Mount Longhu, told straight.

A UNESCO Danxia landscape of red sandstone cliffs in eastern Jiangxi, where a flat-water raft drift carries you past sheer rock walls stuffed with 2,500-year-old hanging coffins, and where the so-called 'Dragon and Tiger Mountain' is really the cradle of Zhengyi Taoism — home of the hereditary Celestial Master. How a foreigner buys the two-day through-ticket, books the raft, times the cliff-coffin-raising show, and finds the genuinely old buildings among the concrete reconstructions.

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.

Longhushan scenic area through-ticket (龙虎山风景区)

2026-06-13
Release
Real-name reservation with your passport; book ahead through the official scenic-area channel, more so on weekends and in holiday peaks
Price
¥120
Foreigners
Passport works

The gate runs on real-name entry, so you reserve with your passport through the official Longhushan platform (its WeChat or Alipay mini-program) or buy on Trip.com/Klook, which list foreigner-bookable tickets. The compulsory in-park shuttle bus is sold together with the entry ticket, not separately at a window, so buy them as a bundle. The interface is Chinese-first; the simplest path is to have your hotel reserve the entry plus shuttle for you with your passport details. Don't assume there's an easy English window at the gate.

officialBookingUrl set to null: we could not verify a single clean official ticketing domain for the scenic area — sales run through the scenic-area company's mini-program plus the listed OTAs, and the long-published prices below should be reconfirmed at booking. Park admission has long run around ¥120, and crucially the ticket is valid for two consecutive days, which is the right way to do Longhushan — the cliffs-and-river half and the Taoist-town half don't fit comfortably into one day. The shuttle-bus network is a separate, effectively compulsory add-on of roughly ¥60 (about ¥70 if you want it valid across both days), since the sights are spread along the river and out to Shangqing and you can't realistically walk between them. The raft drift is yet another separate fee (see below).

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Luxi River bamboo-raft drift (泸溪河竹筏漂流)

2026-06-13
Release
Buy with your scenic-area entry or on the day at the raft dock; book ahead in holiday peaks when slots and rafts fill
Price
¥80
Foreigners
Passport works

Bought as a separate add-on to your scenic-area ticket through the official mini-program, an OTA, or at the raft dock; a passport is fine as ID. The float runs one way down the river, so you ride the shuttle to the put-in and the trail or bus back — plan it as a one-way leg, not a there-and-back.

officialBookingUrl null — the raft is sold through the same scenic-area channel and OTAs, no clean standalone official site we could verify. This is the signature Longhushan experience: a roughly hour-long, very gentle drift down the Luxi River past the red Danxia cliffs, ending near the burial-cliff walls where the hanging coffins are wedged into the rock. Be straight with yourself about the craft — the 'bamboo rafts' here are largely PVC motor-rafts styled to look like bamboo, and the ride is tame rather than a whitewater thrill. The scenery and the coffin cliffs are the reason to do it. Long quoted around ¥80 on top of your entry ticket; confirm the current fare when you book.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Xianshui Rock cliff coffins & coffin-raising show (仙水岩升棺表演)

2026-06-13
Price
Foreigners
Passport works
Resellers
None official

No separate ticket — the cliff, the small cliff-built temple, the coffin viewpoints and the open-air coffin-raising show are all reached on foot once you're inside on your scenic-area entry and shuttle. Just bring your passport for the gate, and time your arrival to the show.

officialBookingUrl null — no ticket of its own, it's covered by your park entry and shuttle. Xianshui Rock (仙水岩) is the wall of cliffs over the river where the Guyue people wedged wooden coffins into hollows high in the rock some 2,500 years ago; a trail winds to eye-level viewpoints of 15-20 of them. Several times a day, on the even hours, the park stages a free open-air 'coffin-raising' (升棺) show on the cliff face — an artistic re-enactment of how the coffins may have been hauled up, with performers rappelling down the rock, acrobatics, and cormorant fishermen on rafts below. It's the set-piece most people build their park half-day around, so check the day's show times and be at the riverside viewpoint a little early. Combine it naturally with the boardwalk between Fairy Pool and Elephant Trunk Hill.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Shangqing Town & Celestial Master's Mansion (上清古镇·嗣汉天师府)

2026-06-13
Price
Foreigners
Passport works

Reached by the in-park shuttle out to Shangqing town (you may need to change buses at Zhengyiguan). The Tianshifu mansion is a walk-up gate ticket with your passport; the old-town streets are free to wander. No advance booking needed in normal periods.

officialBookingUrl null — gate sale and OTAs only, no official ticketing site we could verify. This is the Taoist half of Longhushan and the reason the mountain matters spiritually: the Sihan Tianshifu (嗣汉天师府), the residence of the hereditary Celestial Master — the head of Zhengyi Taoism, sometimes loosely called the Taoist 'pope' — sits in Shangqing town, the historic seat of the school. Nearby are Zhengyiguan (正一观), a rebuilt temple with a famous well where an attendant will pour you a cup of water held to be medicinal, and the archaeological site of the great Shangqing Temple (大上清宫). Manage expectations: Longhushan's old town and most of its 'ancient' temples are obvious modern concrete reconstructions, with only two or three genuinely old buildings among them — come for the living Taoist tradition and the setting, not for untouched antiquity.

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
Longhushan is rural eastern Jiangxi, reached through Yingtan, and it sees few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is genuinely hit-or-miss. The cluster of hotels just outside the park's north entrance and the small guesthouses around Shangqing town are aimed at domestic tour groups, and many smaller properties aren't set up to register a foreign passport with the police. The safer base is a mid-range or chain hotel in Yingtan city, near Yingtan North high-speed station or Yingtan Station, where registration is more reliable; confirm the property takes foreign passports before you pay. Carry your original passport — it's 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 can get patchy out at the cliffs and on the local buses.

Eat like a local

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

Shangqing tofu, the local name dishchecked 2026-06-13

The thing to eat around Longhushan is Shangqing tofu (上清豆腐) — bean curd from Shangqing town, prized for a smooth, springy texture locals credit to the local water, and cooked braised, stuffed or in clay-pot. It's a genuine regional speciality rather than a tourist invention. You'll find it in the restaurants of Shangqing old town and at No Mosquito Village (无蚊村), where most houses have turned into eateries — though, as everywhere here, prices inside the park run higher than outside the north gate.

Tianshi chestnut chicken and small river fishchecked 2026-06-13

The other plates to look for are 'Celestial Master' chestnut braised free-range chicken (天师板栗烧土鸡) — local chicken slow-cooked with chestnuts, a dish tied to the Taoist-master mythology of the mountain — and the small freshwater fish pulled from the Luxi River, usually cooked simply so the freshness carries. Both are local Jiangxi mountain fare, hearty and worth ordering over anything generic on a tourist menu.

This is Jiangxi — it runs spicychecked 2026-06-13

You're in Jiangxi, and the cooking leans genuinely hot: fresh chilli and pickled-chilli heat woven through the braises and stir-fries, not just a sprinkle on top. It's a defining character of the food here rather than a single dish. If you don't take chilli well, say so when you order — 'not spicy' is understood — but know that the local default is properly spicy, and toning it down can flatten the dishes that are worth coming for.

The honest layer

The part a tourism board will never print.

One ticket buys two days — and you need themchecked 2026-06-13

Longhushan's admission (long around ¥120) is valid for two consecutive days, and that's not padding: the park really has two halves. The river-and-cliffs half — the raft drift, Xianshui Rock's hanging coffins, the coffin-raising show, the Fairy Pool boardwalk — is a day in itself. The Taoist half out at Shangqing — the Celestial Master's Mansion, Zhengyiguan, the old town — is another. Trying to cram both into one day means rushing the bit you came for. Plan two days, or pick your half deliberately.

Three fees stack: gate, shuttle, raftchecked 2026-06-13

The price you see quoted for Longhushan is just the gate. On top of it, the in-park shuttle bus (roughly ¥60, about ¥70 for two days) is effectively compulsory — the sights are strung out for kilometres along the river and out to Shangqing, and you can't walk between them. Then the raft drift is a third, separate fee (long around ¥80). Budget all three together so the shuttle and the raft aren't a surprise at the dock, and reconfirm each price when you book, since the published figures are dated.

Time your day around the coffin-raising showchecked 2026-06-13

The cliff-coffin-raising performance at Xianshui Rock — performers rappelling down the red cliff to slot a coffin into a hollow, with acrobatics and cormorant fishermen below — is the signature spectacle, and it's free with your entry. But it runs only at set times through the day (traditionally on the even hours), so it's the one thing worth planning your park half-day around. Check the day's posted show times, ride the shuttle out in good time, and be at the riverside viewpoint a few minutes early to get a clear line of sight.

It's Danxia scenery first, ancient temples a distant secondchecked 2026-06-13

Longhushan sells itself as one of China's sacred Taoist mountains, and the Zhengyi tradition centred on the Celestial Master here is real and still alive. But be clear-eyed: almost every 'old' or 'historic' building in the park is an obvious modern reconstruction in concrete, with only a handful of genuinely old structures. The honest draw is the landscape — the red Danxia cliffs over the green river, the raft drift, the 2,500-year-old hanging coffins. Come for the geology and the river, treat the temples as atmosphere, and you won't be disappointed.

Straight answers

Do I need to book Longhushan tickets in advance, and can a foreigner do it?

Entry is real-name, so you reserve with your passport, and a passport works as ID. Book through the official Longhushan WeChat or Alipay mini-program (Chinese-first) or on Trip.com/Klook, which list foreigner-bookable tickets, and reserve ahead on weekends and in holiday peaks. The simplest path is to have your hotel book the entry plus the compulsory shuttle for you with your passport details. The admission ticket is valid for two consecutive days.

What does it actually cost — is the shuttle and the raft included?

No, they stack. The gate admission has long been around ¥120 (valid two consecutive days), the in-park shuttle bus is a separate roughly ¥60 (about ¥70 for two days) and is effectively compulsory because the sights are spread out, and the Luxi River raft drift is a third separate fee, long quoted around ¥80. Budget all three together, and reconfirm each price when you book since the published figures are dated.

What's the deal with the hanging coffins and the cliff show?

At Xianshui Rock, wooden coffins were wedged into hollows high in the red cliffs by the Guyue people some 2,500 years ago, and a trail brings you to eye-level viewpoints of around 15-20 of them. Several times a day, on the even hours, the park stages a free open-air 'coffin-raising' show on the cliff face — performers rappelling down the rock, acrobatics and cormorant fishermen below, re-enacting how the coffins may have been hoisted. It's covered by your entry; just check the day's show times and arrive a little early.

How do I get to Longhushan, and where should I stay?

Arrive via Yingtan: the high-speed Yingtan North station (on the Shanghai-Kunming line) is the easiest, with bus 23 to Yingtan Station then a bus to the park visitor centre; or the conventional Yingtan Station, where bus K2 reaches the visitor centre in about 30 minutes (around ¥4). For lodging, the safer bet for foreigners is a mid-range or chain hotel in Yingtan city, where police registration of a foreign passport is more reliable than at the small guesthouses by the north gate or in Shangqing — confirm the property takes foreign passports before you pay, and carry your original passport for check-in.

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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.