The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Mount Huaguo / Flower-Fruit Mountain scenic area (花果山风景区)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Real-name reservation with your passport; book ahead through the official scenic-area channel, more so on weekends, in summer, and during the autumn peak
- Price
- ¥90
- Foreigners
- Passport works
The gate runs on real-name entry, so you reserve with your passport. The official scenic-area site (lyghgs.cn) has a 'one-click ticket booking' (门票预约) function, run through its WeChat/Alipay mini-program; the interface is Chinese-first with patchy English. A passport works as ID. The simplest path is to have your hotel reserve the entry — and the in-park shuttle — for you with your passport details. OTAs such as Trip.com also list the ticket, but the official channel is cleaner. Don't assume there's an easy English window at the gate.
Official site is lyghgs.cn (连云港市花果山风景区管理处 — the Mount Huaguo Scenic Area Management Office, a government body). This is the headline draw: a national AAAAA mountain whose Yunü Peak (624.4 m) is the highest point in Jiangsu, marketed hard as the real-life Flower-Fruit Mountain (花果山) and Water-Curtain Cave home of the Monkey King in Journey to the West. Wikivoyage long quoted entry at ¥90 in the Mar–Nov high season and ¥50 in winter (Dec–Feb); the official site shows opening hours around 07:00–18:00 (Wikivoyage notes a shorter 07:00–16:30 close in the main season). Reconfirm both at booking. Crucially, the gate price is not the whole cost — see the shuttle and the honest-takes below.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Mount Huaguo in-park shuttle bus & high zipline (景区交通车 + 高空滑索)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
The shuttle bus is bought at the scenic area, usually bundled with or added to your entry ticket rather than at a far-off window; a passport is fine. The optional high zipline (高空滑索) is paid separately on the day at its station up the mountain. No advance booking needed in normal periods, but in peak season the shuttle queues are long.
officialBookingUrl is the same scenic-area site (lyghgs.cn). Mount Huaguo is a real mountain, not a flat park: the gate sits well below the sights and most visitors take the in-park shuttle bus up toward the Water-Curtain Cave and the upper trails, then walk. The shuttle is an extra fee on top of admission and is effectively necessary unless you want a long uphill road walk — we could not verify a current exact price, so treat it as an unbudgeted add-on and confirm at the gate (prices null on purpose, not invented). Note this is a shuttle bus, not a summit cable car: the mountain's aerial ride is a 788 m high zipline (滑索) from near Yunü Peak toward Sanxing Cave, an optional paid thrill ride, not a transport link, so you still climb and walk to reach the top.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Water-Curtain Cave & Sanyuan Temple, on Mount Huaguo (水帘洞 · 三元宫)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
- Resellers
- None official
No separate ticket — both are inside Mount Huaguo and reached on foot once you're in on your scenic-area entry and shuttle. Bring your passport for the gate; nothing extra to book.
officialBookingUrl is the scenic-area site (lyghgs.cn); these are sights within the park, covered by your entry. The Water-Curtain Cave (水帘洞 Shuilian Dong) is the genuine article behind the Monkey King legend — a natural waterfall over a fissure cave, famous long before the novel was written, with old imperial rock inscriptions out front (including '印心石屋' attributed to the Qing Daoguang Emperor) and a spring inside said never to run dry. Sanyuan Temple (三元宫) is the largest and one of the oldest buildings on the mountain, first founded in the Tang dynasty and dedicated to the three officials of Heaven, Earth and Water — the real religious heritage under the theme-park monkey statues. Combine them naturally on the walk up from the shuttle stop toward Yunü Peak.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Kongwang Mountain cliff carvings (孔望山摩崖造像)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Walk-up site on the edge of Haizhou, reached by city bus or DiDi; carry your passport for any real-name check. No advance booking in normal periods. Wikivoyage lists hours of roughly 07:00–17:00.
officialBookingUrl set to null: we could not verify a dedicated official ticketing domain for this site, and could not confirm a current price, so it is left null rather than guessed. The Kongwang Mountain cliff carvings (孔望山摩崖造像) are Lianyungang's genuine ancient heritage and a nationally protected cultural relic — a group of Buddhist-and-secular figures carved into the rock face, widely dated to the Eastern Han and argued to be among the earliest Buddhist cliff carvings in China, predating the great northern grottoes. This is the real-history counterweight to the monkey-king tourism: low-key, uncrowded, and close to the city centre near the Lianyungang Museum. The city's other famous rock art, the Neolithic Jiangjunya (将军崖) petroglyphs, is older still but far more remote and lightly developed — worth knowing about, but verify access locally before making a trip of it.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Liandao Island coast & Sumawan beach (连岛 · 苏马湾海滨)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥50
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Reached from the city by bus (101–105 to Xugou, then bus 33) or a DiDi/taxi out to Lianyun and across to Liandao; passport for any check. The beach charges a small admission at the gate. No advance booking needed.
officialBookingUrl null — no clean official ticketing domain we could verify for the beach. Liandao (连岛), connected to the mainland by causeway off the Lianyun port district, has Lianyungang's main public beaches, including the Sumawan (苏马湾) stretch backed by wooded hills. Wikivoyage long quoted beach admission around ¥50, and mentions a combined tourist card sold in town (around ¥68) that bundles the beach with Mount Huaguo — worth asking about if you're doing both, though confirm it still exists and the price. This is the Yellow Sea, not a tropical resort: the water is muddy-green and the swimming season is short (summer), but it's a genuine sea-and-seafood day out and the closest real coastline to the city. Manage expectations and come for the air, the walk and the seafood rather than postcard sand.
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
- Lianyungang is a working port city in northern Jiangsu that sees few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is genuinely hit-or-miss at the budget end. Mid-range and chain hotels in the Haizhou (Xinhai) urban core and the larger properties near Mount Huaguo and the high-speed station generally take foreign passports and register you with the police; small guesthouses, the cheap places out by the Liandao beach, and family-run inns near the mountain often aren't set up for it. Confirm the property accepts foreign passports before you pay. Carry your original passport — it is your ID for hotel check-in and for the real-name entry that most attractions now use. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers tickets, taxis, DiDi and most restaurants in town, but keep some cash on you, since acceptance and signal get patchy out at the coast and on local buses.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
Lianyungang is a coastal port, and its honest food identity is seafood rather than anything monkey-themed. Out at Liandao and around the Lianyun harbour there are clusters of seafood restaurants where you pick from tanks — local fish, clams, crabs, conch, shrimp, the small shellfish of the northern Jiangsu coast — cooked simply so the freshness carries. As Wikivoyage warns, the ones with the best sea views are often overpriced and pushy on price, but there are so many of them that you can compare and bargain. Eat where the local families are eating, agree the price before they cook, and you'll do well.
The signature city dish is Huaguoshan goose (花果山凤鹅), a local braised/cured goose marinated with a long list of herbs — a genuine regional speciality you'll see sold as a gift food as well as on menus, not just a tourist gimmick. Pair it with the mountain's teas: Huaguoshan 'cloud-mist' tea (花果山云雾茶) is grown on the misty slopes and is the local cup worth trying, and Yuntai-mountain kudzu (arrowroot) starch is a traditional local product. These are the things actually from here, rather than the generic stuff on a景区 tourist menu.
If you want to eat like a local with an open mind, two northern-Jiangsu oddities stand out. Guanyun doudan (灌云豆丹) is a regional delicacy made from the larva of a moth that feeds on soybean plants — protein-rich, prized locally, and very much an acquired idea for most foreign visitors, but a real point of local pride. Guannan liangfen (灌南凉粉) is a cooling mung-bean jelly noodle, an easier and very refreshing summer snack. Neither is a tourist invention; both tell you more about the place than the themed snacks up the mountain.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Lianyungang's whole tourism pitch is that Mount Huaguo is the real Flower-Fruit Mountain from Journey to the West, and the park plays it up — a giant Sun Wukong head sculpture, the four pilgrims at the entrance, scores of stone monkeys, themed shops and snacks. Some of it is genuine heritage hiding under the theming: the Water-Curtain Cave is a real waterfall cave that was famous before the novel existed, Sanyuan Temple is a real Tang-founded temple, and the imperial rock inscriptions are real. But a chunk of what you'll photograph is modern monkey-king set-dressing. Come for the mountain itself — it's a properly tall, green, walkable peak, the highest in Jiangsu — and treat the West-journey overlay as the local flavour, not as ancient relics.
The price you see quoted for Mount Huaguo — long around ¥90 in the Mar–Nov season, ¥50 in winter — is just the gate. The mountain is steep and the sights sit well above the entrance, so most people pay an extra in-park shuttle-bus fare to ride up toward the Water-Curtain Cave before walking on; treat that as effectively necessary unless you fancy a long road climb. The 788 m high zipline near the summit is a third, separate, optional fee. We could not verify the current shuttle and zipline prices, so don't trust an old number — budget for the gate plus a shuttle add-on, ask at the ticket office, and don't be surprised by the second payment after you're already inside.
Beyond the stone monkey statues, Mount Huaguo has actual wild macaques roaming the upper slopes, and like temple monkeys across Asia they associate humans with food. They will snatch a plastic bag, a drink, a phone or anything that looks edible, and a confronted monkey can scratch or bite. Don't feed them, don't wave food around, keep snacks zipped away, and hang onto your bag and phone on the busy stretches near the cave. It's part of the fun, but treat them as wild animals, not photo props.
Lianyungang is well connected by high-speed rail (it sits on the east–west Eurasian land-bridge line and links to a north–south coastal route) and has its own airport, so reaching the city is easy; it's the local legs that eat time. Mount Huaguo is about 7 km southeast of the Haizhou (Xinhai) urban core — reachable by tourist buses (游1/游2/游6) and bus B11, but a DiDi is faster and cheap. The Liandao beach is a separate trip out toward the Lianyun port district, and the Kongwang carvings are near the museum in town. The sane plan is to base in the Haizhou core, do the mountain as a full day, and use DiDi to stitch the scattered coastal and city sights together rather than relying on slow bus transfers.
Straight answers
Is Mount Huaguo really the Monkey King's mountain, and is it worth it?
It's the real-world mountain that inspired the Flower-Fruit Mountain (花果山) and Water-Curtain Cave of Journey to the West, and the park leans hard into that — giant Sun Wukong sculptures, stone monkeys, themed everything. Under the theming there's genuine substance: the Water-Curtain Cave is a real waterfall cave famous before the novel, Sanyuan Temple is a Tang-founded temple, and Yunü Peak is the highest point in Jiangsu at 624.4 m. Come for the actual mountain and the climb, treat the monkey-king overlay as the local flavour, and you won't be disappointed.
What does Mount Huaguo actually cost — is the shuttle included?
No, the fees stack. Wikivoyage long quoted gate admission around ¥90 in the Mar–Nov high season and ¥50 in winter, but that's only the entrance. The mountain is steep, so most people pay an extra in-park shuttle-bus fare to ride up before walking to the sights, and the 788 m summit zipline is a third optional fee. We could not verify the current shuttle and zipline prices, so budget for the gate plus an add-on and confirm everything at the ticket office. Reserve entry in advance with your passport through the official lyghgs.cn channel, or have your hotel do it.
Are there wild monkeys, and are they a problem?
Yes — alongside the stone-monkey decor, there are actual wild macaques on the upper mountain, and they're bold around food. They'll grab a bag, a drink, a phone or any snack, and can scratch or bite if cornered. Don't feed them, keep food zipped away, and hold onto your bag and phone on the busy stretches near the Water-Curtain Cave. Enjoy them, but treat them as wild animals.
Beyond the mountain, what's worth seeing, and where should I eat?
For genuine history, the Kongwang Mountain cliff carvings (孔望山摩崖造像) near the city museum are nationally protected Eastern-Han cliff figures, often called among China's earliest Buddhist rock carvings — quiet and uncrowded. For the coast, Liandao island has the city's main beaches (small admission, short summer swimming season, Yellow-Sea water rather than tropical). And eat seafood: the harbour and Liandao restaurants let you pick from the tank, but agree the price before they cook, since the view-front places can be pushy. The local specialities to try are Huaguoshan goose and Huaguoshan cloud-mist tea.