The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Tongwancheng (统万城) — Xiongnu Xia capital ruins, Jingbian county
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
A national-level protected ruins site with an on-site visitor centre. Bring your passport as ID; buy at the gate or, where a reservation is asked for, through the site's Chinese-first mini-program with your hotel's help. Whether real-name advance booking is enforced varies and we couldn't verify it firmly, so treat it as unknown and confirm before you make the long drive.
officialBookingUrl set to null: we could not verify a clean official ticketing domain for the site, and ticketing here is handled locally — don't trust a random reseller link. This is the headline: the white-earth ruins of the capital of the Xiongnu-led Hu Xia (Daxia) kingdom, built around 419 AD under Helian Bobo and meaning roughly 'the city to rule ten thousand'. It is the only known surviving capital of the Xiongnu — the steppe people the Great Wall was built to contain — and sits on a UNESCO tentative list. The walls were rammed from steamed, lime-whitened earth so hard an iron spike couldn't bite, which is why fragments still stand pale against the desert. Manage expectations: this is a ruin field, not a rebuilt attraction — eroded white ramparts and platforms on the Ordos sand edge, atmospheric and historically extraordinary but sparse. Critically, it's in Jingbian county, roughly 100+ km west of Yulin city near the Inner Mongolia border — a long half-to-full-day drive each way; most visitors hire a car/driver from Yulin or Jingbian town rather than attempt it by bus. Prices left null: confirm the current admission on the ground.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Zhenbeitai (镇北台) — Ming Great Wall beacon-tower
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥30
- Foreigners
- Passport works
A walk-up gate ticket; bring your passport as ID. No advance booking needed in normal periods. Reachable by city bus (no. 3 or 5 toward Hongshixia/Zhenbeitai) or a short taxi/DiDi from Yulin city.
officialBookingUrl null — gate sale, no official ticketing site we could verify. The largest beacon/guard tower on the Ming Great Wall, often billed as 'the first watchtower of the ten-thousand-li Wall'. A square, tiered brick-and-earth platform about 7 km north of Yulin city, raised in the late 16th century to watch over the frontier and the old Han-Mongol border-trade market below. You can climb the tiers for a sweep of the Wall line and the desert edge; it pairs naturally with Hongshixia, which is only about 500 m away. Long quoted around ¥30; confirm at the gate.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Hongshixia (红石峡) — red-sandstone gorge & cliff carvings
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥30
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Walk-up gate ticket with your passport as ID; no advance booking in normal periods. Same bus line as Zhenbeitai (bus no. 3), get off at the Hongshi reservoir/Zhenbeitai stops; an easy taxi from town.
officialBookingUrl null — gate sale, no official ticketing domain we could verify. A short red-rock gorge on the Yuxi (Yuhe) River just north of Yulin, walled by red-sandstone cliffs cut by an old canal beside the Great Wall. The draw is the open-air gallery of cliff inscriptions — well over a hundred carved stelae and giant characters dating from the Ming dynasty on, including poems, military records and even Mongolian script, alongside small cave-shrines hewn into the rock. Compact (an hour or two), green and atmospheric, and a natural pairing with Zhenbeitai 500 m up the road. Long quoted around ¥30; confirm at the gate.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Baiyunshan (白云山) — Taoist temple complex, Jia County
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
An active temple mountain; bring your passport as ID and buy at the gate, or via the site's Chinese-first mini-program if a reservation is requested. We could not firmly verify whether advance booking is enforced, so treat it as unknown and confirm before the long trip east.
officialBookingUrl null — no clean official ticketing domain we could verify; entry is handled locally and some sources describe it as free or low-cost, which we could not confirm, so prices are left null. Baiyunshan ('White Cloud Mountain') is the largest Taoist temple complex in northern Shaanxi — a sprawling Ming-founded group of dozens of halls, shrines and painted murals climbing a hill above the Yellow River, and a living pilgrimage centre that fills for its temple fairs. It sits in Jia County (Jiaxian), well to the east of Yulin city on the Shanxi border, roughly a 2-hour-plus drive; realistically a hired-car day or an overnight, not a quick add-on. Come for the working temple atmosphere, the murals and the river setting. Prices null: confirm admission on the ground.
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
- Yulin is a far-northern Shaanxi prefecture city on the desert-and-Great-Wall frontier — an energy boomtown (oil, gas, coal) more than a tourist town, and it sees very few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is genuinely hit-or-miss. Mid-range and chain business hotels in Yuyang district (the main urban area, near the old town and the high-speed station) are your safest bet for a property set up to register a foreign passport with the police; small local guesthouses and the cheapest places often aren't. Confirm the hotel takes foreign passports before you pay. If you base yourself out in a county town — Jingbian (for Tongwancheng), Jia County (for Baiyunshan) — registration-ready options thin out fast, so it's usually easier to day-trip from Yulin city or Xi'an. Carry your original passport: it's your ID for every gate ticket and for hotel check-in. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa/Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers tickets, taxis and restaurants in town, but keep some cash, because acceptance and signal get patchy out at the far sights and on local buses, and as in many smaller Chinese cities you may not be able to load the city bus card in Alipay without a mainland ID — carry small notes for the bus.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
Forget any preconception of Shaanxi as just Xi'an's biangbiang noodles and roujiamo; up here in Shaanbei the cooking is northern-frontier and hearty. Mutton and lamb are the heart of it — stewed mutton, mutton soup, lamb done plainly so the meat carries — reflecting the steppe edge the region sits on. In the cold months especially, a bowl of mutton soup or a lamb dish is the local default and the right call, and it's everyday food here rather than a tourist menu item.
The Shaanbei loess country runs on coarse, sustaining grains, and the local plates reflect it: potato in many forms (including grated-potato dishes), yellow millet, buckwheat, and youmian — oat or naked-oat flour worked into chewy 'noodles', rolls or little fish-shaped pieces, often eaten with a savoury sauce. It's rustic, filling highland food built for a hard climate, and trying the oat-noodle and millet dishes is the most authentic eating you'll do in Yulin. Look for them at busy local canteens rather than anything aimed at out-of-towners.
Yulin has a locally prized tofu (Yulin doufu) — bean curd locals credit to the local water, served braised, fried or in clay-pot — that's a genuine regional speciality rather than a tourist invention. Around it you'll find Shaanbei snacks like the thin, crackling fried oil-pastry (youpi), savoury oil-tea (youcha), and the cured meats and red dates the dry highland is known for. Pair the tofu and an oat-noodle dish at a local place and you've eaten Yulin properly; as everywhere, prices in the rebuilt old-street tourist stretch run higher than at the neighbourhood shops a block away.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Yulin isn't a compact city break; it's a 43,000-km² frontier prefecture and its headline sights are flung far apart. Zhenbeitai and Hongshixia sit together just 7 km north of Yulin city and are easy — a city bus or a short taxi. But Tongwancheng is 100+ km west in Jingbian county on the Inner Mongolia border, and Baiyunshan is a couple of hours east in Jia County over the Yellow River. There is no neat loop. The honest plan is to hire a car and driver (or DiDi for the day) for each far sight, treat Tongwancheng and Baiyunshan as separate full-day trips, and not assume buses will stitch them together. Budget the driving time before you budget the sightseeing.
Set your expectations right and Tongwancheng is one of the most remarkable places in Shaanxi; set them wrong and you'll feel you drove three hours for some eroded mounds. This is the only known surviving capital of the Xiongnu — the white-earth city of the Hu Xia king Helian Bobo, raised around 419 AD from rammed earth steamed and limed until an iron spike couldn't pierce it. What stands today is exactly that: pale, weathered ramparts and platforms on the edge of the Ordos sand, largely un-excavated, with a restored inspection platform and a visitor centre but no theme-park reconstruction. The reward is historical and atmospheric — standing where the steppe empire the Great Wall was built against had its throne — not a polished sightseeing spectacle. Go for the history and the desolation; go knowing it's raw.
If your time is short, this is the pair to prioritise. Zhenbeitai is the biggest beacon-tower on the Ming Great Wall — a tiered fortress-platform you can climb for a clean view of the Wall line marching off into the desert — and Hongshixia, about 500 m away, is a small red-sandstone gorge whose cliffs are carved with a Ming-onward gallery of inscriptions and giant characters, including Mongolian script, beside the old border canal. Both are cheap (long around ¥30 each), both are walk-up with your passport, and both are a short bus or taxi ride north of Yulin city. Together they're a satisfying half-day that actually delivers the 'Great Wall frontier' story without the long drives the other sights demand.
Yulin is genuinely remote — far-northern Shaanbei, bordering Inner Mongolia, Shanxi and Ningxia. The two sensible approaches are Yulin Yuyang airport (UYN), with flights from Xi'an, Beijing and other hubs, about 17 km from the city (¥25 shuttle bus or a ¥40-plus taxi), or the train: there are direct services from Xi'an, Beijing and beyond, and the road bus from Xi'an is a long 8-hour haul you can mostly skip. Base yourself in Yuyang district, the main urban area, near the old town and the high-speed station, where mid-range and chain business hotels are likeliest to register a foreign passport. From that base, the in-town old streets, Zhenbeitai and Hongshixia are easy, and the far sights become hired-car days.
Straight answers
Is this the Yulin in Shaanxi or the one in Guangxi?
This page is the Shaanxi Yulin (榆林市) — the far-northern, Great Wall and Ordos Desert frontier city in Shaanbei. There is a completely different Yulin (玉林市) in Guangxi in the south, with a different airport and no connection to this one. If you're after Tongwancheng, Zhenbeitai, Hongshixia or Baiyunshan, you want the Shaanxi Yulin; book flights to Yulin Yuyang airport (UYN), not the Guangxi one.
How do I get to Tongwancheng, and is it worth the trip?
Tongwancheng is in Jingbian county, 100-plus km west of Yulin city near the Inner Mongolia border — a long half-to-full-day drive each way, best done by hired car or driver from Yulin or Jingbian town rather than by bus. Whether it's worth it depends on what you want: it's the only known surviving Xiongnu capital, the white rammed-earth city of the Hu Xia king Helian Bobo from around 419 AD, and historically it's extraordinary. But it's a raw, largely un-excavated ruin field on the desert edge, not a rebuilt attraction. Go for the history and the desolation, and bring your passport; we couldn't firmly verify advance-booking rules, so confirm ticketing before you set out.
What can I see easily from Yulin city without a long drive?
The easy, high-value pair is Zhenbeitai and Hongshixia, both about 7 km north of the city and only 500 m apart. Zhenbeitai is the largest beacon-tower on the Ming Great Wall, climbable for views down the Wall line; Hongshixia is a small red-sandstone gorge whose cliffs carry a Ming-onward gallery of carved inscriptions. Both are walk-up gate tickets (long around ¥30 each) with your passport, reachable by city bus no. 3 or a short taxi. The walkable old town in Yuyang district — old streets, drum tower, small temples — fills out an easy in-town day.
Can a foreigner pay by card, and what about hotels registering my passport?
Mobile pay — a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay — covers tickets, taxis and restaurants in Yulin city, but carry some cash, since acceptance and signal get patchy at the far sights and on local buses, and you may not be able to load the city bus card without a mainland ID. For lodging, stay at a mid-range or chain business hotel in Yuyang district, which is likeliest to be set up to register a foreign passport with the police, and confirm they take foreign passports before you pay. Out in the county towns near Tongwancheng or Baiyunshan, registration-ready hotels thin out, so it's usually simpler to day-trip and sleep in Yulin city or Xi'an.