Wulong, told straight.

The karst show outside Chongqing: giant natural rock bridges over a green gorge that you've seen in 'Curse of the Golden Flower' and a Transformers film, a UNESCO World Natural Heritage cave, a deep ground-crack canyon, and a highland meadow at Fairy Mountain. How a foreigner buys the combined Three Bridges + Longshui Crack ticket with its compulsory shuttle and elevator, why Furong Cave and Fairy Mountain are separate trips, and how to get out here from Chongqing now that the high-speed line has cut the run to under an hour.

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.

Three Natural Bridges (Tiansheng Sanqiao, 天生三桥)

2026-06-13
Release
Real-name entry with your passport; book ahead through the official Wulong Karst channel, more so on weekends and in holiday peaks
Price
¥155
Foreigners
Passport works

The headline sight, and the one whose ticket is bundled. Buy real-name with your passport at the Fairy Mountain (Xiannüshan) Tourist Center, where you also pick up the compulsory shuttle bus, or through the official Wulong Karst (武隆喀斯特旅游区) WeChat/Alipay mini-program; OTAs such as Trip.com also list it for foreigners. The price already includes the shuttle bus and the Tianlong elevator that drops you into the gorge — there is no walk-in gate, you ride out from the visitor centre. Interface is Chinese-first, so have your hotel reserve it with your passport details if the app is a barrier.

officialBookingUrl set to null: we could not verify a single clean official ticketing domain — sales run through the Wulong Karst scenic-area mini-program (and the 4000235666 tourism hotline) plus the listed OTAs, so reconfirm the price at booking. Three colossal natural limestone bridges — named after dragons, the Tianlong (Sky Dragon), Qinglong (Azure Dragon) and Heilong (Black Dragon) — span a deep green karst gorge; it is part of the South China Karst / Wulong Karst UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site (inscribed 2007) and is the filming location famous from Zhang Yimou's 'Curse of the Golden Flower' and a 'Transformers' instalment. Open roughly 08:30-16:30. Ticket has run about ¥95 low season (Nov-Mar) and ¥155 peak (Apr-Oct), shuttle bus and Tianlong elevator included; a separate via-ferrata adventure route runs nearby. The descent is via elevator then a paved loop on the gorge floor — moderate walking, not a hard hike.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Longshui Gorge Ground Crack (Longshuixia Difeng, 龙水峡地缝)

2026-06-13
Price
¥105
Foreigners
Passport works

A separate ticket and a separate canyon, usually paired with the Three Bridges on the same day. Buy real-name with your passport at the Fairy Mountain Tourist Center or in the Wulong Karst mini-program; reach it by shuttle from the visitor centre or from the shuttle stop near the Three Bridges exit. The price includes the shuttle bus and the elevator down into the slot canyon.

officialBookingUrl null — same Wulong Karst mini-program and OTAs, no clean standalone official site we could verify; reconfirm the price. A narrow 'ground crack' (difeng) slot canyon: an elevator and stepped boardwalks take you down into a deep, damp fissure with waterfalls and overhanging karst walls, a tighter and wetter counterpoint to the broad gorge at the Three Bridges. Ticket has long been quoted around ¥105, including the shuttle bus and the elevator. It is its own gate, not covered by the Three Bridges ticket, but the two sit in the same Fairy Mountain karst cluster and most visitors do them back-to-back. Wear shoes that can handle wet steps.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Furong Cave (Furong Dong, 芙蓉洞)

2026-06-13
Price
¥150
Foreigners
Passport works

Buy real-name with your passport at the cave's own visitor centre or through the Wulong Karst mini-program / OTAs. Important: it is in a different part of the district (Jiangkou Town, down toward the Wu River) and there is no tourist shuttle bus to it from the Fairy Mountain side — you reach it by local bus to Jiangkou plus a walk, or far more simply by taxi/DiDi or a chartered car. Plan it as its own half-day, not a quick add-on to the Three Bridges.

officialBookingUrl null — sold through the Wulong Karst channel and OTAs, no clean official ticketing site we could verify; reconfirm the price. A spectacular, large show cave, also part of the South China Karst UNESCO World Natural Heritage Site — a long lit walkway past big chambers, calcite formations, cave pools and rare aragonite 'flowers'. Open about 08:30-16:30. The ticket has run around ¥150 and includes the cable car you take to reach the cave entrance. Because it is geographically separate from the Three Bridges / Longshui Crack cluster and has no direct shuttle, it is the sight most day-trippers skip for time — worth building a dedicated half-day around if caves are your thing.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Fairy Mountain National Forest Park (Xiannüshan, 仙女山国家森林公园)

2026-06-13
Price
¥50
Foreigners
Passport works

A walk-up scenic area rather than a timed-entry sight: buy the entry ticket with your passport at the gate or via the Wulong Karst mini-program. Reach it by shuttle bus from the Fairy Mountain Tourist Center or on the Fairy Mountain Star Tourist Bus (仙女山星旅游专线) that runs from Wulong South Railway Station up the mountain (first bus 07:00, last 20:00, full fare about ¥10). The in-park sightseeing train is a separate small add-on.

officialBookingUrl null — gate sale and OTAs only, no official ticketing site we could verify; reconfirm the price. A high, open grassland-and-forest plateau — China likes to bill it as a 'southern prairie' — with gentle meadow trails, dense woods, horse-riding, and in winter a snow-play and ski scene that pulls in Chongqing day-trippers escaping the city heat or chasing snow. Entry has run about ¥50, with the optional sightseeing train around ¥25 extra. This is the relaxed, scenic-drive half of Wulong: cooler air and long views rather than the dramatic karst chasms below. It anchors the resort strip where most of the better hotels and mountain restaurants are.

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
Wulong is a mountain district of Chongqing built around its karst tourism, not a big city, and it sees relatively few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is hit-or-miss. There are really two lodging zones: Wulong town (around the old railway station and the bus centre, down by the Wu River) and the cooler highland resort strip up at Fairy Mountain / Xiannüshan, where the four-star and resort hotels cluster near the visitor centre. Mid-range and chain or four-star properties in either zone generally take a foreign passport and can register you with the police; smaller guesthouses and farmstays, especially up on the mountain, may not be set up for it, so confirm 'can you register a foreign guest' before you pay. Carry your original passport — it's your ID for every scenic-area ticket and for hotel check-in. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers tickets, taxis and restaurants in town, but keep some cash on you, since acceptance and signal can thin out up on the mountain and out at Furong Cave, and the local tourist shuttle buses are cash-friendly.

Eat like a local

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

Wulong black goat is the local name dishchecked 2026-06-13

The thing Wulong is known for at the table is its black goat (武隆黑山羊) — a hardy local mountain breed, served as fresh goat/lamb hotpot, in clear stewed-goat soups, or braised. Down in Wulong town there are dedicated fresh-goat restaurants doing it as the house speciality, and vacuum-packed goat jerky and preserved slices are the standard take-home gift from the town markets. It's a genuine regional specality rather than a tourist-menu invention, and on a cool mountain evening a goat hotpot is exactly the right call.

This is Chongqing — the hotpot and the heat are the real thingchecked 2026-06-13

Wulong is a district of Chongqing, so the everyday food is Chongqing/Sichuan cooking at full strength: numbing-spicy málà hotpot, firewood chicken (柴火鸡), 'fatty-intestine fish' (肥肠鱼) combining offal and river fish in the local style, and home-style stir-fries that come properly hot and oily, not toned down. There are solid Chongqing-style hotpot places in Wulong town. If you don't take chilli well, say 'bù là' (not spicy) when you order — it's understood — but know the local default is seriously spicy, and the dishes worth coming for are built around that heat.

Up on Fairy Mountain, eat the mountain foodchecked 2026-06-13

The resort strip around Fairy Mountain (Ginkgo Avenue / Qise Tianjie) is lined with farmhouse-style restaurants leaning into what the highland does well: wild-mushroom 'mountain treasure' soups (山珍菌汤), barbecue, big-bone pots and farm vegetables, alongside more of the fatty-intestine-fish and firewood-chicken places. Prices up here run a notch higher than in town, as mountain-resort food usually does, but the mushroom soups in particular are a local highlight worth ordering. Dried bamboo shoots and high-mountain tea from the karst slopes make easy, packable souvenirs from the same shops.

The honest layer

The part a tourism board will never print.

One day buys the two karst chasms; the cave and the meadow are extra tripschecked 2026-06-13

Wulong's sights aren't one ticket or one place. The two showstoppers — the Three Natural Bridges and the Longshui Gorge Ground Crack — sit together in the Fairy Mountain karst cluster and are the natural pairing for a single big day, each with its own ticket but both reached by the same shuttle network. Furong Cave is in a different part of the district (down by Jiangkou) with its own ticket and, crucially, no tourist shuttle to it, so it's a separate half-day by taxi or local bus. Fairy Mountain itself — the grassland plateau — is yet another area and mood. Trying to do all four in one day from Chongqing means a frantic dawn-to-dark dash. Pick the bridges-plus-crack day as your core, and add the cave or the meadow only if you've got a second day or you base overnight in Wulong.

The Three Bridges ticket is a bundle — shuttle and elevator are baked inchecked 2026-06-13

You don't walk into the Three Natural Bridges from a roadside gate. You buy the ticket at the Fairy Mountain Tourist Center, ride a compulsory shuttle bus out to the rim, and take the Tianlong elevator down into the gorge — and all of that is already included in the ¥95-to-¥155 price (low season Nov-Mar, peak Apr-Oct). Longshui Crack works the same way: its roughly ¥105 ticket also bundles the shuttle and an elevator down into the slot canyon. So the headline number isn't hiding a stack of surprise add-ons the way some Chinese parks do — but it does mean you're committed to the shuttle system and can't just drive yourself to the trailhead. Reconfirm the current fares when you book, since published prices drift.

Yes, it's the film-location karst — and it lives up to the photoschecked 2026-06-13

The giant rock bridges arching over the green gorge are the real backdrop from Zhang Yimou's 'Curse of the Golden Flower' and a 'Transformers' film, and unlike a lot of 'as seen in' tourism this one delivers: the scale is genuinely enormous and the UNESCO World Natural Heritage listing (South China Karst, 2007) is earned. The flip side is that everyone knows it, so peak-season and holiday crowds on the shuttle and the gorge-floor loop are real. Go early, go on a weekday if you can, and accept that the elevator and the photo viewpoints will have queues at busy times. The walking down on the gorge floor is moderate and mostly paved — manageable for most, but it's stairs and slopes, not flat.

Getting here is easy now — the high-speed line changed the mathchecked 2026-06-13

Wulong used to be a 2-to-3-hour regular-train haul from central Chongqing into the old Wulong Railway Station. Since 2025 there's a new high-speed line: trains from Chongqing East to Wulong South Railway Station take just 40-50 minutes (an hour or so longer if you start from Chongqing North, West or the airport station). From Wulong South, the Fairy Mountain Star Tourist Bus runs up to the mountain and the karst cluster. There are also direct tourist coaches from central Chongqing (Chengjiaping bus station and around the Liberation Monument) straight to the Fairy Mountain Tourist Center, where you buy your scenic-area and shuttle tickets on arrival. The upshot: Wulong is now a comfortable day trip from Chongqing, though an overnight on the mountain lets you slow down and do the cave too.

Straight answers

Is it one ticket for everything in Wulong?

No. The Three Natural Bridges and the Longshui Gorge Ground Crack are two separate tickets in the same Fairy Mountain karst cluster, usually done together in one day. Furong Cave is a separate ticket in a different part of the district with no tourist shuttle to it, and Fairy Mountain National Forest Park (the grassland plateau) is its own area and ticket again. Plan the bridges-plus-crack as your core day, and add the cave or the meadow only with extra time or an overnight.

What does the Three Natural Bridges ticket include, and what does it cost?

It's a bundle: the price already includes the compulsory shuttle bus out from the Fairy Mountain Tourist Center and the Tianlong elevator down into the gorge — there's no roadside walk-in gate. It has run about ¥95 in low season (November-March) and ¥155 in peak season (April-October). The Longshui Crack ticket (around ¥105) similarly includes its shuttle and elevator, and Furong Cave (around ¥150) includes the cable car to the cave. Reconfirm all of these when you book, since published prices drift.

How do I get to Wulong from Chongqing, and can a foreigner buy the tickets?

Since 2025 the fastest way is the high-speed line from Chongqing East to Wulong South Railway Station, 40-50 minutes (longer from Chongqing North/West or the airport station); from Wulong South the Fairy Mountain Star Tourist Bus runs up to the mountain. There are also direct tourist coaches from central Chongqing to the Fairy Mountain Tourist Center, where you can buy scenic-area and shuttle tickets on arrival. Entry is real-name, so reserve with your passport, which works as ID — through the official Wulong Karst WeChat/Alipay mini-program (Chinese-first) or on OTAs like Trip.com that list foreigner-bookable tickets. Having your hotel book it with your passport details is the easy path.

Is the Three Bridges walk hard, and is Furong Cave worth the detour?

The Three Bridges is moderate: you ride the shuttle, drop in by elevator, and walk a paved loop on the gorge floor with stairs and slopes — fine for most reasonably mobile visitors, but not flat. The Longshui Crack is wetter and steeper underfoot, so wear grippy shoes. Furong Cave is a genuinely impressive UNESCO-listed show cave, but it's geographically separate with no direct shuttle, so it really only makes sense if caves interest you and you can give it its own half-day by taxi or local bus rather than squeezing it into a single packed day.

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