Xiangxi & Jishou, told straight.

The Tujia-and-Miao prefecture of northwest Hunan beyond Fenghuang: the cliff-perched waterfall town of Furong (the 'Hibiscus Town' of the film), the record-breaking Aizhai Bridge and its canyon skywalk, and the karst-peak Miao valley of Dehang. Why the sights are scattered an hour or more apart, why you really want a car, and how a foreign traveller books and gets around from a base in Jishou.

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.

Furong Town / Wangcun waterfall town (芙蓉镇·王村)

2026-06-13
Price
Foreigners
Passport works

Entry is real-name, so you buy with your passport — at the ticket office on arrival or through the scenic area's own WeChat or Alipay mini-program, which is Chinese-first. OTA platforms such as Trip.com also list it. There is no clean English booking window, so the simplest path is to have your Jishou hotel reserve it for you with your passport details, or just buy at the gate, which normally works in non-peak periods.

officialBookingUrl set to null: we could not verify a single clean official ticketing domain for the town, so book at the office or the official mini-program and reconfirm the current fare there — we are not quoting a price we could not confirm. Furong Town, historically the river port of Wangcun, is an ancient Tujia town built in tiers down a cliff, with a thundering multi-stage waterfall running straight through the middle of it and old stilted houses cantilevered over the drop. It was the setting and namesake of Xie Jin's 1986 film 'Hibiscus Town' (芙蓉镇), which is why it was renamed. The big draw is the view back at the town from across the falls, best in the wet season (roughly late spring through summer) when the water is full — in a dry spell the waterfall can be thin. Note the geography: Furong sits in Yongshun county, well north of Jishou and over an hour away by road, so most people fold it into a trip that also takes in Zhangjiajie rather than treating it as a quick Jishou day-trip.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Aizhai Bridge, canyon & skywalk (矮寨大桥·矮寨奇观)

2026-06-13
Price
¥100
Foreigners
Passport works

Real-name entry with your passport; buy at the scenic-area ticket office or via its mini-program, with OTAs as a fallback. The bridge itself is a live expressway — you cannot walk across it on foot — so what you buy is access to the 'Aizhai Wonder' (矮寨奇观) scenic area, with its sightseeing shuttle and lift up to the canyon-rim viewing platforms beneath the span, and, separately, the glass skywalk that runs out under and along the cliffs. Confirm at the counter which combination of shuttle, lift and skywalk your ticket covers.

officialBookingUrl null — no clean official ticketing site we could verify; book at the office or official mini-program and reconfirm. The Aizhai Bridge is a single-span steel-truss suspension bridge carrying the Changde–Jishou expressway over the Dehang canyon, with a deck roughly 330 m above the valley floor and a main span of about 1,176 m; it opened to traffic at the end of March 2012 and was, at the time, among the highest and longest mountain suspension bridges in the world. You watch it from below and from the canyon-rim platforms, reached by the scenic-area shuttle bus and a sightseeing elevator — entry to the viewing area has long run around ¥100, but the glass skywalk is typically a separate add-on, so budget for both and reconfirm the split when you book. Aizhai is between Jishou and Huayuan, and pairs naturally with Dehang at the foot of the same canyon.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Dehang Miao Village (德夯苗寨)

2026-06-13
Price
Foreigners
Passport works

Real-name entry with your passport, bought at the village gate or through the scenic-area mini-program; OTAs list it too. It is reachable by local bus from Jishou's North bus station as well as by car. No special foreigner procedure beyond carrying your passport for the gate.

officialBookingUrl null and price left null — we could not verify a current official fare or a clean official ticketing domain, so confirm both at the gate or the official mini-program. Dehang (德夯, a Miao phrase meaning roughly 'beautiful canyon') is a Miao-minority valley at the foot of the Aizhai canyon, ringed by sheer karst peaks and threaded with streams and waterfalls — the tall Liusha ('flowing sand') waterfall is the signature sight, though like the Furong falls it is at its best after rain and can run thin in a dry season. The village stages Miao song, drumming and folk-custom performances aimed squarely at visitors; treat them as a show rather than an untouched ritual. It is one of the two attractions (with Furong) that draw most travellers out of Jishou, and sits close enough to Aizhai to combine the two in a day with a car.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Qianzhou Ancient Town (乾州古城), Jishou

2026-06-13
Price
¥20
Foreigners
Passport works

A walk-up gate ticket with your passport; the surrounding new-district streets are free, and only the walled old-town core is ticketed. No advance booking needed in normal periods.

officialBookingUrl null — gate sale and OTAs only, no official ticketing site we could verify. Qianzhou is a riverside Miao-frontier old town inside Jishou itself, the easiest sight to reach if you have a few hours in the city between trips out to the canyons — a city bus or short taxi gets you there. It is a restored ancient town in the now-standard Chinese style rather than untouched antiquity, but the ticket is cheap (long quoted around ¥20; reconfirm at the gate) and it is an honest way to fill a half-day without a long drive. The nearby Miao museum and the reconstructed old streets round it out.

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
Xiangxi is a Tujia-and-Miao autonomous prefecture in remote northwest Hunan, and its sights are spread across several counties — Jishou (the capital) is the practical base, but Furong Town is over in Yongshun county and Aizhai and Dehang are out toward Huayuan. Jishou itself sees relatively few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is genuinely hit-or-miss: the safer choice is a mid-range or chain hotel in central Jishou or near the high-speed station, where staff are more used to registering a foreign passport with the police, rather than a small guesthouse inside Furong or Dehang scenic areas. Confirm the property takes foreign passports before you pay. Carry your original passport — it is your ID for every gate ticket and for hotel check-in — and keep some cash on you, since mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers most things in town but acceptance and phone signal get patchy out in the canyons and the minority villages, and the city buses run on cash you should have small notes for.

Eat like a local

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

Rice tofu (mi doufu), the Furong street snackchecked 2026-06-13

Rice tofu (米豆腐) — a soft, savoury 'tofu' set from rice slurry, served cold and sliced with chilli, vinegar, garlic and pickles — is the snack of the region, and it is especially tied to Furong Town, where stalls trade hard on the dish's screen fame. It is genuinely local rather than a tourist invention, smooth and tart and cheap. Eat it at a busy stall, and don't overpay just because of the film connection.

Tujia smoked bacon and sour meatchecked 2026-06-13

This is Tujia country, and the larder runs to smoked and soured pork: Xiangxi bacon (湘西腊肉), cured and hung over a smoky fire-pit until it is dark and firm, then sliced and stir-fried; and Jishou-style sour meat, fermented to a tangy, slightly sour edge and fried up hot and oily. Both are hearty mountain food, properly local, and worth ordering in a plain neighbourhood restaurant over anything generic on a tourist menu.

Sour-soup fish, blood-cake duck and rice noodleschecked 2026-06-13

The wider Miao-and-Tujia table leans sour and spicy: sour-soup fish, the dark and rich blood-cake duck (duck stir-fried with chunks of glutinous-rice-and-blood cake, ginger and chilli), and a morning bowl of Jishou rice noodles with long-simmered meat and a pile of seasonings. It is western-Hunan cooking — distinct from the rest of the province and properly hot by default. Say so if you want it milder, but the local version is the one worth coming for.

The honest layer

The part a tourism board will never print.

This is a prefecture, not a town — the sights are scattered and you want a carchecked 2026-06-13

The thing to get straight before you come: 'Xiangxi' is a whole autonomous prefecture, and its headline sights sit in different counties, often an hour or more apart on mountain roads. Furong Town is up in Yongshun county, north toward Zhangjiajie; Aizhai Bridge and Dehang are out toward Huayuan on the canyon; Qianzhou is in Jishou city itself. There is no tidy loop you can walk, and public buses between the far sights are slow and infrequent. If you have two or three of these on your list, the sane move is a hired car or a chartered driver for the day out of Jishou — it costs more than the bus but turns a frustrating multi-day puzzle into one or two manageable days.

Furong is the photo, but it lives or dies on the waterfallchecked 2026-06-13

Furong Town's whole identity is the waterfall crashing through the middle of an old Tujia town stacked up a cliff — it is the image that put it on screen in the 1986 film 'Hibiscus Town' and on every poster since. But be honest with yourself about timing: in the wet season, roughly late spring through summer, the falls are full and thunderous and the town earns its reputation; in a dry stretch the water thins out and the magic fades. If the waterfall is the reason you are going, go when it has been raining, and shoot it from the viewpoint across the gorge rather than from inside the lanes.

Aizhai is an engineering pilgrimage, not a walk across a bridgechecked 2026-06-13

First-timers sometimes expect to stroll across the famous Aizhai Bridge. You cannot — it is a working expressway suspended some 330 metres over the canyon, opened in 2012 and once among the highest mountain bridges anywhere. What you actually do is ride a shuttle and a lift up to viewing platforms on the canyon rim and look at it, and optionally walk the cliffside glass skywalk that is usually a separate ticket. Go for the sheer scale of the span and the canyon below it, manage the expectation about walking it, and check which platforms, lifts and skywalk your ticket actually includes before you pay.

How this fits with Fenghuang — it doesn't duplicate itchecked 2026-06-13

Fenghuang, the famous riverside ancient town, is in this same prefecture and has its own page, so don't double-book the same experience. The pitch of Furong, Aizhai and Dehang is different: where Fenghuang is a lantern-lit old town to wander at night, these are a waterfall town, a canyon-and-bridge spectacle and a Miao valley of karst peaks — scenery and engineering rather than riverside streets. Many travellers string several together — Zhangjiajie, Furong, Fenghuang and the Aizhai/Dehang canyon make a natural western-Hunan route — but treat each as its own thing rather than more of the same.

Straight answers

Is Xiangxi the same as Fenghuang? Where should I base myself?

Fenghuang is one famous town inside the wider Xiangxi prefecture, and it has its own page; the sights here — Furong Town, the Aizhai Bridge and canyon, Dehang Miao village — are spread across other counties. The practical base for those is Jishou, the prefecture capital, which is a transport hub with the most reliable hotels for registering a foreign passport. From Jishou you reach Qianzhou in the city, and head out by car or local bus to the canyon and the villages.

How do I get to Xiangxi and around it once there?

Jishou has no airport; arrive by high-speed or conventional train (it is on lines linking Changsha, Huaihua and Zhangjiajie), or by long-distance bus. The nearest airports are at Zhangjiajie and Changde, each roughly a couple of hours away. Once there, the catch is that the headline sights sit an hour or more apart in different counties, so a hired car or chartered driver for the day is by far the easiest way to combine, say, Aizhai and Dehang, or to reach Furong up in Yongshun. Local buses run to Dehang and the bigger sights but are slow and infrequent.

Can I walk across the Aizhai Bridge, and what does the ticket cover?

No — the Aizhai Bridge carries a live expressway about 330 metres above the canyon and is not open to pedestrians. The scenic-area ticket (long quoted around ¥100) buys you the shuttle bus and sightseeing lift up to viewing platforms on the canyon rim, where you see the span from below and alongside. The cliffside glass skywalk is usually a separate add-on, so budget for both and confirm at the ticket office exactly which platforms, lifts and skywalk your ticket includes, as the bundles change.

When should I go for the waterfalls at Furong and Dehang?

Both Furong Town's signature waterfall and Dehang's Liusha (flowing-sand) waterfall are at their best after rain, roughly in the wetter late-spring-through-summer months; in a dry spell they can run thin and underwhelming. If the waterfall is the main reason you are going, time your visit to a rainy period and check recent conditions. The towns and villages are worth seeing year-round, but the falls are the part that depends on the weather.

Can a foreigner book these tickets, and will my card work?

Entry to each is real-name, so you book with your passport, and a passport works as ID. Booking runs through each scenic area's Chinese-first WeChat or Alipay mini-program or the ticket office, with OTAs such as Trip.com as a fallback; the simplest path is to have your Jishou hotel reserve with your passport details, or buy at the gate in non-peak periods. For payments, link a foreign Visa or Mastercard to Alipay or WeChat Pay for tickets, food and taxis, but carry cash for the canyons, the villages and the city buses, where signal and acceptance get patchy.

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.