The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Wugongshan scenic-area gate ticket (武功山风景名胜区门票)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Real-name entry with your passport; on summer weekends, public holidays and the autumn camping-festival peak the mountain gets very busy, so reserve or arrive early
- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Entry runs on real-name registration, so you book or buy with your passport as ID, through the scenic area's own WeChat or Alipay mini-program or at the entrance ticket office. The interface is Chinese-first; the simplest path is to have your hotel reserve it with your passport details, or buy at the window with your passport. Crucially, pick your entrance first (see notes): the famous Jintan/Golden Top meadow is most directly reached from the Jiangxi-Wugongshan / Shexi side and the Luxi (Yangshimu) side, each with its own gate and its own cable car. Don't assume there is an English-speaking window.
officialBookingUrl set to null: the scenic area's public site (wugongshan.cn, the Pingxiang-side official portal) is an information site, not a clean ticketing domain we could verify, and actual sales run through the scenic-area mini-programs plus OTAs. Prices left null deliberately — we could not verify a current gate fare from an official source, and the figure varies by which entrance and which season you enter, so confirm it at booking. The key fact is that the gate ticket is only the first of several stacked fees: at least one cable car (often two, on different sections of the ridge) and a connecting shuttle are separate charges on top. Budget for the stack, not just the gate.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Wugongshan cable cars (武功山索道)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Sold at the cable-car stations or with your entry package; cars stop running in high wind, lightning, fog or ice, sometimes at short notice
- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Bought as separate add-ons to your gate ticket, at the cable-car station or through the same scenic-area channel; a passport is fine as ID. Be clear that the mountain has more than one cable-car system on different sides and sections of the ridge — the Jiangxi-Wugongshan/Shexi side and the Luxi/Yangshimu side each run their own — and a single cableway does not deliver you to the top. You typically ride a cable car partway, then still face a stiff stair-and-path climb to reach the Jintan/Golden Top meadow.
officialBookingUrl null and prices null on purpose — cable-car fares are charged per section, differ between the two sides of the mountain, and we could not verify current figures from an official source; expect each cable-car leg to cost a meaningful amount on top of the gate, and confirm at the station. The hard operational fact to plan around: these are exposed high-altitude ropeways, and they close in bad weather — high wind, lightning, dense fog or winter ice — sometimes with little warning. A closure can strand you with a long descent on foot, or trap you at the top, so check the day's weather and the cable-car status before you commit to going up, and never assume a ride down will be running when you need it.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Jintan / Golden Top alpine-meadow ridge (金顶高山草甸)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
- Resellers
- None official
No separate ticket — once you are inside on your gate ticket and have ridden the cable car up, the Golden Top (Jinding/Jintan, 1,918 m) and the rolling meadow ridge are reached on foot. Bring your passport for the gate, sun protection, layers and water; there are simple food and drink stalls on the ridge but prices climb with the altitude.
officialBookingUrl null — it has no ticket of its own, it's covered by your gate entry. This is the whole reason to come: above roughly 1,600 m the granite ridge is carpeted not in rock or forest but in some 100,000 mu (around 10,000 hectares) of high-altitude grassland — verified as among the highest and largest alpine meadows at this latitude — rolling away for kilometres with old Taoist stone altars near the summit. The classic experience is the ridge traverse: a multi-hour up-and-down walk along the grassy crest linking the meadow sections (Jinding, Guanyindang, Jiulongshan, Fayunjie). Be honest with yourself about the effort — even with a cable car doing part of the climb, the stairs and the ridge walk are a genuine half- to full-day of hiking at altitude, with real exposure to sun, wind and sudden cloud. It is not a stroll.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Meadow camping, sunrise & sea of clouds (草甸露营·日出·云海)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Tent pitches and tent-rental cluster around the Golden Top meadow; busiest and most worth booking ahead on summer weekends and during the autumn camping festival
- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Camping on the meadows is the signature overnight here, done either with your own gear or, far more commonly, by renting a pitched tent, sleeping mat and quilt from one of the tent camps on the ridge — pay on the spot, passport as ID where asked. You still need a gate ticket and the cable car to get up there. There is no formal foreigner barrier, but it is an entirely Chinese-language operation run informally by the tent camps, so arrange it through your hotel or on arrival rather than expecting an English booking system.
officialBookingUrl null — camping is run by informal tent operators on the ridge, not a single official channel we could verify. People camp on the Golden Top meadows specifically to catch sunrise and, on the right mornings, a sea of clouds pooling in the valleys below the ridge — the mountain's calling card. Manage the logistics honestly: it is high, exposed and cold at night even in summer, the weather turns fast, and 'sea of clouds' and clear sunrise are never guaranteed — many nights are just cloud and wind. If you don't carry a tent and warm sleeping gear, rent the full kit from the meadow tent camps rather than under-packing; bring a head-torch, rain shell and warm layers regardless. And remember the cable cars can shut in bad weather, so build slack into when you go up and come down.
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
- Wugongshan is a rural mountain straddling four counties in western Jiangxi, reached mainly through Pingxiang or Yichun, and it sees very few independent foreign travellers — so foreign registration is genuinely hit-or-miss. The cluster of guesthouses, farm-stays and hostels right at the mountain entrances (in Wugongshan town on the Yichun side, or out at Xinquan/Maytain on the Pingxiang side) is aimed almost entirely at domestic hikers, and many of the smaller family-run places are not set up to register a foreign passport with the police. The safer base is a mid-range or chain hotel down in Pingxiang city near Pingxiang North high-speed station, or in central Yichun, where registration of a foreign passport is more reliable; confirm the property takes foreigners before you pay. On the mountain itself you may have to negotiate. Carry your original passport — it is your ID for every gate ticket and cable-car reservation and for hotel check-in — and keep some cash on you, since mobile pay (a foreign card linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works in town and at the main ticket offices but signal and card acceptance get patchy up on the ridge and at the mountaintop tent camps.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
The serious eating is down at the mountain-foot villages and in the entrance towns, where farm-stays and small restaurants do hearty local Jiangxi mountain fare — free-range chicken, smoked and cured pork, mountain vegetables and bamboo shoots, cooked simply and generously. Up on the ridge it's a different story: food is limited to simple stalls and tent-camp kitchens, prices climb with the altitude, and choice is thin. Eat well before you go up and carry your own snacks and water for the meadow, rather than relying on what's for sale at the top.
You're in western Jiangxi, bordering Hunan, and the cooking leans genuinely hot — fresh and pickled chilli worked through the braises and stir-fries, not just sprinkled on. It's a defining character of the food here, not a single dish. If you don't take chilli well, say 'not spicy' (bù là) when you order; it's understood, though toning it down can flatten dishes that are worth eating as the locals make them. The cured and smoked meats of the region pair especially well with the heat.
The Anfu county side of the mountain is known for Anfu ham, a traditional Jiangxi cured ham, and more broadly this is cured- and smoked-meat country — pork preserved through the damp mountain winters and then stir-fried with chilli and local greens. Look for these regional specialities in the farm-stay restaurants around the mountain rather than ordering anything generic; they're the local thing to eat, hearty fuel for a day on the ridge.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Wugongshan is a long ridge straddling four counties, and it has several separate entrances on different sides — most usefully the Jiangxi-Wugongshan / Shexi side (reached via Wugongshan town, on the Yichun side) and the Luxi / Yangshimu side, plus the Pingxiang-managed Xinquan side. They are not interchangeable: each has its own gate, its own cable car, and a different walk to the Golden Top meadow, and getting between them by road is slow. Decide which side you're climbing first — most independent hikers aim for the Jintan/Golden Top meadow from the Shexi or Luxi entrances — then book transport, ticket and cable car for that side. Turning up at the wrong gate is a real way to waste a day.
The price you see quoted is just the gate. On top of it you'll usually pay for a cable car — and because the ridge is huge, there can be more than one cable-car section, on different parts of the mountain, each charged separately — plus a connecting shuttle bus between the entrance and the cableway. None of it is bundled into the headline figure, and a cable car does not even take you all the way to the top: you still climb stairs and ridge path afterwards. We've deliberately left the prices null here because we couldn't verify current official figures and they differ by entrance and season — but budget for the stack, not the gate alone, and reconfirm every leg when you book.
Wugongshan's high meadows make their own weather: clear and blazing one hour, socked in by cloud and wind the next, and genuinely cold at the top even in summer. That's not just a comfort issue. The cable cars are exposed high-altitude ropeways and they close in high wind, lightning, thick fog or winter ice, sometimes at short notice — which can strand you with a long descent on foot or trap you at the summit. Check the forecast and the cable-car status before you head up, carry a rain shell and warm layers, and never plan on the assumption that the ride down will be running when you want it.
Don't let the cable cars fool you into thinking this is easy. Even riding one up, reaching the Golden Top means a stiff stair climb, and the classic ridge traverse across the grassland is a multi-hour walk with constant up and down at altitude and full exposure to sun and wind — a proper half- to full-day hike, not a viewpoint stroll. The overnight camp on the meadows is the highlight for many, but it means a cold, windy, high night: either carry a tent and warm sleeping gear or rent the full kit from the ridge tent camps, and accept that the sunrise and sea of clouds you came for might be a wall of fog instead. Come fit, come layered, and come with a flexible plan.
Straight answers
Which entrance should a foreigner use for the famous grassland?
Wugongshan is a long ridge with several separate entrances on different sides, and they're not interchangeable — each has its own gate, cable car and walk to the top. Most independent hikers heading for the Jintan/Golden Top alpine meadow use the Jiangxi-Wugongshan / Shexi side (via Wugongshan town on the Yichun side) or the Luxi / Yangshimu side; there's also the Pingxiang-managed Xinquan side. Decide which side you're climbing before you book transport and tickets, because crossing between entrances by road is slow and turning up at the wrong gate can cost you a day.
What does it actually cost — is the cable car included?
No. The gate ticket is only the first fee. On top of it you normally pay for a cable car — and because the ridge is so large there can be more than one cable-car section, on different parts of the mountain, each charged separately — plus a connecting shuttle bus, and a cable car still doesn't take you all the way to the top. We've left exact prices unstated here because we couldn't verify current official figures and they vary by entrance and season, so reconfirm each leg when you book. Budget for the whole stack — gate, cable car(s), shuttle — not just the headline gate price.
Can I camp on the meadow, and what gear do I need?
Yes — camping on the Golden Top grassland for sunrise and the sea of clouds is the signature overnight here. Most people don't carry their own gear: they rent a pitched tent, mat and quilt from the informal tent camps on the ridge, paid on the spot, with a passport as ID where asked (you still need the gate ticket and cable car to get up). It's an entirely Chinese-language, informal operation, so arrange it through your hotel or on arrival. Whether you rent or bring your own, pack for a cold, windy, high night even in summer: warm layers, a rain shell and a head-torch at minimum, and accept the sunrise view isn't guaranteed.
How do I get to Wugongshan, and where should I stay?
Arrive via Pingxiang or Yichun. Pingxiang North is a high-speed station on the Hangzhou-Changsha line with services from across China, and there are minibuses from Pingxiang toward the mountain; Yichun (and Wugongshan town on that side) is the other main approach. For lodging, the safer bet for foreigners is a mid-range or chain hotel down in Pingxiang city near the high-speed station, or in central Yichun, where police registration of a foreign passport is more reliable than at the small guesthouses and farm-stays right at the mountain entrances. Confirm the property takes foreign passports before you pay, and carry your original passport for every ticket and for check-in.