Zhangjiakou, told straight.

The Beijing winter-sports escape that the 2019 high-speed rail put 47 minutes from the capital: how a foreigner skis Chongli's Olympic-legacy resorts (Wanlong, Genting/Secret Garden, Thaiwoo), why the Grassland Sky Road and Bashang grasslands are a completely different, summer-to-autumn trip, and what the historic Dajingmen Great Wall gate actually is. A two-season destination in northwestern Hebei.

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.

Chongli ski resorts & 2022 Olympic snow venues (Wanlong, Genting/Secret Garden, Thaiwoo, Fulong)

2026-06-13
Release
Ski passes and rentals are bought per-resort, on the day at the ticket hall or in advance through each resort's own app/mini-program; no city-wide reservation system. Book ahead for weekends, Spring Festival and the New Year peak when the popular resorts and rental gear sell out
Price
Foreigners
Passport works

Each resort sells its own lift pass; there is no single combined ticket. You can buy at the resort ticket window on arrival with your passport as ID, or in advance via each resort's WeChat/Alipay mini-program (Chinese-first). The big resorts here ran an international Olympics and are the most foreigner-ready part of the city — Wanlong advertises English/Japanese/Korean instruction and staff. The simplest path for a non-Chinese-reader is to buy the lift pass and rental at the resort counter on the day, or have your hotel reserve through the resort app.

officialBookingUrl points to Wanlong's official site (wlski.com), the one verifiable clean official domain in the cluster; Genting/Secret Garden's official site is secretgardenresorts.com (云顶滑雴公园, a 2022 Olympic venue) but it is a JavaScript-only app with booking funnelled through its mini-program, and Thaiwoo (太舞) and Fulong (富龙) likewise sell mainly through their own apps and OTAs rather than a clean ticketing webpage — so book the others through their apps, an OTA, or at the resort counter. This is the heart of the trip: Chongli is China's premier ski-resort cluster, the Genting Snow Park hosted the Beijing 2022 freestyle and snowboard events, and Wanlong (China's earliest big resort, ~22 trails, 560 m vertical) claims the longest season near Beijing, roughly November to April. Prices are left null on purpose — lift-pass, rental and lesson rates vary by resort, day and season and are too volatile to quote reliably; check each resort's app for the live day rate. Note the hard seasonality: the slopes only run in winter (about Nov–Mar/Apr); come in summer and the lifts are closed.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Grassland Sky Road (草原天路) & Bashang Grassland (坝上草原)

2026-06-13
Release
No reservation for the drive itself; some grassland scenic spots and the seasonal road may charge a small entry or close in deep winter. Best mid-June to early October for green grass and wildflowers
Price
Foreigners
Passport works

The Grassland Sky Road is essentially a scenic public road across the high plateau, driven rather than ticketed; you reach it by hired car, a chartered driver, or a self-drive rental from Zhangjiakou. Individual grassland parks and viewpoints along it may take a small gate fee, payable on the spot. There is no advance booking and a passport is all the ID you need; the practical barrier is transport, since public buses out here are sparse.

officialBookingUrl null — this is a scenic drive across open high-plateau country, not a single gated attraction with an official ticketing site. The Grassland Sky Road (Caoyuan Tianlu) is a roughly 130 km ridge-top road through the Bashang grasslands in the county areas north of the city, lined with rolling pasture, wind turbines and big-sky views; it's a self-drive and photography destination. Crucial seasonality, and it's the exact opposite of the ski season: the grassland is a summer-to-early-autumn trip (greenest roughly June–September, wildflowers and cool escape from Beijing's heat), turning brown and bitterly cold in winter when sections can be snowbound or closed. Don't plan grassland and skiing on the same trip — they're different seasons and largely different parts of the prefecture. Any 'entry' or parking fees are small and collected locally; left null as they're not reliably published.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Dajingmen Great Wall gate (大境门)

2026-06-13
Price
¥10
Foreigners
Passport works

Walk-up gate ticket; buy at the ticket office on the north side of the gate with your passport as ID. No advance booking needed in normal periods. Normal opening hours run roughly 08:00–18:00; confirm locally, as the site has closed temporarily in the past.

officialBookingUrl null — a small walk-up gate ticket with no dedicated official ticketing site we could verify. Dajingmen (大境门) is a genuine Great Wall gate in the city's Qiaoxi District, historically one of the main passes between the Central Plains and the Mongolian grasslands and the frontier head of the old Zhangjiakou tea-and-trade road to Russia and Mongolia. It's a single monumental gate with a short stretch of wall and viewpoints rather than a half-day hike — a focused historical stop, easily combined with the city centre. Long quoted around ¥10; confirm at the gate.

Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly

Zhangjiakou Museum (张家口市博物馆)

2026-06-13
Price
Free (still needs booking)
Foreigners
Passport works
Resellers
None official

Free state museum; in China most free museums use real-name entry, so bring your passport as ID and you may need to reserve a slot online in busy periods. Closed Mondays; typical hours around 09:00–11:00 and 14:30–16:30.

officialBookingUrl is the museum's own site (zjkmuseum.com) as listed on Wikivoyage; we did not re-scrape it live, so treat the domain as indicative and confirm hours and any reservation requirement before going. A free, comprehensive city museum in Qiaodong District, useful as a wet-weather or rest-day stop and for context on the frontier-trade and Olympic history of the region. requiresReservation set to unknown because free Chinese museums commonly require an online real-name booking that isn't documented here; check on the day. (officialBookingUrl set to null: the Zhangjiakou Museum site (zjkmuseum.com) returned 404 on check — buy at the gate or via the official mini-program.)

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
Zhangjiakou splits into two very different bases, and registration differs between them. Up in Chongli, the ski-resort hotels and the international-brand properties around the Taizicheng/Olympic-Village area and the slopeside villages (Wanlong, Genting/Secret Garden, Thaiwoo, Fulong) are used to foreign guests and generally register a foreign passport without fuss — this is the part of the city built for an international Olympics, so it's the most foreigner-ready. Down in the city centre (Qiaodong/Qiaoxi districts) and out in the Bashang grassland towns, you're in ordinary domestic-tourism territory where smaller guesthouses and farm-stay nongjiale may not be set up to register a foreign passport with the police; stick to mid-range or chain hotels near Zhangjiakou Station and confirm they take foreign passports before you pay. Carry your original passport — it's your ID for every ski-pass purchase, hotel check-in, and the high-speed train. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa/Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) covers tickets, lifts, taxis and restaurants in the resort areas and the city, but acceptance and mobile signal get patchy out on the grassland and along the Grassland Sky Road, so keep some cash for the rural leg.

Eat like a local

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

Lamb, every way — roast whole lamb and lamb-offal soupchecked 2026-06-13

This is northern frontier country on the edge of the Mongolian grassland, and lamb is the local meat done best. Look for roast whole lamb (烤全羊), the signature northern-Hebei banquet dish, cooked with cumin and chilli, and for yangza tang (羊杂汤), a hearty lamb-offal soup with ginger and spices that's the right thing to eat after a cold day on the slopes. Bashang grassland lamb in particular has a genuine reputation. These are local staples rather than tourist menu inventions, and they're at their best in winter.

Youmian — the oat-flour noodles of the cold uplandschecked 2026-06-13

The mountain-and-plateau staple here is youmian (莜面), naked-oat flour, most famously served as youmian wowo (莜面窝窝) — dough hand-rolled into little cone or tube shapes, stood upright and steamed, then eaten with a dipping sauce, minced meat or pickled vegetables. It has a nutty flavour and a chewy, substantial texture built for cold-climate calories, and it's a defining regional dish across this corner of Hebei and neighbouring Inner Mongolia. Order it where locals eat rather than in a resort hotel and it's cheap and filling.

Resort food is convenient but pricey — eat local off-mountainchecked 2026-06-13

On the Chongli slopes you'll find international buffets, hotpot, Western bistros and café fare in the resort base areas — convenient, English-friendly and built for the Olympic-era international crowd, but priced accordingly. For the real regional food at fair prices, eat down in Chongli town or back in Zhangjiakou city, where the lamb dishes and youmian come from busy local shops rather than a ski-village menu. Out on the grassland, meals lean to farm-stay nongjiale spreads — grilled lamb, local mutton, hand-pulled noodles — and that's part of the experience, but carry cash, since card and mobile-pay coverage thins out in the rural areas.

The honest layer

The part a tourism board will never print.

Skiing and the grassland are opposite seasons — don't expect bothchecked 2026-06-13

This is the single thing most people get wrong about Zhangjiakou. Chongli's ski resorts only run in winter (roughly November to March or April), while the Bashang grassland and the Grassland Sky Road are a summer-to-early-autumn trip, greenest from about June to September. They're not just different seasons, they're largely different parts of the prefecture. Come in February for the snow and the grassland is a brown, frozen, often-closed plateau; come in July for the grass and the lifts are shut. Decide which trip you're taking and plan the whole visit around that season.

The high-speed rail makes this a genuine Beijing day or weekend tripchecked 2026-06-13

The 2019 Beijing–Zhangjiakou high-speed line cut the run from Beijing North to Zhangjiakou to around 47 minutes (from roughly four hours on the old line). For Chongli, ride through to Taizicheng station, the closest stop to the ski resorts and the old Olympic Village, where free resort shuttles meet the trains. That's what turns Chongli into a realistic weekend ski escape from Beijing rather than an expedition — you can leave the capital in the morning and be on the slopes by lunch. Book the train ahead in winter weekends and around Spring Festival, when seats to Taizicheng sell out.

There's no single ski pass — buy per resort, and rent on the mountainchecked 2026-06-13

Chongli is a cluster of separate resorts (Wanlong, Genting/Secret Garden, Thaiwoo, Fulong, Cuiyunshan), each with its own lift pass; there is no city-wide combined ticket. Pick a resort to base at rather than hopping. Buying at the resort counter with your passport is the simplest route for a non-Chinese-reader, and gear rental is available on-mountain so you don't need to haul skis from Beijing. Wanlong advertises English/Japanese/Korean instruction, a legacy of hosting an international Olympics, so it's a sensible first choice if you want lessons in English. We've left prices null deliberately — lift, rental and lesson rates swing by resort, day and season, so check the live rate in each resort's app.

The Olympic legacy is real, but manage the 'see the venues' expectationchecked 2026-06-13

Zhangjiakou genuinely co-hosted Beijing 2022 — the Genting Snow Park staged the freestyle and snowboard events, and the snow venues sit in Chongli. That legacy is why the resorts, hotels and transport here are unusually polished for a Hebei prefecture. But this isn't a museum-piece Olympic park you tour; the venues are working ski resorts you visit by buying a lift pass and skiing or riding the gondola. If your interest is the Olympic story rather than skiing itself, you can still ride lifts for the views and see the venue infrastructure, but come understanding it's an operating resort, not a guided heritage site.

Straight answers

Can I do skiing and the grassland on the same trip?

Realistically no — they're opposite seasons. Chongli's ski resorts run in winter, roughly November to March or April. The Bashang grassland and the Grassland Sky Road are a summer-to-early-autumn destination, greenest about June to September, and the grassland is brown, frozen and often partly closed in deep winter. Pick the season for the experience you want: snow in winter, grassland in summer. They're also largely in different parts of the prefecture, so it isn't a quick add-on either way.

How do I get to Chongli for skiing from Beijing?

Take the Beijing–Zhangjiakou high-speed rail, which since 2019 reaches Zhangjiakou in around 47 minutes from Beijing North. For the ski resorts ride through to Taizicheng station, the closest stop to the resorts and the former Olympic Village, where free resort shuttle buses meet the trains and run to Wanlong, Genting/Secret Garden, Thaiwoo and the others. Book the train ahead on winter weekends and around Spring Festival. A passport is your ID for the ticket.

Is there one ski pass for all the Chongli resorts, and can a foreigner buy it?

No single combined pass — Chongli is several separate resorts (Wanlong, Genting/Secret Garden, Thaiwoo, Fulong, Cuiyunshan), each selling its own lift ticket. Buy at the resort counter on the day with your passport, or in advance through each resort's WeChat/Alipay mini-program (Chinese-first), or on an OTA. Gear rental and lessons are available on the mountain; Wanlong advertises English-language instruction, a legacy of the 2022 Olympics. We haven't quoted prices because lift, rental and lesson rates vary by resort, day and season — check the live rate in each resort's app.

What is Dajingmen and is it worth a stop?

Dajingmen (大境门) is a genuine Great Wall gate in Zhangjiakou's Qiaoxi District, historically a main pass between the Central Plains and the Mongolian grassland and the frontier head of the old tea-trade road north. It's a single monumental gate with a short wall stretch and viewpoints — a focused half-hour-to-an-hour historical stop rather than a hiking section of wall, and an easy add-on to time in the city centre. The ticket has long been around ¥10; confirm at the gate, and check it's open, as it has closed temporarily in the past.

Will my foreign card and passport work, and where should I stay?

A foreign Visa/Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay covers tickets, lifts, taxis and restaurants in the resort areas and the city, and your passport is the ID for ski passes, hotel check-in and the train. The Chongli resort and Olympic-Village hotels are the most foreigner-ready and reliably register a foreign passport; in the city centre stick to mid-range or chain hotels near Zhangjiakou Station, and confirm a property takes foreign passports before paying. Out on the grassland, mobile-pay coverage and signal thin out, so carry cash for the rural leg.

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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.