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 Kongtong / Kongtongshan scenic area (崆峒山)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Buy at the gate or reserve through the scenic-area channel; real-name entry with your passport, so book ahead on weekends and in holiday peaks if you'd rather not queue
- Price
- ¥120
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Real-name entry applies, and a passport works as your ID. You can generally buy at the gate, or reserve in advance through the official Kongtongshan mini-program (Chinese-first) or on an OTA that lists foreigner-bookable tickets. The mountain is about 10 km west of Pingliang city; take a taxi or DiDi out to the gate. Inside, the gate ticket is one thing and the up-mountain transport (shuttle bus, plus a cable car) are separate add-ons — buy the transport as you go rather than expecting it bundled.
officialBookingUrl set to null: the obvious-looking domain kongtongshan.com is a parked for-sale page, not the scenic area, so we will not point you at it — ticketing runs through the scenic-area mini-program and the listed OTAs, and there is no clean official ticketing website we could verify. Gate admission has been quoted at about ¥120 in peak season (April-October) and ¥60 off-season (November-March); the in-park shuttle and the cable car are separate fees we could not pin to a current figure, so treat those as unverified and confirm at the gate. Kongtongshan is a 5A Taoist mountain of temple-topped peaks; you either climb the roughly 4 km of pilgrimage stairs from the Qianshan (front-mountain) side or ride the cable car / take a vehicle up the Houshan (back-mountain) side toward the middle peak.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Kongtong Mountain cable car (崆峒山索道)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
No separate reservation — buy the cable-car ticket on the spot once you're inside the scenic area, passport fine as ID. It's the way up the steep section for anyone who doesn't want the long stair climb; you can ride up and walk the ridge temples, or ride both ways.
officialBookingUrl null and prices null on purpose: the cable car is an on-site add-on bought inside the park, and we could not verify a current one-way or return fare, so we won't invent one — check the posted rate at the lower station. The point worth knowing is the choice it gives you. The classic ascent is the cliff-stair pilgrimage route from Qianshan, stopping at little shrines as you climb; the cable car (and a shuttle road up the Houshan back side) lets you skip most of the hard climbing and still reach the temple-topped middle peak. If you've a fixed half-day, ride up and walk down, or ride both ways and spend your time among the peak temples rather than on the steps.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Wangmu Palace, Jingchuan (泾川王母宫)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
A walk-up site in Jingchuan county, roughly an hour or more east of Pingliang city; reach it by intercity bus or, more simply, a hired car for the day. No advance booking needed in normal periods; carry your passport for entry as ID.
officialBookingUrl null and price null: we found no official ticketing site and no fare we could verify for the Wangmu Palace, so confirm the (small) admission, if any, at the gate. This is the ancestral shrine to Xiwangmu, the Queen Mother of the West — a major figure of Chinese myth and folk Taoism — and Jingchuan styles itself as her cult's home ground. The complex sits on a hillside above the Jing River where it meets a tributary, with halls, grottoes and stelae. It's a myth-and-heritage stop rather than a big landscape attraction, and it pairs naturally with the Dayun Temple relic museum in the same county on a single day-trip out from Pingliang.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Dayun Temple relic museum, Jingchuan (泾川大云寺)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
A walk-up site in Jingchuan county, reached the same way as the Wangmu Palace — intercity bus or a hired car from Pingliang city. Bring your passport as ID; no advance booking needed in normal periods.
officialBookingUrl null and price null: no official ticketing site or verified fare, so check the admission at the gate. Dayun Temple (Dayun Si) is famous as the place where a remarkable Tang-dynasty reliquary holding Buddha relics — a nested gold-and-silver casket inside a stone box — was unearthed, one of the notable Buddhist-relic finds in China. The modern site is a rebuilt temple-and-museum complex on the Jing River where those discoveries are presented. Manage expectations: much of what you see is a contemporary reconstruction built around the relic story, so come for the history and the museum pieces rather than for untouched antiquity. It's the natural companion to the Wangmu Palace, a few minutes apart in the same Jingchuan trip.
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
- Pingliang is a mid-sized eastern Gansu city that sees very few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is genuinely hit-or-miss and worth nailing down before you pay. Mid-range chains and business hotels in the city centre (Kongtong District) and near the railway station are your safer bet for registering a foreign passport with the police; cheaper local guesthouses, and the small lodges up by the Kongtong Mountain gate, often aren't set up for it. Confirm the property takes foreign passports when you book. Jingchuan county — where the Queen Mother of the West shrine and the Dayun Temple relic museum are — is a separate town an hour or more east, with thinner lodging again, so most travellers base in Pingliang city and day-trip out. Carry your original passport: it is your ID for every gate ticket and for hotel check-in. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works for most tickets, taxis and meals in the city, but keep some cash on you, since acceptance and signal thin out up on the mountain and on the back roads to Jingchuan.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
You're in Gansu, the heartland of Lanzhou-style beef hand-pulled noodles (niurou lamian) — clear beef broth, hand-stretched noodles, chilli oil, a scatter of coriander and white radish. A proper bowl at a busy local Muslim-run noodle shop is the cheap, reliable, everywhere breakfast-or-lunch of the region, and Pingliang does it well. Pick a packed place over anything dressed up for tourists; the standard here is high and the price is low.
This is northwestern China, and lamb is done seriously — hand-grabbed mutton (shsouzhua yangrou), mutton soups, and skewers off the grill in the evening. The meat is good and the cooking is hearty to suit the climate, especially welcome after a cold day on the mountain. Order the mutton where you see locals eating it rather than off a generic menu, and you'll eat like the place actually eats.
Beyond the regional staples, look for the local specialities: Pingliang is known for a few of its own dishes and noodle styles, and over in Jingchuan county you'll find local country cooking tied to the farming villages along the Jing River. Don't expect a foreign-food scene or many English menus — Pingliang sees few foreign visitors and the dining is solidly local Gansu. Use a translation app, point at what looks good in a busy place, and you'll eat well and cheaply.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Pingliang's headline sight is Mount Kongtong (Kongtongshan), revered as a 'first Taoist mountain' and wrapped in one of the oldest myths in Chinese culture: the legendary Yellow Emperor is said to have come here to seek wisdom from the sage Guangchengzi. Whatever you make of the legend, the mountain delivers as a 5A scenic area — forested cliffs topped with clusters of Taoist temples and pavilions, some of the temple traditions on the peaks going back centuries. It's about 10 km west of the city, an easy taxi out. If you only do one thing in Pingliang, do this; the city itself is a functional base rather than a sight.
There are two ways up Kongtongshan and they make for very different days. The traditional pilgrimage route starts on the Qianshan (front-mountain) side and climbs roughly 4 km of stone stairs, passing little shrines where pilgrims stop to pray — rewarding, but a real leg-burner. The easier path is the Houshan (back-mountain) side, where a vehicle road and a cable car carry you up toward the middle peak so you can spend your energy walking among the summit temples rather than on the steps. With a fixed half-day, the sane move for most visitors is to ride up and walk down, or ride both ways. Buy the shuttle and cable-car tickets on the spot; they're separate from the gate ticket, and we couldn't verify their current fares, so check the posted rates.
Two of the names you'll see attached to Pingliang — the Wangmu Palace (the ancestral shrine to Xiwangmu, the Queen Mother of the West) and Dayun Temple (where a famous Tang reliquary of Buddha relics was found) — are not in Pingliang city or up on Kongtong Mountain. They're in Jingchuan county, an hour or more east down the Jing River, and they sit close together. Don't try to staple them onto a Kongtongshan day. Treat Jingchuan as its own half- or full-day trip: the Wangmu Palace and Dayun Temple paired together, reached by intercity bus or, far more easily, a hired car.
Pingliang's attractions don't cluster. The mountain is 10 km west of town; Jingchuan's shrines are an hour-plus east; and within Kongtongshan the front and back routes are far apart. Public transport exists but is slow and fiddly for a visitor who doesn't read Chinese. The honest advice is to hire a car or use DiDi for the day — one driver for the Kongtongshan run, another (or the same, negotiated) for the Jingchuan loop. It costs more than the bus and saves you hours of waiting on the wrong side of a mountain.
Pingliang sits in eastern Gansu near the Ningxia border, and the practical gateways are Xi'an and Lanzhou. By the old Wikivoyage-listed train times it's roughly 7 hours from Xi'an and around 11 from Lanzhou on conventional services, with buses of about 5 hours from either city; check current high-speed and bus options, which have improved. Most travellers fold Pingliang into a Gansu or Shaanxi loop rather than flying in for it alone. Whichever way you come, plan to base in Pingliang city and day-trip out to the mountain and to Jingchuan.
Straight answers
What is Mount Kongtong and how do I get up it?
Kongtongshan is Pingliang's main sight: a 5A Taoist mountain of temple-topped forested peaks, revered as a 'first Taoist mountain' and tied to the legend that the Yellow Emperor sought wisdom here from the sage Guangchengzi. It's about 10 km west of the city, easiest reached by taxi or DiDi. Up top you choose your route: the traditional pilgrimage climb is roughly 4 km of stone stairs from the Qianshan front side, while the Houshan back side has a vehicle road and a cable car up toward the middle peak for anyone who'd rather not climb. The shuttle and cable car are separate from the gate ticket; buy them on the spot.
What does Kongtongshan cost, and can a foreigner buy a ticket?
Entry is real-name and a passport works as your ID. Gate admission has been quoted at around ¥120 in peak season (April-October) and ¥60 off-season (November-March), though you should reconfirm at the gate; the in-park shuttle and the cable car are extra fees we could not verify, so check the posted rates inside. You can usually buy at the gate, or reserve through the official Kongtongshan mini-program (Chinese-first) or an OTA that lists foreigner-bookable tickets. Note there's no clean official ticketing website we could confirm — the domain that looks official is actually a parked for-sale page — so don't trust a random 'Kongtong' web link for booking.
Where are the Wangmu Palace and Dayun Temple, and are they near the mountain?
No — they're both in Jingchuan county, an hour or more east of Pingliang city down the Jing River, not on or near Kongtong Mountain. The Wangmu Palace is the ancestral shrine to Xiwangmu, the Queen Mother of the West, and Dayun Temple is where a famous Tang-dynasty reliquary of Buddha relics was unearthed, now a rebuilt temple-and-museum complex. They sit close together, so do them as their own Jingchuan day-trip, paired, reached by intercity bus or — much more simply — a hired car from Pingliang.
How do I get to Pingliang, and do I need my passport?
Come via Xi'an or Lanzhou: roughly 7 hours by conventional train from Xi'an and about 11 from Lanzhou, with buses of around 5 hours from either (check current high-speed and bus options, which have improved). Most people fold Pingliang into a wider Gansu or Shaanxi trip. Carry your original passport — as across China, sights use real-name entry and it's your ID for every gate ticket and for hotel check-in, and you'll enter your passport details when reserving anything online. Confirm your hotel registers foreign passports before you pay, since Pingliang gets few foreign guests.