The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Sanqingshan scenic area entry (三清山风景区)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Real-name reservation with your passport; book ahead through the official scenic-area channel, more so on weekends and in the May rhododendron season
- Price
- ¥150
- Foreigners
- Passport works
The gate runs on real-name entry, so you reserve with your passport through the official Sanqingshan platform (its WeChat/Alipay mini-program) or buy on Trip.com/Klook, which list foreigner-bookable tickets. The interface is Chinese-first, so the simplest path is to have your hotel reserve the entry plus the ropeway for you with your passport details. Don't assume there's an easy English window at the gate.
officialBookingUrl set to null: I could not confirm a single clean official ticketing domain for the scenic area — sales run through the scenic-area company's mini-program plus the OTAs. Park admission runs roughly ¥150 for most of the year and around ¥130 in January, with discounts for children, students and seniors. The ropeway is a separate ticket (see below). Two main ropeway routes serve the mountain — the south and the east — and which one you use shapes your whole day, so decide your entrance before you book.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
The ropeway and the cliffside plank walkways (西海岸·阳光海岸)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥70
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Buy the ropeway with your scenic-area entry through the official mini-program or an OTA; a passport is fine as ID. The cable car is a separate fare from the gate ticket, priced one-way up and one-way down, so price both legs unless you plan to walk one direction.
officialBookingUrl null — ropeway is sold through the same scenic-area channel and OTAs, no clean standalone official site I could verify. Pricing is per leg: roughly ¥70 to ride up and ¥55 to ride down, so a round trip is about ¥125 (confirm the current split when booking — it moves by season). The ropeway lifts you most of the way up; the actual experience is then the loops of broad concrete trail up top, much of it bolted to the side of the cliff — the West Coast and Sunshine Coast plank walkways. This is the main reason to come, and it's a long walking day, not a quick lap.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Giant Python & Goddess pinnacles (巨蟒出山·司春女神)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
- Resellers
- None official
No separate ticket — these are viewpoints reached on foot along the cliff trails once you're inside on your scenic-area entry. Just bring your passport for the gate.
officialBookingUrl null — no ticket of its own, it's covered by your park entry. The signature rocks are clustered in the southern half of the mountaintop: the famous stone pillar that looks like a giant python rearing out of the mountain (巨蟒出山), the 'Goddess' pinnacle (司春女神), and the cluster of strangely-shaped granite around the Longevity Garden, where you can hike over and around the rocks. Photographers chase these at sunrise from points like the Jade Terrace (玉清台). The Taoist temple Sanqinggong (三清宫), a place of worship for over 1,500 years, sits toward the north end of the mountaintop with carved gates and shrines along the path up to it.
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
- Sanqingshan is rural Jiangxi and sees few foreign visitors, so foreign registration is genuinely hit-or-miss. The little hotel villages at the foot of the south and east ropeways, and the pricey hotels up on the mountaintop, are aimed at domestic tourists and many small properties aren't set up to register a foreign passport with the police. The safer base is a mid-range or chain hotel in Yushan town (near the high-speed station) or in Shangrao city, where registration is more reliable; confirm the property takes foreign passports before you pay. Carry your original passport — it's your ID for the gate and for check-in — and keep some cash, since mobile pay works in town but signal and card acceptance get patchy on the mountain.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
Food on the mountain is available but pricey — the major hotels have restaurants, and away from them it's small huts selling instant noodles, snacks and fried chicken at altitude markup, since everything is hauled up. Eat a proper meal down in the hotel village or in Yushan town before you go up, and carry your own water and snacks for the trail rather than paying mountaintop prices.
This is Jiangxi, and the local food leans genuinely spicy — fresh chilli and pickled-chilli heat, not just numbing — alongside hearty mountain fare. Look for dishes built on local bamboo shoots (fresh in season, dried the rest of the year) and freshwater fish, cooked plainer and hotter than the sweeter eastern-China style. If you don't take chilli well, say so when you order; 'not spicy' is understood, but the default here is hot.
Around the spring tomb-sweeping season you'll see qingmingguo (清明粿) — soft green dumplings of glutinous rice flour tinted and flavoured with mugwort or similar wild greens, stuffed sweet or savoury. It's a regional seasonal snack rather than a year-round restaurant dish, so grab one from a market stall or village shop if you're there in spring.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Your park admission (about ¥150 most of the year, ¥130 in January) does not include the cable car. The ropeway is a separate fare, priced per leg — roughly ¥70 up and ¥55 down, so call it about ¥125 round trip. Book both with your passport through the official mini-program or an OTA, and decide upfront whether you're riding both ways or walking one direction down the trail under the south ropeway. Budget the two tickets together so the second one isn't a surprise at the base station.
People picture a quick photo of the famous rocks and underestimate the mountain. The real thing is hours of broad concrete trail looping around the top, long stretches of it bolted to the cliff face — the West Coast and Sunshine Coast plank walks. It's the best part, but it's a committing walking day. Start early off the first ropeway, carry water, and if the stairs beat you there are sedan-chair carriers for hire. Don't plan it as a half-day stop tacked onto something else.
Sanqingshan's whole payoff — the pinnacles rising out of a sea of cloud — depends on the weather cooperating, and the high mountain is socked in a lot of the time. A clear or half-clear morning is spectacular; a grey, fogged-in day is a wet walk past shapes you can half-see. If your schedule has any give, watch the forecast and pick your day, or sleep on the mountaintop (hotels and even tent rentals exist up top) to catch the sunrise window from spots like the Jade Terrace. Bring a layer: the top is colder than the base and the weather flips fast.
There's no station at the gate. The usual route is the high-speed rail to Yushan South (or the regular Yushan Station), then a bus or taxi to the Yushan bus terminal, then a roughly ¥17 local bus out to the hotel villages at the south or east entrance. It's about 50 km northeast of Shangrao. Sort out which entrance — south or east ropeway — before you set off, because they're on different sides of the mountain and the buses go to different bases.
Straight answers
Do I need to book Sanqingshan tickets in advance, and can a foreigner do it?
Yes — entry is real-name, so you reserve with your passport. A passport works as ID. Book through the official Sanqingshan mini-program (Chinese-first) or on Trip.com/Klook, which list foreigner-bookable tickets, and reserve ahead on weekends and in the May rhododendron season. The simplest path is to have your hotel book the gate plus the ropeway for you with your passport details.
Is the cable car included in the entrance ticket?
No. Park admission (roughly ¥150 most of the year, about ¥130 in January) is separate from the ropeway. The cable car is priced per leg — around ¥70 up and ¥55 down, so about ¥125 round trip — and there are two routes, a south and an east ropeway, serving different sides of the mountain. Pick your entrance and buy both tickets together; confirm the current ropeway prices when you book, since they shift by season.
How do I actually get to Mount Sanqing?
Take the high-speed train to Yushan South (or the regular Yushan Station), then a bus or taxi to the Yushan bus terminal, then a local bus — roughly ¥17 — out to the hotel villages at the south or east entrance. It's about 50 km northeast of Shangrao. Decide which entrance you want before you leave, because the south and east bases are on opposite sides of the mountain.
Should I sleep on the mountain or do it as a day trip?
If the cloud sea and sunrise matter to you, stay overnight on top — there are hotels near the top of the south and east ropeways, and some places even rent tents and bedding (around ¥120–150 a night). A day trip works too, but the high mountain is often fogged in, so an overnight gives you two shots at clear weather and the early-morning light from viewpoints like the Jade Terrace. Either way, the on-mountain hotels are expensive and may not register foreign passports, so confirm before you rely on one.