The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Tiantangzhai scenic area (天堂寨风景区), Anhui side
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Real-name entry with your passport; book ahead in summer peak (it's a known hot-weather escape) and on holidays, otherwise tickets are usually available on the day
- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Entry runs on real-name ID, so a passport works as your ID at the gate or when reserving through the scenic area's own WeChat/Alipay mini-program (Chinese-first). OTAs such as Trip.com also list it. Important: there are two separate Tiantangzhai gates on two sides of the same massif — the Anhui side in Jinzhai County (天堂寨, the one most domestic visitors mean) and the Hubei side in Luotian County (sometimes signed Tiantangzhai or 'Dabieshan'). They are different scenic-area entrances with different tickets and you cannot freely cross the ridge between them on one ticket, so pick your province and gate before you set out, and have your hotel confirm which one your transport actually goes to.
officialBookingUrl set to null and prices left null on purpose: we could not verify a single clean, current official ticketing domain or a reliable current fare for the Anhui-side gate from English sources, and entrance prices at Dabie-mountain 5A parks change — confirm the gate price and any reservation requirement when you book. What's solid: Tiantangzhai is the second-highest peak of the Dabie Mountains (大别山) at about 1,729 m, on the Anhui–Hubei border, forming the watershed between the Huai and Yangtze river systems. The Anhui-side scenic area is a forested canyon walk known for a stack of waterfalls (the 'nine-waterfall' gully), old-growth forest and over a thousand plant and animal species, and it markets itself hard as a cool-air summer escape. Like most big Chinese mountain parks, expect an entrance fee plus a separate, effectively compulsory in-park shuttle bus to the trailheads — budget the two together rather than being surprised at the gate.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Tiantangzhai waterfalls & gully walk
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
- Resellers
- None official
No separate ticket — the waterfall gully, the boardwalk trail and the climb toward the main ridge are all reached on foot once you're inside on your Tiantangzhai entry and shuttle. Bring your passport for the gate and decent shoes for the steps.
officialBookingUrl null and no price of its own — this is what you've come to Tiantangzhai for, and it's covered by your park entry and shuttle. The signature walk follows a stepped boardwalk up a forested gully past a chain of waterfalls and pools; the falls run hardest after summer rain and can thin out in a dry spell, so manage expectations if you visit in a drought. The full loop up toward the summit ridge and the 'first pass of the southeast Yangtze' viewpoint is a real hill-walk with a lot of stairs — give yourself the better part of a day, and check whether any cable-car or chairlift section is running if you'd rather not climb the whole thing on foot.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Wanfo Lake scenic area (万佛湖风景区), Shucheng
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Real-name entry with your passport; usually buyable on the day outside holiday peaks
- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
A passport works as ID at the gate or via the scenic area's mini-program; OTAs list it too. It's a completely separate direction from Tiantangzhai — Wanfo Lake is in Shucheng County, on the Lu'an–Hefei side, not up in the high Dabie hills near Jinzhai — so treat it as its own day trip, not a quick add-on to the mountain. Boat rides on the reservoir are typically a separate fee on top of the gate.
officialBookingUrl null and prices null: we could not verify a clean official ticketing site or a current fare from English sources — confirm at booking. Wanfo Lake (万佛湖, 'Lake of Ten Thousand Buddhas') is a large scenic reservoir formed by the Pi River / Foziling–Longhekou dam system in Shucheng County, and it's a 5A-rated lake-and-islands scenic area: gentle, family-friendly, built around boat cruises, lakeside paths and the dam, rather than the strenuous forest-and-waterfall experience of Tiantangzhai. Worth a calm day if you're basing in Lu'an or Hefei and want water and easy walking; if your time is short and you came for the Dabie Mountains, Tiantangzhai is the higher priority.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Jinzhai & the Dabie Mountains revolutionary heritage (金寨红色旅游 / 大别山)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Most of the red-tourism museums and memorials around Jinzhai county town — including the well-known Jinzhai Revolution Museum / martyrs' memorial — are free or low-cost walk-ups that admit on your passport; some, like government-run free museums, may use a real-name reservation in busy periods. Bring your passport. These sites are practical to fold into a Tiantangzhai trip since both are in Jinzhai County, though the county is large and the mountain is a further two-hour-plus drive beyond the town.
officialBookingUrl null and prices null — many of these are free state museums with no ticketing site to verify; confirm any reservation requirement locally. Jinzhai County is one of the cradles of the Chinese Communist revolution in the Dabie Mountains (大别山), a major base area in the 1920s–40s and the home county of an unusually large number of PLA generals, and its red-tourism circuit — the Jinzhai Revolution Museum, the martyrs' memorial park, old base-area sites — is the heritage that domestic visitors come for alongside the scenery. For a foreign traveller it's mainly of interest as context for why this remote mountain region is so heavily commemorated; the displays are almost entirely in Chinese, so a translation app helps. The same county also holds the Dabieshan Grottoes / Tianfo Temple (天佛寺) area, if you want a temple-and-cliff stop.
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
- Lu'an (六安, pronounced 'Lù-an') is a prefecture-level city in western Anhui, with the mountain sights scattered across its outer counties — Tiantangzhai and the revolutionary sites in Jinzhai County, Wanfo Lake in Shucheng County — well away from the city centre. This is domestic-tour-group country that sees very few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is genuinely hit-or-miss. The safer base is a mid-range or chain hotel in Lu'an city (near Lu'an Railway Station) or in Hefei, the provincial capital an hour east, where police registration of a foreign passport is more reliable than at the small mountain guesthouses and farmstays (农家乐) clustered at the Tiantangzhai and Wanfo Lake gates. If you want to overnight at the mountain to catch a sunrise or the waterfalls in good light, confirm the specific property can register a foreign passport before you pay — don't assume it. Carry your original passport: it's your ID for every gate ticket and for hotel check-in. Keep some cash on you too, since mobile pay (a foreign card linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works in town but signal and acceptance get patchy up in the Dabie hills and on the local shuttles and county buses.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
Lu'an's single most famous export is a tea: Lu'an Guapian (六安瓜片), literally 'Lu'an melon-seed slices', counted among China's ten most famous teas. It's an unusual green tea made only from the leaf — no bud, no stem — so the flat, deep-green pieces look like melon seeds, grown in the Dabie Mountain belt of western Anhui around Jinzhai and Huoshan. This is the place to drink it at source and to buy it as a gift; spring (pre-Qingming and just after) is the prized picking. Be a little wary of roadside 'authentic Guapian' at tourist prices — buy from a reputable tea shop in town or a known producer rather than the first stall at the gate, and taste before you commit to a tin.
Up in the Dabie hills the cooking is hearty mountain-farmhouse fare, served at the 农家乐 (farmstay restaurants) around the gates. Look for wild mountain vegetables and bamboo shoots foraged in season, freshwater fish and crayfish from the reservoirs and streams (Wanfo Lake fish is a local point of pride), free-range chicken slow-cooked in clay pots, and the Anhui habit of smoking and curing pork and bean curd. It's honest, generous, not fussy — and far better value and more local than anything on a polished tourist menu. Order what the farmstay is actually cooking that day rather than a printed menu, and you'll eat well.
Don't expect the chilli wall of a Hunan or Jiangxi meal. Anhui cuisine (Huizhou cooking is its famous southern branch) leans instead on fermenting, smoking, curing and braising, with stronger, funkier flavours than heat — the province's signature oddity is 'hairy tofu' (毛豆腐), a fermented bean curd grown furry with white mould and then pan-fried, which is a lot better than it sounds. The Dabie-region food up here is its own rustic, mountain version rather than refined Huizhou banquet cooking, but the same logic holds: the bold flavour comes from curing and fermenting, not from a pile of dried chillies.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
The single most important thing to get right at Tiantangzhai is which gate you're going to. The same forested massif sits on the Anhui–Hubei border, and there are separate scenic-area entrances on each side: the Anhui gate in Jinzhai County and the Hubei gate in Luotian County (Huanggang). They're run by different managements, sell different tickets, and you can't simply walk over the ridge from one to the other on a single ticket. Most domestic Anhui itineraries mean the Anhui (Jinzhai) side. If you're coming up from Wuhan or the Hubei side, you may be heading for the Luotian gate instead. Decide before you book your transport, and confirm with your hotel which entrance the car or bus actually drops you at — turning up at the wrong province's gate is a long detour to undo.
Lu'an markets these sights as 'in Lu'an', but the mountain is not. Tiantangzhai is deep in Jinzhai County in the far west of the prefecture, well over two hours by road from Lu'an city (and longer from Hefei), on mountain roads. That makes it a committed full-day trip at minimum, and many people overnight at the gate-side farmstays to catch the waterfalls and the morning light without a brutal same-day round trip. Wanfo Lake is in the opposite direction (Shucheng, toward Hefei), so you can't sensibly chain the two in one day. Build your itinerary around one anchor per day, sort out the car or shuttle the night before, and don't underestimate the drive.
As at almost every big Chinese mountain park, the number you see quoted for Tiantangzhai is usually just the gate. On top of it there's normally a separate, effectively compulsory in-park shuttle bus to reach the trailheads, and possibly a cable-car or chairlift section if you don't want to climb every step. We've deliberately left the prices null here rather than print a figure we couldn't verify as current from reliable English sources — fares at these 5A parks get revised, and second-hand numbers online are often years out of date. Reconfirm the gate price, the shuttle fee and any cable-car cost when you actually book, and budget them together.
The honest draw of Tiantangzhai is the landscape: genuine old-growth Dabie forest, a deep canyon strung with waterfalls, cool air in summer when the lowlands are baking. But the waterfalls live and die by recent rain — after a wet spell they're full and loud, in a dry stretch they can be a trickle. If a thundering cascade is the photo you want, aim for after summer rain rather than a long dry spell, and accept that mountain weather here means cloud and mist as often as blue sky. The revolutionary-history sites and Wanfo Lake are pleasant add-ons, but the geology and the woods are the reason to make the trek.
Straight answers
Which side of Tiantangzhai should I go to — Anhui or Hubei?
Tiantangzhai straddles the Anhui–Hubei border and has separate scenic-area gates on each side: the Anhui gate in Jinzhai County (the one most Lu'an / Anhui itineraries mean) and the Hubei gate in Luotian County near Huanggang. They have different tickets and different managements, and you can't cross the ridge from one to the other on a single ticket. Pick the side that matches where you're travelling from — Anhui (Jinzhai) if you're coming via Lu'an or Hefei, Hubei (Luotian) if you're coming up from Wuhan — and confirm with your hotel which gate your transport actually goes to before you set out.
How do I get to Tiantangzhai and Wanfo Lake, and can a foreigner do it independently?
It's doable but it takes planning, because the sights are far from the city. The usual approach is to reach Lu'an or Hefei by high-speed rail, then go out by car, chartered van, or local tour bus: Tiantangzhai is over two hours' drive west into Jinzhai County, and Wanfo Lake is in the opposite direction in Shucheng County toward Hefei, so they're separate day trips. Public transport into the deep Dabie hills is slow and infrequent, so most independent travellers hire a car or driver for the day, or join a domestic day tour. A passport works as ID at the gates; have your hotel help arrange the transport and confirm the destination gate.
Do I need to book tickets in advance, and what will it cost?
Entry is real-name, so carry your passport, and a passport works as your ID to buy at the gate or reserve through the scenic area's WeChat/Alipay mini-program (Chinese-first) or an OTA. Outside summer and holiday peaks you can usually buy on the day; Tiantangzhai is a popular hot-weather escape, so book ahead in midsummer and on national holidays. On cost, we've deliberately not printed prices we couldn't verify as current — expect a gate fee plus a separate, effectively compulsory in-park shuttle (and possibly a cable car) at Tiantangzhai, and a gate fee plus optional boat ride at Wanfo Lake. Reconfirm each fee when you book.
Is the Lu'an Guapian tea worth seeking out, and where should I buy it?
Yes — Lu'an Guapian (六安瓜片) is one of China's ten most famous teas, a distinctive green tea made from the leaf only (no bud or stem), grown in the Dabie Mountain belt around Jinzhai and Huoshan, and Lu'an is the place to drink and buy it at source. Spring-picked is the prized grade. Buy from a reputable tea shop in town or a known producer rather than the first roadside stall at a scenic gate, where 'authentic Guapian' can be overpriced or not what it claims; taste before you commit to a tin, and don't be shy about comparing a couple of shops.