The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Yuncheng Salt Lake / 运城盐湖 (free boardwalk vs. paid float zone)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
There are really two different things here, and conflating them is the classic mistake. The open salt-lake scenery — the kilometres of dyked, multi-coloured evaporation ponds with their public boardwalks and viewpoints — is a free, walk-in natural area with no big gate ticket. The 'Dead Sea' experience you came for — floating in a high-salinity pool, the mineral hot-spring and sauna bathing, the mud treatments — is a separate, enclosed, ticketed 康养 (health/spa) zone you pay to enter. For the free outer area just walk in; for the paid float-and-spa zone, buy on the spot or through the salt-lake's own channel, passport as ID.
officialBookingUrl set to null and prices left null on purpose. The colourful open salt flats and their boardwalks are free to wander, which is the half most photographers come for; this scenic area is not covered by the Yuncheng tourism annual pass. The paid float/spa zone is a separate ticket, and we could not verify a stable standard price — the figures circulating online (e.g. a bundled 康养 package nominally around ¥238, or a float-plus-bathing combo) come largely from local-resident promotional pricing tied to anniversary events, not a reliable list price for a foreign walk-up. Reconfirm the current paid-zone fare at the gate. Salinity is high (often quoted around 18%), so you float easily; the lake's pink-to-green colour comes from algae and brine shrimp and is strongest in warm months. Don't expect open swimming in the productive lake itself — the float experience is in the managed pools.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Xiezhou (Haizhou) Guandi Temple / 解州关帝祖庙
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥60
- Foreigners
- Passport works
A gate ticket; bring your passport as ID for real-name entry, which most Shanxi sights now use. No special foreigner procedure beyond that. The temple is out in Xiezhou (Haizhou) town in Yanhu District, west of the city — reachable by local bus (the no. 11 from near Yuncheng Railway Station is the long-standing route) or a taxi/DiDi.
officialBookingUrl set to null: the long-published official temple domain (guandimiao.com.cn) did not return a working ticketing site when we checked, so we won't pass off a dead link as official — buy at the gate or through the usual booking platforms. This is the ancestral and grandest of the world's countless Guandi temples, because Guan Yu — the deified 'God of War', and more broadly a god of loyalty and, later, of wealth — was born in a village nearby, making his hometown the head temple. The complex is palace-like, built by imperial decree, with the Chongning Hall and the Ming-era Spring and Autumn Pavilion (Chunqiu Lou) as set pieces. Admission has long run about ¥60 in the April–November high season and ¥50 in the December–March low season; confirm at the gate.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Yongle Palace murals / 永乐宫 (in Ruicheng, ~70 km out)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥60
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Gate ticket, passport as ID for entry. The catch is location and logistics, not booking: the palace is in Ruicheng County, well outside Yuncheng city, so plan it as a half- to full-day trip — a bus from Yuncheng's central bus station to Ruicheng and then a short local hop or taxi the last few kilometres, or a hired car for the day if you want it combined with the Stork Tower.
officialBookingUrl null — no clean official ticketing domain we could verify; buy at the gate or via the usual platforms. This is one of China's greatest sets of surviving murals: the largest Yuan-dynasty Taoist temple left standing, built between 1247 and 1358 to honour the immortal Lü Dongbin (born in the old town of Yongle), its main halls covered floor-to-ceiling in vivid Yuan paintings. Extraordinary backstory: the entire complex was moved brick-by-brick and painting-by-painting in 1959–1964 to clear the Sanmenxia (Sanmen Gorge) reservoir on the Yellow River, and the murals survived the move. Be aware photography of the murals is restricted — interior mural halls are routinely no-photo to protect the pigments, and staff enforce it — so come to look, not to shoot. Admission has long been about ¥60. It is roughly 68 km from the city, so factor in real travel time.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Stork Tower / 鹳雀楼 (Stork/Guanque Tower, in Yongji)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
A walk-up gate ticket; passport as ID, no advance reservation needed in normal periods. It sits in Yongji, on the east bank of the Yellow River near the old Puzhou town, well out of Yuncheng city — a hired car or a bus to Yongji plus a local taxi is the practical way, and it pairs naturally with Yongle Palace as an out-of-town day.
officialBookingUrl null and prices left null — published gate prices disagree (you'll see roughly ¥50, ¥54 and even ¥80 quoted across sources), so we won't pin a number; confirm at the gate. This is the tower of the famous Tang quatrain 'climb another storey to see a thousand li further' (Wang Zhihuan's 'Climbing Stork Tower'), counted among China's four great towers and the only one in the north. Manage expectations: the original was destroyed centuries ago, and what stands is a large Tang-style reconstruction completed around 2002 — impressive to climb and photograph, but it's a modern building, not an ancient one. Worth it mainly if you're already doing the Yongji/Ruicheng side; not really worth a special trip on its own.
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
- Yuncheng is a mid-sized city in the far south of Shanxi, bordering Shaanxi and Henan, and it sees relatively few independent foreign travellers, so foreign registration is hit-or-miss at the budget end. The international and upper-mid chains in the city centre — there's a Hilton, a Renaissance and a Wanda Realm near the centre — are set up to register a foreign passport with the police and are the safe choice. Smaller local guesthouses, and the inns out near Ruicheng or Yongji where the famous sights actually are, may not be able to register a foreigner; confirm the property takes foreign passports before you pay rather than turning up. Carry your original passport — it's your ID for hotel check-in and for the real-name entry that most of these sights now use. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works in the city for tickets, taxis and meals, but keep some cash for local buses out to the temples and for smaller vendors, where acceptance is patchier.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
You're in Shanxi, the heartland of daoxiao mian (knife-shaved noodles) — thick, chewy ribbons shaved off a dough block straight into the pot, usually served here in a beef or mutton broth. It's cheap, filling and everywhere; pick a busy local noodle shop over anything dressed up for tourists and you'll eat a proper bowl for a few yuan. This is the default lunch between sights, and it travels well as a quick, reliable meal when you're out in the counties.
Two local plates worth seeking out. Yangrou paomo (羊肉泡馍) here is a mutton soup served with torn flatbread soaking in the rich broth — hearty winter food, more associated with neighbouring Shaanxi but done well in this border corner of Shanxi. And youpo mian (oil-splash noodles) — wide noodles topped with chilli, garlic and scallion, then finished with a ladle of smoking-hot oil poured over to sizzle it all — is a fragrant, mildly spicy street favourite. Both are local and cheap, and both beat anything generic on a tourist menu.
Shanxi is the home of Chinese aged vinegar, and the local stuff is sharp, dark and used liberally — splash it on your noodles the way locals do rather than treating it as an afterthought. Yuncheng is also fruit country, the 'granary of southern Shanxi', famous for grapes (and a small wine scene), apples and dried apricots; in late summer and autumn the fresh grapes are genuinely good and make an easy snack. Round it out with simple street snacks — fried cakes, oil cakes, flatbreads — and you'll eat cheaply and well without needing an English menu.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
This trips up almost everyone. The thing on Instagram and Douyin — the pink-and-green colour-block salt ponds with people walking dykes and boardwalks — is the free, open scenic area; you don't pay a big gate ticket to see and photograph it. The 'Dead Sea of China, float without sinking' experience is a different, fenced 康养 zone with float pools, mineral hot springs and mud bathing that you pay to enter, and it's not the productive lake itself. If you just want the colours and the photos, go free. If you specifically want to bob in the brine, budget for the paid zone — and note the prices floating around online are mostly local-resident promo deals, so reconfirm the real walk-up fare on the day.
Yuncheng's best things are not in the city. The Guandi Temple is out in Xiezhou west of town; Yongle Palace and its murals are ~70 km away in Ruicheng; the Stork Tower is in Yongji near the Yellow River. Public buses link them but eat the day in transfers. The sane move, if you have two or more of these on your list, is a negotiated taxi or DiDi for a half- or full-day loop — Yongle Palace plus the Stork Tower combine well as a western/Yellow-River day, with the Guandi Temple closer to town. Don't assume you can knock all of these out on city buses in an afternoon.
The murals are the entire reason to make the trip to Ruicheng, and they're also why photography inside the mural halls is restricted. Camera flashes and even repeated phone shots are bad for 700-year-old pigments, so the no-photo rule on the painted interiors is enforced by staff. Treat it like a great gallery: you're there to stand in front of the Yuan paintings and take them in, not to come away with a phone full of pictures. Exterior architecture and the grounds are usually fine to shoot — it's the painted hall interiors that are off-limits.
Be clear-eyed about authenticity, sight by sight. The Guandi Temple and the Yongle Palace murals are the real, high-value historic article and fully justify the trip. The Stork Tower, by contrast, is a handsome early-2000s reconstruction of a long-vanished tower — fine as a climb-and-photograph stop, weak as 'ancient history'. And the salt lake is a working industrial lake dressed up for tourism, beautiful but not a wilderness. Knowing which is which before you go saves the disappointment of expecting a medieval tower and finding a 20-year-old one.
Straight answers
Is the Yuncheng Salt Lake free, and can I actually float in it?
Both, with a catch. The open, colourful salt-pond scenery with its boardwalks and viewpoints is free to walk into — that's the half most people photograph, and there's no big gate ticket. Floating 'Dead Sea'-style is a separate, paid 康养 zone with managed float pools, mineral hot springs and mud bathing; you don't float in the working lake itself. The salinity is high (often cited around 18%) so you float easily in the pools. Prices for the paid zone vary and many figures online are local-resident promo deals, so confirm the current walk-up fare on the day. Note the salt lake is not included in the Yuncheng tourism annual pass.
Where is Yongle Palace, and is it really near Yuncheng?
Not really — it's about 68 km away in Ruicheng County, not in Yuncheng city, so plan it as a half- to full-day trip rather than a quick stop. Take a bus from Yuncheng's central bus station to Ruicheng and a short local hop the last few kilometres, or hire a car for the day, ideally combining it with the Stork Tower in Yongji as a Yellow-River-side loop. Inside, photography of the famous Yuan-dynasty murals is restricted to protect the pigments — come to look at them, not to photograph the painted halls. Admission has long been about ¥60.
Do I need to book the Guandi Temple ahead, and what does it cost?
In normal periods it's a gate ticket; bring your passport as ID, since most Shanxi sights now use real-name entry. The ancestral Guandi Temple is in Xiezhou (Haizhou) town west of the city — bus no. 11 from near the railway station is the long-running route, or take a taxi/DiDi. Admission has long run about ¥60 in the April–November high season and ¥50 from December to March; reconfirm at the gate. We list no official booking URL because the old official temple website wasn't returning a working ticketing page when we checked.
How should I get around to Yuncheng's sights, and do I need my passport?
Carry your original passport — it's your ID for real-name entry at the temples and the salt lake's paid zone, and for hotel check-in. The catch with Yuncheng is geography: the Guandi Temple, Yongle Palace and the Stork Tower are scattered across different counties around the city, so local buses work but burn time in transfers. If you're doing two or more in a day, a negotiated taxi or DiDi for a half- or full-day loop is far less painful. Mobile pay (a foreign card on Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers tickets, taxis and meals in the city; keep some cash for rural buses and small vendors.