The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
First Pass Under Heaven (Tianxia Diyi Guan), Shanhaiguan
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Buy at the gate or via the official channel, real-name with your passport; the area runs a day programme and an evening light show, so check current hours before you go
- Price
- ¥50
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Entry is real-name, and your passport is the ID. You can pay at the gate or book through the official scenic-area channel. The 'First Pass' on its own is roughly ¥50 (about ¥25 half-price), but most people take the two-day Shanhaiguan combined ticket (around ¥140 full / ¥70 discount) that bundles this gate-tower with Old Dragon's Head, the bell-and-drum tower, two more gate towers, a courtyard mansion and the old-town sightseeing bus — worth it if you're doing the Wall-meets-sea pair.
officialBookingUrl points at the official Shanhaiguan area ticket-policy page run by the Shanhaiguan district tourism bureau (shgjq.com); the actual online booking portal it links to is Chinese-first, so paying at the gate with your passport is the simplest path for a foreigner. This is the famous gate-tower carrying the 'Tianxia Diyi Guan / 天下第一关' plaque on the inland end of the Wall — restored and busy, but the genuine eastern anchor of the Ming Great Wall. Prices are the published area rates (First Pass alone ~¥50/25; a First Pass + bell-tower + Chuangguandong combo ~¥60/30); confirm the current split when you buy, and note the two-day combined ticket is usually the better value.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Old Dragon's Head (Lao Long Tou)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥60
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Real-name entry with your passport, at the gate or via the official channel. On its own it's around ¥60 (about ¥30 half-price), or it's covered by the two-day Shanhaiguan combined ticket (~¥140/70) along with the First Pass. It's about 5 km south of the old town — a short taxi or DiDi from the First Pass; don't believe drivers who tell you it needs an expensive chartered car.
This is the real reason to come — the point where the Ming Great Wall runs down to the Bohai Sea and the rampart ends in the water, with the Chenghai Tower and the rebuilt Haishen (Sea God) temple. Like much of Shanhaiguan it was reconstructed last century after the original was wrecked, but the setting — masonry wall meeting open sea — is genuinely striking and hard to find anywhere else on the Wall. Published rate is roughly ¥60/30 standalone; the two-day combined ticket usually makes more sense if you're also doing the First Pass.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Beidaihe beaches (Beidaihe)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- Free (still needs booking)
- Foreigners
- Passport works
The main public stretches of beach are free to walk onto — no ticket, no booking, no passport needed just to reach the sand. A few fenced, managed sections and specific scenic parks (and seasonal activities) do charge, but the basic beach experience is open and free. It's a separate district about 25–35 km southwest of Shanhaiguan, reached by local train, bus or taxi.
officialBookingUrl is null — the open public beaches don't sell a ticket. Beidaihe is China's classic old-school summer seaside resort: gentle Bohai-Sea swimming beaches, sanatoriums and a strong domestic-holiday feel, busiest July–August and fairly sleepy out of season. Treat it as a relaxed beach add-on to the Great Wall sites, not a tropical destination — the water is cool and the scene is firmly Chinese domestic rather than international. Any charged sub-attractions (managed beach zones, parks, boat trips) are paid separately on the spot; the sand itself is free.
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
- Qinhuangdao is a Hebei coastal prefecture stitched together from three different bits — the Shanhaiguan old town in the northeast, the modern Haigang port district in the middle, and the Beidaihe beach resort to the southwest, each a real distance apart. Mid-range and chain hotels in Haigang and the bigger Beidaihe resorts register foreign passports routinely; small family guesthouses (especially the cheap seasonal ones near the Beidaihe beaches) often aren't set up for foreigners, so confirm foreign registration when you book rather than at check-in. In peak summer (July–August) Beidaihe fills up with domestic holidaymakers and prices jump — book ahead. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers tickets, taxis and food; carry some cash for small beach vendors and the gaps between the three districts.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
Qinhuangdao is a working port, and the eating leans on Bohai-Sea seafood — clams, sea snails, small crabs, flatfish, prawns, often steamed or stir-fried without much fuss. Pick a busy local seafood place over the obvious tourist spots inside the Shanhaiguan old town, where you'll pay more for the same plate. Ask the price by weight before you order so the bill doesn't surprise you.
In summer, Beidaihe runs on holiday-resort food: grilled skewers, seafood barbecue, cold beer and ice on the seafront, plus the usual northern-Chinese staples. It's cheerful and cheap if you eat where the domestic holidaymakers do rather than at the most touristed beachfront stalls. Out of season a lot of it shuts, so don't count on the beach-food scene if you visit off-peak.
Away from the seafood, this is solid northern Hebei eating — dumplings, hand-pulled and knife-cut noodles, flatbreads and braises — cheap and everywhere across the Haigang district and around the stations. There isn't much of a foreign-food scene outside the bigger hotels, so use a translation app, eat at busy local places, and you'll do well for very little money.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
What makes Qinhuangdao worth the trip is geography you can't get elsewhere: the Great Wall running down a hillside and ending in the Bohai Sea at Old Dragon's Head. That's the photo and the moment. The Shanhaiguan walled old town and the 'First Pass' gate-tower are the inland bookend and worth a look, but if your time is short, the sea end is the priority.
Like Datong and a lot of Chinese 'ancient cities', the walled Shanhaiguan town has been heavily reconstructed — restored ramparts, a tidied gate-tower, and the now-standard old-street shopping and snack lanes. The history is real (this was the strategic pass guarding the route between north China and Manchuria), but you're walking a polished tourist set, not an untouched town. Come for the Wall and the sea, enjoy the old town as a stroll, and don't expect raw authenticity.
The First Pass gate-tower and Old Dragon's Head are about 5 km apart and both sit under the same two-day Shanhaiguan combined ticket (around ¥140 full / ¥70 discount), which also throws in the bell-tower, a couple of other gate towers, a mansion and the old-town bus. Unless you only want one site, the combo beats buying singles. A short taxi or DiDi links the two — ignore drivers pushing pricey full-day charters between them.
Beidaihe is one of China's oldest beach resorts, but it's built around the Chinese summer holiday — packed and lively in July and August, cool-watered and half-asleep the rest of the year. The beaches are pleasant and a lot of the public sand is free, but this is a Bohai-Sea domestic getaway, not a tropical coast. If you come outside summer, plan around the Wall sites and treat the beach as a bonus rather than the reason.
Straight answers
What does the Shanhaiguan ticket cover, and should I buy the combo?
There's a two-day combined ticket (around ¥140 full / ¥70 discount) that bundles the 'First Pass Under Heaven' gate-tower, Old Dragon's Head, the bell-and-drum tower, two more gate towers, a courtyard mansion and the old-town sightseeing bus. The First Pass on its own is roughly ¥50/25 and Old Dragon's Head about ¥60/30. If you're doing both of the headline sites — and the Wall-meets-sea is the main reason to come — the combo is the better value. Buy real-name with your passport at the gate or the official scenic-area channel.
What's the actual highlight — the gate-tower or Old Dragon's Head?
Old Dragon's Head, where the Great Wall runs down to the Bohai Sea and ends in the water, is the unique sight and the one most worth your time. The 'First Pass' gate-tower is the historic inland anchor of the Wall and worth a look, but it sits inside a heavily rebuilt old town. With the combined ticket and a short taxi between them you can do both in a half-day; if you only have time for one, choose the sea end.
Is Beidaihe worth visiting and do I need a ticket?
Beidaihe is China's classic old-school summer beach resort, about 25–35 km southwest of Shanhaiguan, and the main public beaches are free to walk onto with no ticket or booking. It's at its best in July and August, when it's busy with domestic holidaymakers, and fairly quiet the rest of the year with cool water. Treat it as a relaxed add-on to the Great Wall sites rather than a tropical destination; some managed beach zones and parks charge separately on the spot.
Do I need my passport, and will my foreign card work?
Yes — bring your passport. Like much of China the Shanhaiguan sites use real-name entry, so you'll show your passport at the gate or enter its details when booking online. For payments, a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay covers tickets, taxis and most meals; carry some cash for small beach vendors, the local trains and buses between Shanhaiguan, Haigang and Beidaihe, and anywhere the apps don't reach.