The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Hulunbuir Grassland & Hailar base (呼伦贝尔大草原 · 海拉尔)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
The grassland itself isn't a single gated attraction — it's open steppe you reach by road from Hailar, and most people experience it through a yurt camp, a 'pastoral family' visit, or a horse-riding / performance area, each of which charges its own activity fee on the spot. The practical route for a foreigner is a small grassland tour or a hired car-and-driver out of Hailar, booked with your passport; there's no single English ticket window. Hailar is the hub: fly into Hulunbuir Hailar Airport (HLD) from Beijing or Hohhot, or arrive by rail (Hailar is the last major stop before Manzhouli on the line toward the Russian border).
officialBookingUrl null and prices null: 'the grassland' is a region, not one ticketed gate, so there's no official ticketing domain and no single fixed price — costs are per-activity (horse riding, a yurt stay, a pastoral-family meal, a song-and-dance performance) and are best arranged through a Hailar tour operator or driver; confirm each fee on the spot. This is Inner Mongolia's signature steppe, widely billed as one of China's most beautiful grasslands, best in summer (Jun–Aug) when it's green and the Nadam festival, with its horse racing, wrestling and archery, runs. Treat Hailar as your launchpad, not the destination.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Ergune Wetland & border villages — Shiwei / Enhe (额尔古纳湿地 · 室韦 / 恩和)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
The Ergune (Erguna) wetland is a hillside-overlook scenic area on the edge of Ergune town, reached by road from Hailar — a walk-up gate ticket with your passport; no special foreigner channel beyond having your passport for real-name entry. The Russian-ethnic border villages of Shiwei and Enhe are further out along the Erguna River that marks the China–Russia border; getting there crosses into a controlled frontier zone with checkpoints, so carry your passport and expect to have it inspected. Easiest done as part of a multi-day self-drive or grassland tour, since it's hours of driving north of Hailar.
officialBookingUrl null and price null — the wetland sells at the gate and through OTAs with no clean official ticketing domain we could verify, and the published fare should be confirmed locally. The Ergune wetland is described as one of the largest wetlands in China / Asia and is famous as a panoramic overlook, a bird habitat best in summer. Shiwei and Enhe are Russian-ethnic (and ethnic-Russian/Evenki-influenced) frontier villages on the Erguna River opposite Russia — atmospheric log-cabin settlements, but sensitive border territory, so they're a passport-in-pocket, checkpoint kind of stop, not a casual drop-in.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Aoluguya Reindeer Ewenki tribe, Genhe (敖鲁古雅使鹿部落 · 根河)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Reached by road near Genhe, well to the northeast of Hailar in the forest belt — a walk-up scenic-area / cultural-park ticket with your passport for real-name entry; no separate foreigner process. Because it's far from the grassland core and from Manzhouli, it's usually slotted into a longer multi-day itinerary by self-drive or tour rather than visited on its own from Hailar.
officialBookingUrl null and price null — gate sale and OTAs only, no official ticketing site we could verify; confirm the fare on site. Aoluguya is the settlement of the Ewenki (Evenki) 'reindeer people', the only reindeer-herding group in China, relocated near Genhe; the visitable site is a cultural park where you can see domesticated reindeer and learn about a hunting-and-herding way of life now largely sedentary. Manage expectations: it's a presented, semi-touristic version of the tribe rather than a wild encampment, but it's a genuine and unusual culture, and the surrounding Greater Khingan forest is a draw in itself.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Manzhouli — China–Russia National Gate & Matryoshka Square; Hulun Lake (满洲里国门 · 套娃广场 · 呼伦湖)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥148
- Foreigners
- Not for foreigners
Manzhouli is the border port city in the far west of Hulunbuir, reached by rail or road from Hailar (it's the last major stop on the line toward Russia). The National Gate Scenic Area sits directly on the China–Russia border about 9 km west of the city, in a controlled frontier zone — bring your passport, it's a real border area with checks. The gate and Matryoshka Square are walk-up gate tickets; a passport works as ID. Hulun Lake (呼伦湖 / Dalai Lake), China's fifth-largest lake, is out on the grassland near Manzhouli and is usually reached by hired car or tour.
officialBookingUrl null: the National Gate's listed link was a third-party tourism site, and Matryoshka Square promotes a themed-park web address we could not independently confirm as the genuine official ticketing domain — so we set it null rather than risk a wrong or hijacked link; buy at the gate or through OTAs and reconfirm prices. Indicative fares from our scrape: the National Gate Scenic Area around ¥60 (Border Marker No. 41, retired steam locomotives, a border-defence museum), Matryoshka Square around ¥148 (one of the world's largest matryoshka-doll buildings, ~30 m, lit up at night, with Russian circus performances). Hulun Lake nearby is free to reach but boat trips and activities cost extra. PricePeak is set to the Matryoshka figure as the headline paid sight; treat both numbers as indicative and confirm locally.
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
- Hulunbuir is not a single town but a prefecture the size of a country, and the sights you came for — the grassland around Hailar, the Ergune wetland, the Aoluguya reindeer camp near Genhe, the border city of Manzhouli — are hundreds of kilometres apart, often several hours of driving between them. There is no way to 'see Hulunbuir' from one base in a day; realistically you either self-drive (a rental car with a Chinese-recognised licence) or, far more commonly for foreigners, hire a car-and-driver or join a small multi-day grassland tour out of Hailar, the prefecture's transport hub with the airport (HLD) and the main railway station. For lodging, base in Hailar or Manzhouli, where mid-range and chain hotels are used to registering foreign passports with the police; the grassland yurt camps (Mongolian 'buns'/包), the small guesthouses in border villages like Shiwei and Enhe, and the reindeer-camp area near Genhe are aimed at domestic tour groups and are genuinely hit-or-miss for foreign registration — confirm before you pay, and have a tour operator handle it if you can. Crucially, Manzhouli and the Shiwei/Enhe border villages sit right on the Russian frontier: this is a controlled border zone with police checkpoints on the approach roads, and you must carry your original passport for spot checks, not just for hotels and tickets. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa/Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works in Hailar and Manzhouli, but signal and acceptance thin out fast on the open grassland and at remote camps, so carry cash. Come in summer (roughly June–August): that's when the steppe is green and the festivals run. Winter is spectacular but brutally cold (Hailar routinely hits −30°C and below) with ice-and-snow festivals and reindeer sledding — a completely different, far harder trip.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
Hulunbuir lamb is the real thing — animals raised on natural pasture, the meat genuinely tender — and the two dishes to eat are 手把肉 (shouba rou, 'hand-grabbed' boiled mutton you cut and eat off the bone) and roast whole lamb (烤全羊), the centrepiece of a prairie feast. Hailar has restaurants built around exactly this; order the mutton and don't overthink the rest. It's the local default, not a tourist gimmick, and it's done better here than almost anywhere.
Salty Mongol milk tea (奶茶), made with brick tea, milk and often a pinch of salt and fried millet, is the everyday drink of the steppe, and the dairy culture runs deep: yoghurt, dried cheese curds, milk skin, and fermented mare's-milk wine (马奶酒), a lightly alcoholic traditional drink you'll be offered at pastoral-family visits and around the Horse Milk Festival in early August. Try the milk tea and the curds even if the mare's-milk wine isn't to your taste; it's the flavour of the region.
Manzhouli's border-town identity shows up on the plate: with the Russian frontier right there, the city has Russian-styled restaurants serving things like borscht, bread and Russian-leaning dishes alongside the Chinese and Mongolian food, a genuine echo of decades of cross-border trade rather than pure theme-park dressing. And across Hulunbuir, watch for wild blueberries (蓝莓) from the Greater Khingan forests — fresh in season and sold everywhere as juice, jam and dried snacks. They're a real regional specialty worth buying.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
The single biggest mistake is treating 'Hulunbuir' as a place you visit. It's a prefecture, and the headline sights are spread over hundreds of kilometres: Hailar to the Ergune wetland and the border villages is hours of driving north; the Aoluguya reindeer camp near Genhe is off in the forest belt northeast; Manzhouli and Hulun Lake are far to the west on the Russian frontier. You cannot loop them in a day, and public transport between them is slow and sparse. The honest plan is three to five days, either self-driving (with a Chinese-recognised licence) or — what most foreigners actually do — hiring a car-and-driver or joining a small grassland tour out of Hailar. Budget the driving time before you fall in love with the itinerary.
The postcard Hulunbuir — endless green steppe, grazing herds, yurts, the Nadam festival with its horse racing, wrestling and archery — exists roughly June to August. That's the window. Come outside it and the grass is brown or under snow. Winter is genuinely spectacular in its own right, with ice-and-snow festivals, frozen-lake activities on Hulun Lake and reindeer sledding, but Hailar routinely drops to −30°C and colder, days are short, and getting around the frontier in deep cold is a serious undertaking. Decide which trip you're taking: the green-grassland summer or the hard, beautiful winter. They are not interchangeable.
Manzhouli, the National Gate, and the Erguna-River villages of Shiwei and Enhe aren't just scenic — they sit on or right against the Russian border, inside a controlled frontier zone. Expect police checkpoints on the approach roads and spot checks of your passport, not only at hotels and ticket gates. This is normal here; it just means you must keep your original passport on you at all times in these areas, and it's why a tour operator who knows the checkpoints often makes the western and northern legs smoother. Don't wander off-road toward the actual border line.
Two of Hulunbuir's signature draws are real but packaged. The Aoluguya Ewenki 'reindeer people' near Genhe are a genuine and unusual culture — China's only reindeer herders — but the visitable site is a cultural park with domesticated reindeer, not a remote wild encampment. Likewise the grassland 'yurt stays' and 'pastoral family' visits range from authentic herders' homes to purpose-built tourist camps. None of that makes them not worth doing; the steppe, the reindeer and the Mongol hospitality are the point. Just go in knowing you're seeing a presented version, price the per-activity fees on the spot, and pick operators with a real local link if authenticity matters to you.
Straight answers
How do I actually get around Hulunbuir, and can I do it independently?
Fly or take the train into Hailar (Hulunbuir Hailar Airport, code HLD, with flights from Beijing and Hohhot; Hailar is also the main rail stop before Manzhouli on the line toward Russia). From there the sights are hundreds of kilometres apart, so you either self-drive with a Chinese-recognised licence or — what most foreigners do — hire a car-and-driver or join a small multi-day grassland tour. There's no convenient public-transport loop linking the grassland, Ergune, Genhe and Manzhouli, and no English ticket windows out on the steppe, so a local operator who can book with your passport makes it far easier.
When is the best time to visit — and is winter worth it?
For the classic green grassland, yurts and the Nadam festival, come in summer, roughly June to August. That's when the steppe is green, the weather allows outdoor travel, and the festivals run. Winter (December–February) is a completely different trip: ice-and-snow festivals, frozen Hulun Lake, reindeer sledding — beautiful, but Hailar regularly hits −30°C and below, so it's only for travellers prepared for serious cold. Spring and autumn are short and transitional. If you want the postcard Hulunbuir, plan for high summer.
Is the Manzhouli border area sensitive, and what do I need?
Yes. Manzhouli, its National Gate scenic area (right on the China–Russia border, about 9 km west of the city), and the Erguna-River villages of Shiwei and Enhe are in a controlled frontier zone. Expect police checkpoints on the roads in and passport spot-checks, on top of the usual hotel and ticket-gate ID checks. Carry your original passport on you at all times in these areas, don't approach the actual border line off the marked scenic areas, and consider letting a tour operator who knows the checkpoints handle the western and northern legs.
What should I eat, and can I use a foreign card?
Eat the grassland classics: hand-grabbed boiled mutton (手把肉), roast lamb, salty Mongol milk tea and the dairy, plus Russian-influenced food in Manzhouli and wild blueberries from the Khingan forests. On payment, a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay works in Hailar and Manzhouli for tickets, taxis and restaurants — but mobile signal and card acceptance thin out on the open grassland and at remote camps, so carry cash for the steppe, the yurt stays and the reindeer-camp area.