China Travel Guide
Yunnan Travel Guide
Yunnan adds a southwest China route with old towns, markets, tea, mountains, minority cultures, and a looser pace than the classic Beijing-Xi'an-Shanghai spine.
What this place looks and feels like

Why this stop belongs on the route
Yunnan adds a southwest China route with old towns, markets, tea, mountains, minority cultures, and a looser pace than the classic Beijing-Xi'an-Shanghai spine. It is most useful for A slower southwest route with old towns, tea, markets, and mountain scenery when the route is built around actual transfer time, reservation rules, and district-level planning rather than around an overextended wish list.
Use this page to decide whether the stop deserves space in the route, how many nights it needs, and which nearby experience should sit beside the headline attraction.
What to do here
- Kunming for arrival, food, and a gentler start.
- Dali for lake, old town, cafes, and a slower base.
- Lijiang or nearby mountain scenery only if the route can handle crowds, altitude, and transfer time.
- Tea, markets, and local food as part of the route, not as afterthoughts.
How to shape the day
- Start with the anchor experience that would be hardest to replace later in the trip.
- Add one adjacent neighborhood, museum, park, market, or meal rather than crossing the city for another famous name.
- Keep the last block of the day flexible for weather, queues, jet lag, or transport delays.
Route shape that usually works
Yunnan should be treated as its own regional route, not a one-night add-on to Beijing, Xi'an, and Shanghai.
Suggested pairings
Pair old towns with markets and food, then add mountain or lake scenery only when the pace still works.
Shorten or skip it if: Skip or postpone Yunnan when the trip is under ten days and still needs the classic first-route cities.
Common planning mistakes
- Trying Kunming, Dali, Lijiang, Shangri-La, and Xishuangbanna in one compressed route.
- Ignoring altitude and long transfers.
- Treating Yunnan food and markets as optional when they are part of the reason to go.
Booking and logistics checklist
- Check the official operator or attraction site two or three days before booking or departure.
- Keep passport spelling consistent across flights, rail tickets, attraction reservations, hotels, and payment setup.
- Choose hotel location based on the route you will actually use rather than on nightly rate alone.
Confirm current entry policy, mobile payment readiness, SIM or eSIM access, long-distance transport timing, hotel district, and attraction reservation requirements. Practical claims should still be checked against current operator or official sources before booking because transport procedure, reservation windows, and entry rules can change.