The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Mingyueshan scenic area through-ticket + cable car (明月山风景区·索道)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Real-name entry with your passport; reserve or buy ahead on weekends and in holiday peaks, when the cable car queues and slots fill
- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
The gate runs on real-name entry, so you book with your passport through the official scenic-area channel (its WeChat or Alipay mini-program) or buy on an OTA such as Trip.com/Klook, which list foreigner-bookable tickets. The cable car (索道) up to the high ridge is a separate fee from the gate admission, usually sold as a return or single leg, so buy them together rather than expecting one combined ticket. The interface is Chinese-first; the simplest path is to have your hotel reserve the entry plus cable car with your passport details. Don't assume an easy English window at the gate.
officialBookingUrl set to null and prices left null: we could not verify a single clean official ticketing domain or a current fare for the scenic area from the sources to hand, and sales run through the scenic-area company's mini-program plus the listed OTAs — reconfirm the gate price, the cable-car fare and whether they bundle when you book. What is solid: Mingyueshan (明月山, 'Bright Moon Mountain', named for a crescent-moon silhouette) is a national forest park of more than ten peaks all above 1,000 m, organised into several scenic zones. The cable car carries you most of the way up to the high ridge; the gate ticket and the cable car are two separate charges, and the hot springs down in Wentang are a third, wholly separate experience (see below). Budget the gate and the cable car together so the lift fare isn't a surprise at the station.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
The high ridge, glass walkway & waterfalls (云谷飞瀑·玻璃栈道)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
- Resellers
- None official
No separate gate ticket — the ridge-top boardwalks, the cliff-edge glass walkway and the waterfall valleys are reached on foot once you are up top on your scenic-area entry and cable car. A glass-walkway section, where it operates, sometimes carries a small extra charge and supplies shoe covers; pay it on the spot. Bring your passport for the gate and wear grippy shoes — the upper trails are stone steps and boardwalk that get slick in cloud.
officialBookingUrl null and prices null — this is the walking half of your mountain day, mostly covered by the entry and cable car, with any glass-walkway surcharge to confirm on site. From the top of the cable car, plank trails run along the ridge to viewpoints that are famous for sitting above a sea of cloud, with bamboo forest on the slopes and waterfall valleys (the 云谷飞瀑 / Yungu Falls area is the best known) lower down. Be realistic about the experience: this is a built-up, boardwalked national park with steps, railings and a glass-floored cliff walk, not a wilderness hike — the reward is the ridge-line scenery and the cloud sea on a clear morning, not solitude. In low cloud or rain you may see very little from the top, so check the forecast and go up early.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Wentang hot-spring town (温汤镇 富硒温泉)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Wentang is a town, not a single ticketed gate, so 'getting in' just means travelling there — local bus or taxi from Yichun, or it's the base village right under the mountain. The hot springs split two ways: paid resort/hotel spa pools you enter as a hotel guest or on a day ticket (passport fine as ID), and a long-standing public open-air foot-soaking channel in the town centre where locals dip their feet in the hot mineral water for little or nothing. For the resort pools, book through the hotel or an OTA; for the public foot baths, just turn up.
officialBookingUrl null and prices null — hot-spring pricing is per-resort and we could not verify current day-ticket fares, so treat any number you see as a quote to confirm at the venue. The substance: Wentang (温汤镇), at the foot of Mingyueshan, is what Yichun actually markets itself on — its spring water is selenium-rich (富硒) and runs warm year-round, and the town is built around it. The key honest point for travellers is that the hot springs are a separate paid experience from the mountain ticket, and that they are not only a luxury-resort thing: the town centre has a public hot-water channel where people soak their feet cheaply or free, alongside the higher-end resort and hotel spa pools. Decide whether you want the full resort soak or just the local foot-bath scene before you budget.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Bamboo sea & forest trails (竹海)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
- Resellers
- None official
No ticket of its own — the bamboo forest is part of the Mingyueshan scenic area, reached on foot from the lower and mid trails once you're inside on your entry ticket. Bring your passport for the gate; sturdy shoes and water are the only kit you need for the easier forest paths.
officialBookingUrl null — covered by your scenic-area entry, no separate ticket. Mingyueshan's lower slopes are wrapped in dense bamboo forest (竹海, 'bamboo sea'), and the shaded forest trails are a gentler, cooler counterpoint to the exposed upper ridge — a good option in summer heat or when the high cloud has socked in the peaks and there's nothing to see up top. It pairs naturally with the waterfall valleys on the way down. Treat it as part of the mountain visit rather than a destination you ticket separately.
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
- Mingyueshan sits in Yichun, a mid-sized western-Jiangxi prefecture city that sees few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is genuinely hit-or-miss. Two bases make sense and they behave differently. Wentang (温汤) hot-spring town, right at the foot of the mountain, is wall-to-wall hot-spring hotels and resorts aimed at domestic wellness tourists; the bigger branded resorts there generally register a foreign passport, but the cheaper family guesthouses often aren't set up to. Yichun city, about 15-30 km away near the high-speed railway station, has the more reliable mid-range and chain hotels for foreign registration. Either way, confirm the property takes foreign passports with the police before you pay, and carry your original passport — it is your ID for every gate ticket, the cable car and hotel check-in. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa/Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works for tickets, taxis and restaurants in town, but keep some cash, since acceptance and signal can get patchy up on the mountain and on local buses.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
You're in Jiangxi, which has a reputation for the spiciest cooking in China, hotter even than neighbouring Hunan. The chilli here — fresh and pickled — is woven through the braises and stir-fries, not sprinkled on top. It's a defining character of the food rather than one dish. If you don't take chilli well, say 'not spicy' (bù là) when you order; it's understood, though toning it right down can flatten the dishes that are worth coming for. Around Mingyueshan and Wentang the cooking is hearty mountain Jiangxi fare, and it will not be shy with the heat.
The local cooking leans on what the hills and forest provide: free-range chicken slow-braised in clay pot, bamboo shoots (fresh in season, and dried the rest of the year) cooked with pork or in soups, river fish, and mountain greens. The bamboo shoots in particular are a genuine local product of the bamboo seas on the slopes, not a tourist add-on. Look for these in the family restaurants of Wentang town rather than ordering anything generic, and expect prices inside the scenic area to run higher than down in town.
Down in Wentang's town centre, around the public hot-water channel, you'll find eggs and other bits cooked or kept warm in the mineral spring water — a small local ritual tied to the hot springs the town is built on. It's cheap, it's a snack rather than a meal, and it's the kind of genuinely local thing worth trying while you soak your feet. Pair it with a wander of the town's hot-spring street rather than treating it as a sit-down meal.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Yichun sells itself on hot springs, but Mingyueshan the mountain and the Wentang hot springs are different experiences in different places. The mountain is a national forest park you enter on a gate ticket, with a cable car up to a ridge of cloud-sea viewpoints, a glass walkway, waterfalls and bamboo forest. The hot springs are down in Wentang town at the foot of the mountain, paid separately at resorts and hotels — or, in the town centre, soaked cheaply or free at a public foot-bath channel. Don't assume one ticket covers both. Budget the gate, the cable car and a hot-spring soak as three distinct costs, and reconfirm each price when you book, because we couldn't verify current fares.
The peaks here are all above 1,000 m and the signature views are from the high ridge, which most visitors reach by cable car rather than grinding up on foot. The cable car is not included in the gate admission; it's billed on top, usually as a return or a single leg. Buy it together with your entry so the lift fare isn't a surprise at the station. If you'd rather walk, there are stepped trails, but they're a long, steep climb and most people ride up and walk the ridge and the descent.
Mingyueshan's calling card is a sea of cloud below the ridge-top boardwalks, and on a clear morning it's genuinely striking. But this is a wet, often misty mountain, and in low cloud or rain you can ride the cable car up and see almost nothing but white. The forecast matters more here than at most sights. Go up early before the afternoon haze builds, and if the top is socked in, the bamboo forest and waterfall valleys lower down still work — keep a flexible plan rather than pinning the whole day on the summit view.
Be clear-eyed about what Mingyueshan is: a developed, boardwalked national forest park with stone steps, railings, a glass-floored cliff walk and a cable car, busy with domestic tour groups on weekends and holidays. The scenery — ridges above the cloud, bamboo seas, waterfalls — is real and worth it, but you won't find solitude or rough trails. Come for the engineered viewpoints and the easy access to high country, treat the glass walkway as the novelty it is, and time your visit for a weekday if you can to dodge the crowds.
Straight answers
Are the hot springs included in the Mingyueshan mountain ticket?
No. Mingyueshan the mountain (the national forest park, with the cable car, ridge walkways, glass walk, waterfalls and bamboo forest) is one ticketed experience; the hot springs are a separate, paid experience down in Wentang town at the foot of the mountain, run by resorts and hotels. Wentang also has a public hot-water channel in the town centre where people soak their feet cheaply or free. Budget the mountain gate ticket, the cable car and a hot-spring soak as three separate costs, and reconfirm current prices when you book, since we couldn't verify them.
Can a foreigner book the tickets, and do I need my passport?
Yes. Entry is real-name, so you reserve with your passport, and a passport works as ID. Book through the official scenic-area WeChat or Alipay mini-program (Chinese-first) or on an OTA like Trip.com or Klook, which list foreigner-bookable tickets; reserve ahead on weekends and in holiday peaks. The cable car is a separate fee from the gate, so buy them together. The simplest path is to have your hotel book the entry plus cable car with your passport details, and carry your original passport for the gate, the cable car and hotel check-in.
How do I get to Mingyueshan and Wentang from Yichun?
Arrive via Yichun: Yichun railway station sits on the Beijing-Nanchang line and, since 2014, on the Shanghai-Changsha high-speed line, and Yichun Mingyueshan Airport has domestic flights from cities like Beijing, Shanghai, Wuhan and Nanchang. From the city it's roughly 15-30 km out to the mountain and to Wentang town at its foot; local buses run toward Wentang and the scenic area, or take a taxi or DiDi, which is the simplest if you're carrying bags. Many people base in Wentang to combine the mountain by day with a hot-spring soak in the evening — confirm your hotel registers foreign passports before you pay.
What's the mountain itself actually like to visit?
It's a developed national forest park, not a wilderness hike: more than ten peaks above 1,000 m, reached mainly by cable car, with stone-step trails, ridge-top boardwalks, a cliff-edge glass walkway, waterfall valleys and bamboo forest on the lower slopes. The signature view is a sea of cloud below the ridge on a clear morning, so check the forecast and go up early — in low cloud or rain you may see little from the top. It gets busy with domestic groups on weekends and holidays; a weekday visit is calmer. Allow most of a day for the mountain, then the hot springs separately.