The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Chimelong Ocean Kingdom (Changlong Haiyang Wangguo) — Hengqin
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥350
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Same Chimelong-group wall as in Guangzhou. Real-name entry, and the official booking channel (the Chimelong WeChat mini-program / app) is built around a 2nd-gen Chinese ID card plus a Chinese mobile number, with the entry gates set up to swipe that ID. There is no working official passport booking flow we could verify. Passport-only foreigners book through OTAs (Klook, Trip.com, KKday, GetYourGuide) that take passport details — third-party, not an official channel — and should confirm at the entrance whether the machine reads a passport or whether you redeem at a manual counter. The resort's international English site exists but its direct-purchase link has been flaky; treat it as brochure, not a reliable checkout.
officialBookingUrl null: the Chimelong international English page (oceankingdom-int.chimelong.com) is the brand channel but we couldn't verify a working passport-friendly direct-purchase deep link, and it's shown as a dead link on Wikivoyage. Billed as home to the world's largest oceanarium, out on Hengqin Island next to the Macau border. Base adult ticket is around ¥350 and climbs on peak days and holidays; on-site hotels, shows and a separate water park add up fast, so budget a full pricey day, not an afternoon. Open roughly 09:00 onward; reserve before you go and bring the exact document used at booking. This is Zhuhai's number-one foreigner friction point.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Fisher Girl Statue & Lovers' Road (Yunü / Qinglü Lu)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- Free (still needs booking)
- Foreigners
- Passport works
- Resellers
- None official
Free open seafront — just walk up, no ticket, no reservation, no ID check. The statue stands on the rocks on Lovers' Road; the promenade itself runs for kilometres along the coast.
The 8.7 m granite Fisher Girl holding a pearl aloft is the city's symbol, tied to a local dragon-king legend. Lovers' Road (情侣路) stretches along Zhuhai's eastern coast from near the Macau border well past the statue — good for a walk or a bike, with the Macau skyline across the water. Honest caveat: the sea here is often brown and muddy estuary water, not postcard-blue. It's the free pleasure of the city, best at sunset; reachable on bus 9, 99 or the sightseeing bus.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
New Yuanming Palace (Yuanming Xinyuan)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥85
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Park entry is free and you can simply walk in. The paid part is the evening stage shows, which you buy on-site at the gate — passport is fine as ID for any real-name purchase. No timed-slot reservation system to fight in normal periods.
officialBookingUrl is zhymxy.com.cn, the park's own site (Chinese-only). A full-scale replica of Beijing's destroyed Old Summer Palace, set against Shilin Mountain with a big lake, pagodas and boat hire — heavy on photo ops and theatrical 'imperial' shows, light on real history. Park admission is free; the evening Chinese-dance shows and a boat-battle re-enactment are the ticketed draw, around ¥85 adult (concessions ~¥60). About a 15-minute bus ride from Gongbei on bus 1, 25, 30 or 60. Open to ~21:00 for the shows.
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
- Works
- Police registration
- Zhuhai is one of the more foreigner-comfortable cities in China — it's a Special Economic Zone built as Macau's mainland gateway, so staff near Gongbei and Jida are used to overseas passports, and Cantonese plus some English turn up more than you'd expect. Stay at a mid-range chain or business hotel (the Gongbei and Jida clusters are easiest) that registers foreign guests with the police; cheaper local guesthouses and the 'massage-parlour' rooms around the border may not be set up for it. One quirk of a border town: a lot of visitors here are day-trippers crossing to Macau, so confirm your hotel actually does foreign registration when you book, and remember that the Macau side is a separate immigration zone with its own entry rules — crossing out and back uses up your China entry, which matters if you're on a single-entry visa or a transit exemption.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
This is the Pearl River Delta, so the default is Cantonese, and Zhuhai's edge is the sea. At the Wanzai Seafood Street and the island fishing villages you pick your fish, crab or shellfish live from the tank and have it cooked simply — steamed with ginger and scallion is the local move that lets the freshness do the work. Agree the price by weight before they net it, and you'll eat better here than in pricier Macau across the water.
Hengqin Island is oyster country — fat, briny oysters that locals rate highly. You'll see them grilled over charcoal with garlic and chilli at night-market stalls and done in claypot or congee in seafood houses. Cheap, regional, and a better souvenir of Zhuhai than anything in a gift shop; order a half-dozen grilled and see if you want more.
Delta cooking here leans on river-and-sea eel — the prized 'golden' wind-dried eel (huangjin fengshan) turns up braised or claypot-style in Cantonese kitchens. And Zhuhai eats late and outdoors: the city's BBQ culture, strongest up in the working-class Jinding district, is a lively local scene of grilled skewers and seafood well away from the tourist strips. Go where the plastic stools are full of locals, not where the menu has photos.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Zhuhai sells itself as 'the city of romance,' and the part that earns it is free: the long Lovers' Road promenade and the Fisher Girl statue, walked or biked at sunset with Macau lit up across the water. It's one of China's cleanest, greenest, least crowded big cities, and the coastline is the whole point. Manage one expectation — the water is estuary-brown, not tropical-blue — and the walk is the best thing here, costing nothing.
Chimelong Ocean Kingdom is genuinely huge (it markets the world's largest oceanarium) and out on Hengqin Island near the Macau line, so it's a committed day-trip, not a side stop. Base entry is around ¥350 before the on-site hotels, shows and separate water park pile on. The catch for foreigners is the same Chinese-ID wall as Chimelong's Guangzhou parks: the official booking is built around a mainland ID card and a Chinese mobile, with no reliable passport checkout. The practical route is an OTA that accepts your passport, then confirming at the gate that it reads. Decide if a marine theme park is worth that hassle and that budget; many travellers skip it and take the free Mangzhou Wetland Park on the same island instead.
Zhuhai is the mainland's front door to Macau. The Gongbei port at the south end of town is one of the busiest land crossings in the world, and the Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macau Bridge adds a 24-hour shuttle link to Hong Kong. That's why people base here: cheaper hotels, food and beds than Macau, then a short walk or shuttle across to the casinos and Portuguese old town. Just remember the border is real immigration — stepping into Macau and back consumes a China entry, so check your visa or transit-exemption terms before you treat the crossing as casual.
The Lotus Road (Lianhua Lu) pedestrian strip near the border is a packed nighttime spectacle of bar stalls, dice games and street food — fun to wander, but a chunk of the Gongbei bar scene tilts toward 'adult entertainment' and bar-girl hustle aimed at moneyed cross-border visitors. Enjoy the street food and the buzz; treat the friendly drink invitations and karaoke-house pitches as a sales operation, not local hospitality, and you'll have a good cheap evening.
Straight answers
Can foreigners get into Chimelong Ocean Kingdom without a Chinese ID card?
Not through the official channel. Like the Chimelong parks in Guangzhou, the official booking is built around a 2nd-gen Chinese ID plus a Chinese mobile number, and the gates are set up to swipe that ID. Passport-only visitors book through an OTA (Klook, Trip.com, KKday, GetYourGuide) that accepts passport details — third-party, not official — and should confirm at the entrance machine or manual counter that the passport links on arrival. It's the one real ID-card wall among Zhuhai's sights; everything else here is friendlier.
Do I need to book Zhuhai's attractions in advance?
Mostly no. The Fisher Girl statue and Lovers' Road are free open seafront with no ticket, and New Yuanming Palace has free park entry — you only pay at the gate for its evening shows, where a passport is fine as ID. The big exception is Chimelong Ocean Kingdom, which needs advance booking and, for passport-only foreigners, an OTA workaround because of its Chinese-ID system.
How does crossing to Macau from Zhuhai work?
Zhuhai is Macau's mainland gateway. The main land crossing is the Gongbei port at the south end of the city, walkable from the Gongbei hotel district; there's also the Hengqin/Lotus Bridge crossing and, for Hong Kong, 24-hour shuttle buses over the Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macau Bridge from the HZMB Zhuhai Port. It's full immigration in both directions, so crossing into Macau and coming back uses a China entry — check your visa is multiple-entry or that your transit-exemption terms allow it before you treat the hop as routine.
Will my foreign card work in Zhuhai?
Yes — link a Visa or Mastercard to Alipay or WeChat Pay and nearly everything works: hotels, restaurants, taxis, the metro-style transit and seafood markets. As a long-established SEZ used to cross-border visitors, Zhuhai is one of the smoother mainland cities for foreigners. Keep a little cash for island day-trips, where some smaller islands may not have ATMs.