The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Shunan Bamboo Sea / Southern Sichuan Bamboo Sea (蜀南竹海国家公园) + internal shuttle
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥110
- Foreigners
- Passport works
The scenic area runs an official site (snzh.cn, with English, Japanese and Korean versions) that has its own online-ticketing section, plus the usual OTAs list foreigner-bookable tickets. A passport works as ID. The practical catch is logistics, not booking: the Bamboo Sea is about 68 km southeast of Yibin city in Changning county, so you reach it by bus (services from Yibin's southern bus station to Changning, then change for the park's west gate at Wanli village) or by a tour/shuttle bus, and once inside this 120 km² park you'll rely on the in-park sightseeing buses and cable car to move between viewpoints. Have your hotel help with the Chinese-first booking and the bus connections if you're not confident, and start early — it's a full day out, not a half-day.
officialBookingUrl is snzh.cn, the official scenic-area company site (Yibin Southern Sichuan Bamboo Sea Tourism Development Co., Ltd.); it has an online-ticketing section, though we couldn't load a stable deep booking link to confirm live fares, so reconfirm at booking. Gate admission has long run around ¥110 in high season (roughly January–November) and ¥60 in the low season; the park is a vast sea of bamboo forest with cliff-top temples, waterfalls, lakes and caves, and is famous as a filming location for 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon'. Crucially, the gate ticket is not the whole cost: the sights are spread across a huge area, so the in-park sightseeing buses and the cable car are separate add-ons you should budget on top — we couldn't verify the current internal-transport fares, so treat them as an extra and confirm on site. The headline draw of Yibin, but plan it as a long day with internal transport built in.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Li Zhuang Ancient Town (李庄古镇)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- Free (still needs booking)
- Foreigners
- Passport works
The old-town streets are free to wander; you reach it by local bus from Yibin's southern bus station (a roughly half-hour ride) or by taxi/DiDi for the short hop, with your passport on you for any individual museum or hall that charges. No advance booking needed in normal periods.
officialBookingUrl set to null — the town itself is open and free to walk; we could not verify a clean official ticketing domain for the individual halls and museums, which sell at the gate. Li Zhuang sits on the Yangtze about 19 km east of downtown Yibin, a low-key riverside town of Qing-dynasty buildings, temple halls and tree-lined streets. Its real significance is wartime: during the Japanese invasion it became a refuge for relocated Chinese academia — Tongji University and major research institutes moved here in the late 1930s–40s — making it a small but genuine seat of Chinese intellectual life in the war years, which several preserved halls and memorial sites now commemorate. It pairs well with the famous local dish, Lizhuang white pork (thin-sliced pork with a garlicky chilli dip).
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Cuiping Mountain Scenic Area & Wuliangye Tourism Area (翠屏山景区 / 五粮液旅游景区)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- Free (still needs booking)
- Foreigners
- Passport works
- Resellers
- None official
Both are free-entry and reached by city bus or taxi within Cuiping District; bring your passport as ID. The Wuliangye site runs set opening hours (roughly 09:00–17:00) and the liquor-culture exhibits may be visited on a walk-up basis or via the company's own arrangements; no advance booking needed for general entry in normal periods.
officialBookingUrl null — these are free city attractions with no ticket of their own to book. Cuiping Mountain is Yibin's green city-centre hill (about 503 m), an evergreen ridge with the Zhenwu Mountain temple complex, a Nezha temple, the Qianfo Rock cliff carvings and the Zhao Yiman memorial hall, with walking paths up from town. The adjacent Wuliangye Tourism Area is an industrial-tourism site built around Yibin's claim to fame — Wuliangye baijiu, one of China's most famous liquors — preserving Ming- and Qing-era fermentation cellars and a liquor-culture museum alongside the landmark bottle-shaped building. Good half-day fillers in the city itself, between trips out to the Bamboo Sea and Li Zhuang.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Xingwen World Geopark / Bo people relics (兴文世界地质公园)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥80
- Foreigners
- Passport works
A standalone scenic area in Xingwen county, southeast of Yibin near the Sichuan–Yunnan–Guizhou border; reached by long-distance bus or hired car, with a passport as ID at the gate. Open roughly 08:30–17:30. Buy at the gate or via OTAs; no clean official booking domain we could verify.
officialBookingUrl null — sold at the gate and via OTAs; the globalgeopark.org.cn listing is an informational page, not a booking channel. A 156 km² UNESCO Global Geopark of karst landforms — sinkholes (some of the earliest studied in China), caves, canyons, waterfalls, lakes and ancient stone forests — that also preserves relics of the ancient Bo people, the culture famous for the hanging coffins of this corner of Sichuan. Long quoted around ¥80; it's a fair way out, so treat it as a dedicated trip rather than a side stop, and reconfirm the fare at booking.
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
- Yibin is a mid-sized southern Sichuan river city that sees relatively few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is hit-or-miss at the budget end. International-brand and higher-star city-centre hotels in Cuiping District (the Crowne Plaza, HUALUXE and Mercure properties around the riverfront and Lingang area are examples) are set up to register a foreign passport with the police; small local guesthouses, and especially the homestays out at the Bamboo Sea in Changning county, often are not. Base yourself in central Yibin city and treat the Bamboo Sea and Li Zhuang as day trips rather than trying to sleep inside the park, unless you've confirmed the homestay can register foreigners. Confirm the property takes foreign passports before you pay. Carry your original passport — it's your ID for hotel check-in and for any real-name ticket — and keep some cash on you, since mobile pay (a foreign card linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers taxis, restaurants and most tickets in the city but acceptance and signal can get patchy on the rural buses out to the Bamboo Sea and on the smaller country roads.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
The dish to eat here is Yibin ranmian (宜宾燃面), literally 'burning noodles' — dry noodles, no soup, tossed hot the moment they're scooped from the pot with oil, chilli, crushed peanuts, sesame and scallion until they're so dry and oily they're said to almost catch light. It's the signature Yibin breakfast and lunch, cheap (often under ¥10 a bowl) and everywhere; locals and students queue at unglamorous shops like the ones on Liuchen Street. Skip the polished tourist versions and find a busy local noodle joint — a good bowl of ranmian is one of the genuine reasons to stop in Yibin.
Tied to the Li Zhuang day trip is Lizhuang bairou (李庄白肉) — pork belly sliced paper-thin and draped over a garlicky, chilli-and-oil dipping sauce. It's a real regional speciality rather than a tourist invention, and it's done best in and around Li Zhuang town itself, though you'll also find dedicated Lizhuang white pork restaurants back in central Yibin. Order it where the slicing is done in front of you; the knife work is part of the dish's local pride.
You're in southern Sichuan, so the cooking leans into chilli and Sichuan-pepper heat as a default, not a garnish — the cold-pot skewers (lengguo chuanchuan), bullfrog-and-fish-head hot pots and home-style braises around town all carry it. That's the character of the food here, and toning it all the way down can flatten the dishes worth coming for. If you genuinely don't take chilli well, say 'bu la' (not spicy) when you order, but know the local baseline is hot. Yibin is also tea and citrus country (the Pingshan mandarins are a local buy), so a tea-house break or a bag of fruit is the gentle counterweight to a spicy lunch.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
This is the mistake to avoid. The Shunan Bamboo Sea isn't on the edge of town; it's roughly 68 km southeast in Changning county, an hour-plus each way by road, and the park itself is a vast 120 km² expanse of bamboo forest. You don't 'pop out' to it. Getting there usually means a bus from Yibin's southern bus station to Changning and a change for the west gate, or a tour/shuttle bus that waits to fill before leaving. Then, inside, the viewpoints — the cliff-top temples, the lakes, the waterfalls, the famous sea-of-bamboo overlooks — are spread far apart, so you lean on the in-park sightseeing buses and the cable car to cover ground. Plan a full day, start early, and accept that the gate ticket is only part of the spend: the internal transport is a separate, effectively necessary cost on top. It's the headline reason to come to Yibin, and it rewards the time — just don't try to fold it into a busy half-day.
The price you'll see quoted for the Bamboo Sea — long around ¥110 in high season (about January–November) and ¥60 in the low season — is just admission. Because the park is so large and the sights so dispersed, the in-park sightseeing buses and the cable car are separate add-ons, and in practice you'll need at least the shuttle to see the place in a day. We couldn't verify the current internal-transport fares from a stable official page, so budget them as an extra and confirm at the gate. Reconfirm the admission price too: the published figures are dated, and the scenic area has gone through 5A upgrade works, so fares can shift.
On the surface Li Zhuang is one more pretty Qing-dynasty riverside town — crumbling old buildings, tree-lined lanes, a slow pace 19 km downriver from the city. What makes it worth the trip is its history: when the Japanese invasion pushed China's universities and research institutes inland in the late 1930s and 1940s, Li Zhuang took them in. Tongji University and major academic institutions relocated here, and for a few years this small Yangtze town was a genuine refuge of Chinese intellectual life under wartime conditions. Several halls and memorial sites preserve that story. Go for the history as much as the architecture; it's an easy, cheap half-day by local bus, and it pairs naturally with a plate of Lizhuang white pork, the dish the town is known for.
Yibin sits at the junction of the Jinsha, Min and Yangtze rivers and is now a high-speed-rail crossroads, which is the easy way in. Yibin East and Yibin West stations connect on the Chengdu–Yibin and Chongqing–Kunming lines, so the city is a straightforward train hop from Chengdu or Chongqing — far simpler than the old long-distance buses. There's also Wuliangye Airport for fliers. Base yourself centrally in Cuiping District near the rivers, do the city sights (Cuiping Mountain, the Wuliangye area) on foot or by short taxi, and treat the Bamboo Sea, Li Zhuang and the Xingwen geopark as separate spokes out from that hub. Distances to the out-of-town sights are real, so a hired car or DiDi for a day can save a lot of bus-changing if your budget allows.
Straight answers
How do I get to the Shunan Bamboo Sea from Yibin, and how long does it take?
The Bamboo Sea is about 68 km southeast of Yibin in Changning county, an hour-plus each way by road, so plan a full day. The usual public route is a bus from Yibin's southern bus station to Changning, then a change for the park's west gate at Wanli village; there's also a tour/shuttle bus from the southern station that leaves once it fills. Inside, the park is huge (around 120 km²) and the sights are spread out, so you'll use the in-park sightseeing buses and the cable car to get between viewpoints. Start early and treat it as a dedicated day trip rather than a half-day add-on.
What does the Bamboo Sea cost, and can a foreigner book it?
Gate admission has long been around ¥110 in high season (roughly January–November) and ¥60 in the low season, but that's just entry — the in-park shuttle buses and the cable car are separate add-ons you should budget on top, and we couldn't verify the current internal-transport fares from a stable official page, so confirm them on site. A passport works as ID. You can book through the official scenic-area site (snzh.cn, which has an English version and an online-ticketing section) or through OTAs that list foreigner-bookable tickets; the simplest path is to have your hotel help with the Chinese-first booking and the bus connection. Reconfirm all prices when you book, since the published figures are dated.
Is Li Zhuang Ancient Town worth the trip, and what's special about it?
Yes, if you like history. Li Zhuang is a quiet Qing-dynasty riverside town about 19 km east of central Yibin, reached by a roughly half-hour local bus from the southern bus station. Beyond the old streets and temple halls, its real significance is wartime: when the Japanese invasion drove China's universities and research institutes inland in the late 1930s and 1940s, Li Zhuang took them in, and Tongji University and major academic bodies relocated here — making this small town a genuine refuge of Chinese intellectual life during the war, commemorated today in several preserved halls. The town is free to wander; bring your passport for any individual hall that charges, and try the local Lizhuang white pork while you're there.
How do I reach Yibin, and where should I stay?
Yibin is a high-speed-rail crossroads: Yibin East and Yibin West stations sit on the Chengdu–Yibin and Chongqing–Kunming lines, making it an easy train hop from Chengdu or Chongqing, and there's also Wuliangye Airport. For lodging, the safer bet for foreigners is an international-brand or higher-star hotel in central Cuiping District near the rivers, where police registration of a foreign passport is more reliable than at small local guesthouses or the homestays out at the Bamboo Sea. Confirm the property takes foreign passports before you pay, carry your original passport for check-in, and base yourself in the city so the Bamboo Sea, Li Zhuang and the Xingwen geopark work as day trips out from your hub.