you bought it under for the gate check. In 2025 the operator ran some overseas-visitor half-price promotions (incl. HK/Macau/Taiwan); treat any such discount as a time-limited promo to confirm on the day, not a standing rate.

How do I get to Hongcun and Xidi from Huangshan?

The villages are at the southwest foot of Huangshan (Yellow Mountain) in Yixian, Anhui — about 65 km from Huangshan City (Tunxi), where the high-speed rail station is, and a short hop from Yixian county town. Buses run from Tunxi and from the Huangshan scenic-area gateway (Tangkou), but services are limited and the village-to-village legs are slow, so many people hire a car or DiDi for the day. Yixian sits within reach of the broader Huangshan visit, which most travellers combine with the mountain itself over two to four days. Ignore the touts at the station offering 'cheap' tickets — that's just the standard online price.

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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.