Shijiazhuang, told straight.

Hebei's provincial capital is a base more than a sight: an honest, modern industrial city you sleep in to reach the genuinely old stuff around it. Zhengding's Song-dynasty Longxing Temple and free old town, the 1,400-year-old Zhaozhou Bridge out in Zhao County, and the cliff-clinging Hanging Palace at Cangyan Shan. How the reservations, passports and free tickets actually work.

Field-verified · last checked 2026-06-13

The booking wall verified

These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.

Longxing Temple (Longxing Si) & Zhengding old town

2026-06-13
Release
Buy the temple ticket at the gate or via the official scenic channel, real-name with your passport; much of the surrounding Zhengding old town is open and free
Price
¥50
Foreigners
Passport works

Entry is real-name and your passport is the ID. The temple itself is ticketed (roughly ¥50 full price, with discounts for students and over-60s, and free entry for visitors 70+ on ID) and you can normally just pay at the gate; no advance booking is needed in normal periods. Zhengding's walled old town around it — its gates, towers and several smaller temples and pagodas in the streets — is largely open to walk for free, so you can wander a lot of the town without a ticket and pay only for the headline sights.

officialBookingUrl is null — Longxing Temple sells at the gate and through OTAs, with no dedicated official ticketing website we could verify; book in person or have your hotel reserve through the scenic-area mini-program if a slot is required at busy times. This is the real reason to come to the Shijiazhuang area: a Sui-founded, Song-rebuilt monastery often called the finest temple complex outside the old capitals, with a 20-plus-metre bronze multi-armed Guanyin in the Pavilion of Great Mercy and the famous revolving sutra cabinet. Genuinely old timber and bronze, not a modern rebuild. Around ¥50 full; confirm the current price and any discounts at the gate. About 15 km north of central Shijiazhuang, an easy taxi, DiDi or bus.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Zhaozhou Bridge (Anji Bridge), Zhao County

2026-06-13
Release
Free entry but real-name reservation required (in place since late 2023); reserve through the official mini-program before you go, or scan the on-site QR to register on arrival
Price
Free (still needs booking)
Foreigners
Passport works
Resellers
None official

The scenic area is free to enter, but since late 2023 it runs real-name reservation: you book a free, timed entry through the official 中国赵州桥 mini-program in Alipay, or the 乐游冀 channel in WeChat, both real-name with passport details, then scan a QR at the gate. If you haven't pre-booked you can usually scan the on-site QR to register on the spot. The interface is Chinese-first, so have your hotel help if the app is a barrier — but there is no ticket price to pay for the bridge itself.

officialBookingUrl is null — booking runs through the official 中国赵州桥 (Alipay) / 乐游冀 (WeChat) mini-programs, not a clean public web page, and admission to the bridge is free. The bridge is the point: built around the year 600 under the Sui by the craftsman Li Chun, it is the world's oldest surviving open-spandrel stone segmental arch bridge — over 1,400 years old, with a 37-metre main span. It's a single famous structure plus a small park and on-site museums, so it's a half-day add-on, not a full day. Separate paid indoor museums (the old-bridge exhibition hall and a small science hall) exist on a cheap combined ticket sold on the spot or through OTAs; the bridge outdoors is free. About 40 km south of Shijiazhuang in Zhao County — reachable by intercity bus (around the 1101/215 routes from the city) or a taxi for the day.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Cangyan Shan (Mount Cangyan) & the Hanging Palace, Jingxing

2026-06-13
Release
Buy at the gate or via the official scenic channel, real-name with your passport; no advance booking needed in normal periods, busier on summer weekends and holidays
Price
¥70
Foreigners
Passport works

Real-name entry with your passport, normally bought at the gate. The headline full-area ticket is around ¥70 (with student/senior discounts, and free entry for visitors 70+ on ID); you may also see cheaper part-area or off-season rates quoted, so check exactly what a given price covers before you buy. No advance reservation is usually required, though it gets busy on summer weekends. The site is mostly stairs and mountain paths, so come in real shoes.

officialBookingUrl is null — Cangyan Shan sells at the gate and through OTAs, with no dedicated official ticketing website we could verify. The draw is the Hanging Palace (Qiaolou Dian) of Fuqing Temple, a Sui-era hall built onto a stone bridge spanning a gorge high on the cliff, reached by a long stone stairway — it's a striking, vertiginous piece of temple engineering and was used as a filming location for 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon'. Around ¥70 full; confirm the current price and exactly which areas it covers at the gate. It sits ~70 km southwest of Shijiazhuang near Jingxing, deep enough into the mountains that it's a dedicated day-trip — a hired car or DiDi for the day is the sane way to do it; public transport is slow and fiddly.

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
Shijiazhuang is a big, modern provincial capital with a major high-speed rail hub, so mid-range and chain hotels near Shijiazhuang Station and in the city centre register foreign passports routinely — this is an easier place to find a foreigner-ready bed than the smaller Hebei towns. Budget local guesthouses, and small inns out in Zhengding old town or near the county sights, can still be hit-or-miss, so confirm foreign registration when you book rather than at check-in. The real catch here is geography: the three things worth coming for are scattered across the prefecture (Zhengding just north of the city, Zhaozhou Bridge ~40 km south in Zhao County, Cangyan Shan ~70 km southwest in the mountains), so base yourself in the city and plan day-trips out. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers tickets, taxis and food; carry some cash for county buses and small vendors, and note the ticketing for several sights runs through Chinese-only WeChat/Alipay mini-programs.

Eat like a local

What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.

Donkey-meat flatbread (lürou huoshao)checked 2026-06-13

This is Hebei's signature cheap eat: braised donkey meat stuffed into a crisp, layered flatbread (huoshao). It's a genuine regional staple across the province, not a tourist invention, and it's filling and cheap. Look for a busy local shop rather than anything aimed at visitors; you'll usually pay a few yuan for one and they go well with a bowl of soup.

Zhengding's 'eight big bowls' and gangkuo shaobingchecked 2026-06-13

Around Zhengding you'll see the old banquet tradition of the 'eight big bowls' (bada wan) — a set of braised and steamed meat dishes served family-style, the kind of thing laid on for weddings and festivals. It's hearty northern home cooking rather than refined restaurant food. Pair it, or a simple meal, with gangkuo shaobing — a sesame flatbread baked against the wall of an urn-shaped oven, crisp and a local breakfast standby.

Solid northern staples, not a foreign-food scenechecked 2026-06-13

As a big provincial capital Shijiazhuang has more chains, malls and variety than the small Hebei towns, but the heart of the eating is still northern Chinese — dumplings, hand-pulled and knife-cut noodles, flatbreads, braises and lamb. There's little dedicated foreign-food scene outside the bigger hotels. Use a translation app, eat where locals queue, and you'll do well for very little money.

The honest layer

The part a tourism board will never print.

The city is a base, not the attraction — Zhengding is the real drawchecked 2026-06-13

Shijiazhuang itself is a young, sprawling provincial capital with an industrial backbone and not much old fabric to see; people sometimes call it one of China's least touristy big cities, and that's fair. Don't come expecting a historic centre. What earns the trip is just north of town: Zhengding, where Longxing Temple keeps genuinely old Song-dynasty timber halls and a giant bronze Guanyin, surrounded by an old town you can largely walk for free. Treat the city as the place you sleep and eat, and spend your daylight in Zhengding and the county sights.

The sights are spread out — plan around transport, not the mapchecked 2026-06-13

The three things worth coming for don't cluster. Zhengding is ~15 km north of the city, Zhaozhou Bridge is ~40 km south in Zhao County, and Cangyan Shan is ~70 km southwest in the mountains near Jingxing — roughly a triangle with the city in the middle. You won't string them in one day without a lot of driving. Pair Zhengding with a relaxed city evening, and give Zhaozhou Bridge or Cangyan Shan its own half- or full-day. A hired car or DiDi for the out-of-town days saves hours over slow county buses.

Zhaozhou Bridge is free now — but you still have to registerchecked 2026-06-13

Good news and a small catch. The famous 1,400-year-old bridge stopped charging admission and is now free to visit, but since late 2023 the scenic area uses real-name reservation: book a free timed slot in the official 中国赵州桥 (Alipay) or 乐游冀 (WeChat) mini-program with your passport, or scan the QR at the gate to register on arrival. There's no ticket to pay for the bridge itself; the only friction is the Chinese-only app. The paid bits are just the small indoor museums, which you can skip.

Cangyan Shan is a trip, and it's a climbchecked 2026-06-13

The cliff-hanging Hanging Palace is genuinely impressive and a real outing — but it's ~70 km out into the mountains and a long flight of stone stairs to reach the bridge-temple itself. That makes it a committed day-trip, not a quick stop, and not ideal if stairs are a problem. If you've got limited time in the Shijiazhuang area, Zhengding's Longxing Temple is the surer bet; do Cangyan Shan if you want the dramatic mountain temple and have a full day and a car to spare.

Straight answers

Why visit Shijiazhuang at all — isn't it just an industrial city?

The city itself is a modern provincial capital with little old fabric, so you don't come for the city — you come for what's around it. Just north is Zhengding, whose Longxing Temple keeps genuinely old Song-dynasty halls and a giant bronze Guanyin, with an old town you can largely walk for free. Out in the prefecture are the 1,400-year-old Zhaozhou Bridge and the cliff-hanging Hanging Palace at Cangyan Shan. Use the city as a comfortable, well-connected base and spend your time on those sights.

Is the Zhaozhou Bridge free, and do I need to book?

Yes — admission to the bridge is free, but the scenic area has used real-name reservation since late 2023. Book a free timed entry through the official 中国赵州桥 mini-program in Alipay or the 乐游冀 channel in WeChat, both real-name with your passport, then scan a QR at the gate; if you haven't pre-booked you can usually scan the on-site QR to register on arrival. The interface is Chinese-first, so have your hotel help if needed. Small indoor museums on site charge a little separately, but the bridge outdoors costs nothing.

How do I get to Cangyan Shan and Zhaozhou Bridge from the city?

Both are out in the prefecture and don't cluster with Zhengding. Zhaozhou Bridge is ~40 km south in Zhao County, reachable by intercity bus from Shijiazhuang or a taxi for the day. Cangyan Shan is ~70 km southwest near Jingxing, deep in the mountains — public transport is slow and fiddly, so a hired car or DiDi for the day is the sane way to do it. Plan each as its own half- or full-day rather than trying to combine them.

Do I need my passport, and will my foreign card work?

Yes — bring your passport. Like much of China the sights here use real-name entry, so you'll show your passport at the gate or enter its details when booking online (the Zhaozhou Bridge reservation needs them). For payments, a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay covers tickets, taxis and most meals; carry some cash for county buses out to Zhao County and Cangyan Shan and for small vendors, since the gaps between the city and the sights are where the apps are least reliable.

Still stuck? Ask the desk.

AI answers grounded in the facts on this site. Booking walls, hotels, payments.

or open the full desk →

These facts were field-verified on 2026-06-13. Rules change — if you saw different on the ground, help the next traveler.