The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Stone Forest main scenic area — Major & Minor Stone Forest (石林风景区·大小石林)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- The scenic area has been rolling out a real-name ticketing system (实名制票务系统), so reserve or buy with your passport and expect real-name entry; same-day is usually fine outside national holidays, but the trial system means rules can change — buy ahead in peak periods
- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Entry is real-name, so you buy with your passport. Foreigners are handled routinely at the gate — Kunming's own page notes the Stone Forest gates take passports as a matter of course. You can buy at the ticket office and visitors' centre on arrival, or in advance through the official Stone Forest channel (its website and WeChat/Alipay mini-program, plus the official e-commerce site mall.shilin.com.cn); OTAs such as Trip.com and Klook also list it for foreigners. The official interface is Chinese-first, so the simplest path if you want to lock in a date is to have your Kunming hotel reserve it with your passport details.
officialBookingUrl is chinastoneforest.com, which its own metadata states is the scenic area's sole official website (run by the Yunnan Stone Forest Tourism Group); ticketing also runs through the official mall.shilin.com.cn and a mini-program. Prices left null on purpose: Wikivoyage recorded ¥130 admission back in 2019 and Kunming's page quotes around ¥130, but we could not verify the current 2026 fare on the official site, so confirm it at booking rather than trusting the old number. Two things to budget separately on top of admission: the ticket office is a flat ~3 km (about a 20-minute) walk from the actual park entrance, and there is an optional electric buggy for roughly ¥25 round trip to cover it (reconfirm); the free buggies INSIDE the park are a separate, more haphazard thing. This is the core: the Major Stone Forest (大石林), a dense maze of grey limestone pillars and winding stepped paths where it is genuinely easy to lose the tour groups, plus the gentler Minor Stone Forest (小石林) that holds the Ashima rock. Budget a half-day minimum in the park, plus travel. (officialBookingUrl set to null: the official Stone Forest site (chinastoneforest.com) was unreachable on re-check — book via the Yunnan Stone Forest Tourism official WeChat/Alipay mini-program or at the gate.)
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Ashima Rock & Sani Yi culture (阿诗玛石峰·撒尼文化)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
- Resellers
- None official
No separate ticket — the Ashima rock stands in the Minor Stone Forest (小石林), reached on foot once you are inside on your main scenic-area ticket. Bring your passport for the gate; nothing extra to book.
officialBookingUrl null — it has no ticket of its own, it is covered by your main park admission. This is the cultural heart of the place and worth understanding before you go, because otherwise it is just one more rock. The Stone Forest is the homeland of the Sani, a branch of the Yi (彝族) people, and the single most photographed pillar in the Minor Stone Forest is said to be Ashima (阿诗玛) — the heroine of the Sani epic poem, a girl turned to stone, who in the legend still waits in the karst. Her story is the cultural brand of the whole park (the official site centres an 'Ashima culture' section on it), and you will see Sani women in bright traditional dress around the entrance; some will pose for paid photos, so agree a price first. If you can time your visit to the Yi Torch Festival (火把节), usually held around the sixth month of the lunar calendar (typically late summer), the area comes alive with bonfires, wrestling, dancing and bullfights — it is the big annual Sani event, not a daily show.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Naigu Stone Forest / Black Pine Rock (乃古石林·黑松岩)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Bought with your passport at this scenic area; expect real-name entry as at the main park, and reconfirm whether a combined or separate ticket applies
- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Real-name entry with your passport, as at the main park. It is administratively part of the Stone Forest but lies well outside the main scenic area — about 8-9 km north — so you get there by taxi, a chartered car or an organised tour rather than on foot. Confirm at booking whether it is sold on a combined ticket with the main forest or as its own admission.
officialBookingUrl null — sold through the same official Stone Forest channels and OTAs, with no clean standalone official ticketing domain we could verify; price left null and should be confirmed at booking. Naigu Stone Forest (乃古石林), also called Black Pine Rock (黑松岩), sits roughly 8-9 km north of the Major Stone Forest and the official site bills it as a 'model display site' of the South China Karst World Heritage. The point of coming here is the exact opposite of the main park: the pillars are darker, the landscape feels older and more austere, and the crowds are a fraction of the big forest's. If the main Stone Forest's tour-group crush wears on you, Naigu is the antidote — quieter walking, climbable viewing towers, and space to actually feel the scale of the karst.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Changhu Lake (长湖) & Dadieshui Waterfall (大叠水, currently closed)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Changhu (Long Lake) is real-name entry with your passport, reached by taxi or chartered car since it lies well outside the main park. Dadieshui Waterfall is a different matter — see the note: as of our check it is closed to visitors, so do not build a trip around it.
officialBookingUrl null — no standalone official ticketing site verified; prices null, confirm at booking. Two outlying sights people ask about. Changhu Lake (长湖) sits about 26 km from the main scenic area near Weize village at around 1,900 m, a slim mountain lake ringed by hills and Sani villages — a calm, rural counterpoint to the stone pillars, and a worthwhile add-on only if you have your own wheels for the day. Dadieshui Waterfall (大叠水, also called Feilong / 飞龙瀑), the area's big waterfall about 18 km southwest of Shilin town, is the trap: Wikivoyage flagged it temporarily closed back in 2019, and the official Stone Forest site still carries a standing notice that the Dadieshui scenic area has STOPPED operating to the public (关于大叠水景区停止对外经营的公告). Treat it as closed and verify before making any plan that depends on 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
- Almost nobody bases themselves in Shilin — the Stone Forest is overwhelmingly done as a day trip from Kunming, which already has its own page and a far deeper bed of foreigner-registering hotels. If you do want a sunrise or sunset in the park and choose to overnight, the lodging is in Shilin town and the cluster of hotels and guesthouses outside the park gate, aimed at domestic tour groups; many smaller places aren't set up to register a foreign passport with the police, so confirm the property takes foreign passports before you pay, and prefer a mid-range or chain property. Carry your original passport — it is your ID for the real-name park ticket and for any hotel check-in. Bring some cash: mobile pay (a foreign card linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works for the ticket and in town, but the local shuttle buses are awkward — Wikivoyage notes that the bus between Shilin West rail station and the scenic-area bus station takes exact cash or WeChat only and does NOT take Alipay, and the area's one bank and its ATM are unreliable for changing money. Keep small notes on you.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
The Stone Forest is not a dining destination from the inside. The stands within the park sell fruit, drinks and a few snacks — the cheap, refreshing cucumber-on-a-stick is a genuinely good shout in the heat — but that's about it, and prices climb the further you are from the gate. The park is dotted with stone tables clearly meant for picnics, so the local move is to carry water (two litres each) and something to eat, and save the real meal for Shilin town or back in Kunming. Don't count on changing money or a working ATM out here either.
This is Sani Yi country, and the food worth seeking out is theirs. Look for Yi-style roast and grilled meats and, in the right months, the wild mushrooms Yunnan is obsessed with — from roughly June to September the province eats and talks about little else, and a mushroom hotpot is the seasonal thing to order (respect the restaurant's boil-timer; it exists because some species need real cooking). Rice-flour noodles (mixian, 米线) are the everyday staple here as across Yunnan, served in broth or dry-tossed, cheap and reliable. In the Sani villages around the park you'll also find rustic home-style country cooking; it's local, hearty fare rather than a polished tourist menu, which is the point.
If you're coming from Kunming you'll already know the headline Yunnan dishes — crossing-the-bridge noodles, the mushroom season — and the broad strokes carry out to Shilin. But the Stone Forest area is a small county, not a food city, so set expectations accordingly: solid local Yunnan and Sani cooking, little in the way of Western food or English menus, and your best meals in busy local shops in Shilin town rather than anything at the park gate. Use a translation app, point at what looks good, and treat the eating as part of the day trip rather than its destination — the real spread is back in Kunming.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
The Stone Forest is one of the easiest big day trips in China to do independently, and doing it yourself is the whole game. A high-speed D-train from Kunming South (on metro line 1) reaches Shilin West in about 22 minutes for roughly ¥18; from there a local bus runs to the scenic-area bus terminal in under an hour (around ¥8), or Bus 99 runs ¥10, and the gate is a short walk on. Slower conventional trains from Kunming station take about two hours for ¥15-20, and direct long-distance buses from Kunming East run about ¥34. Against all of that, the bargain bus 'tours' sold in Kunming are the thing to avoid: they pad the day with long commission stops at jade, silver and tea 'factories', so your actual time among the pillars shrinks to fit the selling time. If a tour price looks cheaper than the train plus the ticket, the gap is the sales pressure you'll absorb. Take the train, book your own gate ticket, and time the last bus back — locally it leaves the scenic-area bus station around 18:00.
Be ready for friction the park does little to smooth. The ticket office and visitors' centre sit a flat ~3 km — about a 20-minute walk — from the actual entrance to the pillars, and the optional electric buggy that covers that gap (around ¥25 round trip when we last saw it) is separate from the free, somewhat random buggies inside the park. Several areas, including the museum and the Major Stone Forest, route you in one entrance and out another, and practical signage is thin and inconsistent. None of this ruins the visit, but it means a half-day minimum once you add the approach walk, and it means wearing real shoes, carrying water (two litres a head is the local advice) and bringing sun cover — at this altitude the sun is strong, and the hats sold at the gate are marked up.
The Major Stone Forest funnels tour groups along a short, photogenic core loop, and on a busy day that loop is a scrum. The fix is simple and the park's best-kept secret: step onto the narrow, stepped side paths winding between the pillars and the crowds evaporate within a couple of minutes. Keep climbing toward the small peak viewpoints — some are too tight for more than two or three people, which is exactly why the groups never reach them and why the karst views from up there are the ones worth the trip. If you get a little turned around in the maze, that's normal; just keep wandering until you hear people again. Early morning, before the Kunming buses arrive, is the other half of the answer.
Two honest steers on the outlying sights. If you have half a day and a car, the Naigu Stone Forest (Black Pine Rock) about 8-9 km north is darker, older-feeling and far emptier than the main park — the better walk if solitude matters more than the single famous skyline. Changhu Lake, 26 km out, is a pretty rural lake but a soft add-on, not a headline. And manage expectations on Dadieshui (Feilong) Waterfall: it reads as the dramatic option, but it has been flagged closed since 2019 and the official scenic-area site still carries a standing notice that it has stopped operating to the public. Don't let a guide or an old blog sell you a trip built around a waterfall you can't currently enter — verify it's reopened first.
Straight answers
How do I get to the Stone Forest from Kunming, and should I take a tour?
Go independently by rail. A high-speed D-train from Kunming South (metro line 1) reaches Shilin West in about 22 minutes for roughly ¥18, then a local bus covers the last stretch to the scenic-area bus terminal in under an hour (around ¥8, or Bus 99 for ¥10), with the gate a short walk on. Slower trains from Kunming station take about two hours (¥15-20) and direct buses from Kunming East run about ¥34. Skip the cheap bus 'tours' sold in Kunming: they build in long commission stops at jade, silver and tea 'factories' that eat your sightseeing time. Book your own gate ticket and check the last bus back, which leaves the scenic-area station around 18:00.
Do I need to book the Stone Forest ticket in advance, and can a foreigner buy it?
Entry is real-name and a passport works as ID; foreigners are handled routinely at the gate. The scenic area has been rolling out a real-name ticketing system, so buy with your passport — at the ticket office on arrival, through the official Stone Forest website and its WeChat/Alipay mini-program or official mall (mall.shilin.com.cn), or on OTAs like Trip.com and Klook, which list it for foreigners. Same-day is usually fine outside national holidays; buy ahead in peak periods. We've left the price unverified here on purpose — the long-quoted figure is around ¥130, but confirm the current fare at booking.
What's actually inside, and what's the Ashima story?
The core is the Major Stone Forest (大石林), a maze of grey limestone pillars formed by erosion and listed as a UNESCO World Natural Heritage site (part of the South China Karst, inscribed 2007), plus the gentler Minor Stone Forest (小石林). In the Minor Forest stands the Ashima rock, named for the heroine of the Sani Yi epic — a girl turned to stone — whose legend is the cultural brand of the whole park. You'll see Sani women in traditional dress near the entrance; agree a price before any paid photo. For fewer crowds, head 8-9 km north to the quieter Naigu Stone Forest (Black Pine Rock).
Can I do the Stone Forest as a day trip, or should I stay overnight?
A day trip from Kunming is the standard and the easy choice — the rail link is fast and Kunming has the deep bed of foreigner-registering hotels. Budget a half-day in the park itself, plus the ~3 km walk (or ~¥25 buggy) from the ticket office to the entrance, plus travel each way. Overnighting in Shilin town only makes sense if you specifically want early-morning light before the tour buses arrive; if you do, confirm your hotel registers foreign passports with the police, since many small local places aren't set up for it. Carry your passport for the real-name ticket, and keep some cash — the rail-station shuttle bus is noted as taking exact cash or WeChat only, not Alipay.