The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Li Bai Former Residence / Li Bai's birthplace heritage, Jiangyou (李白故里, 江油)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
This is in Jiangyou, a separate county-level city about 40 km north of Mianyang proper, not in Mianyang city itself — plan it as a day trip. Reach Jiangyou by high-speed train (Jiangyou Station is on the Xicheng line, a short hop from Mianyang Station) or by bus, then a local taxi or bus to the site. Entry is real-name like most Chinese scenic areas, so carry your passport as ID. There is no reliable English-language booking window; the simplest path is to have your hotel reserve or to buy on arrival, and to use a translation app on site.
officialBookingUrl set to null and prices left null: we could not verify a single clean official ticketing domain or a current admission price for the Li Bai heritage sites in Jiangyou, so we won't quote a figure to be reconfirmed at the gate. 'Li Bai's birthplace' is a cluster rather than one ticket — the great Tang poet Li Bai (701-762) grew up in what is now Jiangyou, and the area markets several linked sites including the Li Bai Former Residence (李白故里 / 李白纪念馆) and the surrounding Longxi heritage area. Treat it as Tang-poetry pilgrimage and landscaped memorial grounds rather than an untouched ancient house; much of what you see is reconstructed and curated. Pair it naturally with Dou'tuan Mountain, which is also in Jiangyou.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
5·12 Wenchuan Earthquake Memorial & old Beichuan county ruins (北川老县城地震遗址 / 5·12汶川特大地震纪念馆)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- Free (still needs booking)
- Foreigners
- Passport works
- Resellers
- None official
Reached by local bus from the Mianyang bus terminal across from the railway station (buses to Beichuan run frequently), or by hired car / DiDi for the day; it's roughly 70 km from Mianyang city. Entry is real-name, so bring your passport. The memorial museum itself is free; you may need to reserve a free timed entry through its WeChat channel on busy days, which is why we mark reservation 'unknown' rather than 'no' — confirm locally. This is a solemn disaster-memorial site, not a sightseeing attraction; dress and behave as you would at any memorial to the dead.
officialBookingUrl null and entry free: the 5·12 Wenchuan Earthquake Memorial Museum (5·12汶川特大地震纪念馆) in Qushan Town is free, closed Mondays, open roughly 09:00-17:30 in summer (May-Oct) and 09:00-17:00 in winter (Nov-Apr) — reconfirm the day's hours and any free-reservation requirement before you go. This is the preserved ruin of old Beichuan county seat (Qushan Town), which sat near the epicentre of the 12 May 2008 Wenchuan earthquake and was then buried in part by a landslide that September; the government chose never to rebuild or excavate it, leaving the collapsed town — including the school where many children died — sealed and standing as a memorial, with a separate museum and viewing points. The new county seat was rebuilt as Yongchang Town nearby. Approach it respectfully: tens of thousands died here, families still visit, and it is a place of mourning, not a thrill stop. Photography is generally permitted at the official viewing areas but read the posted rules and follow them.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Dou'tuan Mountain, Jiangyou (窦圌山)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Also in Jiangyou, about 25 km north of Jiangyou town and roughly 45 km from Mianyang. Take a train or bus from Mianyang to Jiangyou first, then a local bus or taxi to the mountain; from Chengdu it's around 2.5-3 hours by bus to Jiangyou. A walk-up gate ticket with your passport; no advance booking needed in normal periods. The cable car and the cliff-walk plank/chain bridges between the peaks are separate paid add-ons.
officialBookingUrl null and prices left null — we could not verify a clean official ticketing site or a current fare, so we won't invent one; reconfirm admission, cable car and the cliff-bridge fees at the gate. Dou'tuan Mountain (窦圌山, sometimes written Douchuan / DouChuan) is a AAAA-rated Danxia-landform peak of three sheer sandstone pillars linked high up by famous iron-chain and plank bridges, with a national geopark designation; it forms part of the wider Jianmen Shudao scenic system. Its draw for foreigners is partly the Li Bai connection — the young poet is said to have visited and written of the mountain, and a later inscription on the mountain quotes him. Expect a real climb and stairs; the chain-bridge crossing between peaks is the signature thrill and not for the vertigo-prone.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Fule Mountain (Fule Shan Park, 富乐山)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
In Mianyang city itself, just across the Fu River from downtown — a short taxi or bike ride from the centre, or a walk over one of the river bridges. A walk-up park; bring your passport in case of real-name entry checks, though as a city park it is low-friction. No advance booking.
officialBookingUrl null and price left null — admission has long been only nominal, but we won't quote an exact figure; check at the gate. Fule Mountain is the easy, in-city green hill opposite downtown, a hillside park of teahouses, walking trails, a pagoda lit at night, and Three Kingdoms-era historical monuments and statues (the area ties to Liu Bei, Guan Yu and Zhang Fei). It's the right low-effort half-day if you don't want to commit to the Jiangyou or Beichuan day trips, and it pairs with a stroll along Mianyang's riverwalk. Expect stairs and climbing to reach the upper monuments, as with most Chinese hill-parks.
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
- Mianyang is a large, modern Sichuan city (the province's number-two by economy, around 5 million people) but it sees relatively few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is hit-or-miss below the international-brand tier. The reliable choice is a mid-range or international-chain hotel in central Fucheng District near the riverwalk and the railway station — properties like the Sheraton, a Holiday Inn Express, or a Hampton by Hilton are set up to register a foreign passport with the police. Smaller local guesthouses, and the budget places out in Jiangyou or Beichuan county, often are not, so don't assume a cheap room near a sight will take you. Confirm the property accepts foreign passports before you pay. Carry your original passport — it's your ID for hotel check-in and for the real-name entry that most scenic areas now use. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works across the city for taxis, meals and tickets, but keep some cash for the ¥2 city buses and for the local buses out to Beichuan and Jiangyou, where card acceptance is patchier.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
The city's signature dish is Mianyang rice noodles — fine, soft rice vermicelli in a clear, long-simmered broth, topped with beef, tripe or a fried 'crispy' garnish, eaten most often for breakfast. Locals are genuinely attached to it, with a backstory tying it to a Three Kingdoms-era official, and it's a few yuan a bowl at any busy local noodle shop. It is not the same as Sichuan's better-known dan dan or 'small noodles' — it's a distinct, lighter, broth-forward style. Have it in the morning at a packed neighbourhood place rather than a tourist spot, point at what others are eating, and ask for it as la (spicy) or not to taste.
Alongside the noodles, look for guokui (锅盔) — a crisp, layered griddle-baked flatbread, sometimes split and stuffed with marinated or cured meat — sold from small street stalls all over town. For a proper graze, head to a snack street such as Majiaxiang (马家巷): skewers, spicy hot-pot bowls, cured-meat skewers and a wide spread of cheap small eats, busiest and best late in the evening. Share dishes to try more, pick the standardised, hygienic-looking stalls, and reckon on a very modest spend for a full meal of snacks.
Mianyang is northern Sichuan, so the default cooking leans on chilli and the numbing Sichuan peppercorn (the mala tingle), in hotpot, stir-fries and braises. If you don't take heat well, say bu la (not spicy) when you order — it's understood — but know that toning it all the way down flattens the dishes worth coming for. Mianyang has a small foreign-food and Western-cafe scene downtown (you'll find Western dishes, coffee and the odd pub near Iron Ox Square and the riverwalk), but the local Sichuan food is the reason to eat here, and it's cheap and good.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Mianyang sells itself on the Tang poet Li Bai, but the birthplace heritage — the Li Bai Former Residence, the memorial grounds, Dou'tuan Mountain — is all out in Jiangyou, a separate county-level city about 40 km north. Downtown Mianyang itself is a clean, modern riverside city with parks, a riverwalk and the Yuejin Road industrial-heritage block, pleasant but not a poetry pilgrimage. If Li Bai is your reason to come, base yourself for easy access north and plan a full Jiangyou day; don't expect to walk to any of it from your hotel. Jiangyou has its own high-speed station, so the hop is quick once you know it's a separate trip.
The single most distinctive thing near Mianyang is the preserved ruin of old Beichuan, the county town that the 12 May 2008 Wenchuan earthquake destroyed and a landslide then partly buried. The government chose never to rebuild it; it stands sealed as a memorial, with the collapsed school where many children died among the sites you can view. It is free to enter, and it is not a sightseeing 'attraction' in the ordinary sense — tens of thousands of people died in this disaster and families still come to grieve. Go if you want to understand it and pay respect, dress and behave as you would at any memorial to the dead, keep your voice down, follow the posted photography rules, and don't pose for cheerful holiday photos in front of the ruins.
Mianyang's headline sights are spread out: Beichuan is around 70 km away, the Jiangyou cluster (Li Bai's heritage and Dou'tuan Mountain) is about 40-45 km north. The city's own attractions — Fule Mountain, the riverwalk, People's Park, Xianhai Lake reservoir — are gentle and worth a relaxed half-day but won't fill a trip. Be realistic: pick one big day trip (Beichuan, or Jiangyou) per day, use the frequent local buses from the terminal by the train station or hire a car, and don't try to cram Beichuan and Jiangyou into the same day — they're in opposite directions and each deserves its own.
Mianyang is nicknamed China's 'science city' because it hosts major defence and nuclear research, including the CAEP. You'll see it referenced everywhere, but the actual Science City compound is a secured area closed to foreigners not specifically cleared for entry, and it is not a tourist site. Don't go looking for a way in; there isn't one for a casual visitor, and it's the wrong place to wander. The city's industrial-heritage story is far better experienced at the open, free Yuejin Road industrial-history block downtown, where 1950s-80s factory buildings have been turned into cafes and exhibits.
Straight answers
How do I get to Mianyang, and is it easy from Chengdu?
Yes — Mianyang is on the high-speed line north of Chengdu and the trip takes well under an hour by bullet train, making it an easy add-on to a Chengdu base or a stop on the way north toward Guangyuan and Xi'an. Mianyang Railway Station sits in central Fucheng District; the city also has its own airport (Mianyang Nanjiao) with flights to Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and other hubs. Within the city, buses are ¥2 (carry cash) and metered taxis start around ¥6, with DiDi widely available.
Where exactly is Li Bai's birthplace — is it in Mianyang?
Not in Mianyang city itself. The Tang poet Li Bai grew up in what is now Jiangyou, a separate county-level city about 40 km north of Mianyang, and the Li Bai heritage sites (the Former Residence / memorial grounds) and the related Dou'tuan Mountain are all there. Plan it as a full day trip: take a high-speed train or bus to Jiangyou (it has its own station on the Xicheng line), then a local bus or taxi to the sites. Carry your passport for real-name entry, and have your hotel help with tickets since there's no reliable English booking window.
Can I visit the Beichuan earthquake ruins, and how should I behave there?
Yes. The preserved old Beichuan county seat (Qushan Town) and the 5·12 Wenchuan Earthquake Memorial Museum are open to visitors and free, about 70 km from Mianyang, reached by frequent local buses from the terminal by the train station or by hired car. The museum is generally closed on Mondays — reconfirm hours and whether a free timed reservation is needed. Treat it as the solemn memorial it is: the town was destroyed in the 2008 earthquake with enormous loss of life and was left standing, unexcavated, in memory of the dead. Dress respectfully, keep quiet, follow the posted photography rules, and don't treat the ruins as a backdrop for holiday selfies.
Do I need my passport, and can I use a foreign card?
Carry your passport — it's your ID for hotel check-in and for the real-name entry that most Chinese scenic areas, including the Jiangyou sites and the Beichuan memorial, now use. For payment, a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay covers most tickets, taxis and restaurants. Keep some cash, though, for the ¥2 city buses and for the local buses out to Beichuan and Jiangyou, where mobile-pay acceptance and signal can be patchier than in the city centre.