Regional overview

Danxia Shan (丹霞山) is the type locality of the Danxia landform and the southern Nanling Mountains’ best-known walking destination, in Renhua County, Shaoguan, northern Guangdong. The 292 km² scenic-area complex carries an unusually thick stack of designations — National Park, National Nature Reserve, AAAAA scenic area, UNESCO Global Geopark, and one of six components of the UNESCO China Danxia World Heritage serial property — and protects a landscape of red sandstone cliffs, towers, narrow ravines, lake corridors, temples and cliff plank roads. Baozhu Peak sits at roughly 408 m above the Jin River basin, so this is low-altitude walking, but the relief is concentrated and the engineered staircases are steep.

The walking character is managed scenic-area hiking: stone steps, cliff stairways, plank roads, temple courtyards, short summit loops, lake paths and shuttle-linked sectors. Routes cluster in four scenic zones — Changlaofeng around Baozhu Peak (the headline cultural and viewpoint area), the Yangyuan Mountain sector (Yangyuan Stone, the Yunya plank road and the Ximei Fortress challenge loop), Xianglong Lake (a low water-and-cliff corridor) and the Shaoshi sector to the east. Internal shuttles connect the gates and major paths, the official Danxiashan site publishes opening hours, ticket policy and recommended itineraries, and a January 2024 protected-area notice prohibits unauthorised entry into the reserve’s core and buffer zones, so the practical walking universe is the public scenic-area network.

Best walking seasons are October to April for cool dry weather. Spring brings scenic mist that softens the red rock but also slick stairs. Summer is hot, humid and stormy, with flash-flood risk on the lower corridors and slippery sandstone on the cliff routes. Winter is mild, but the early starts needed for sunrise from Baozhu Peak can be cold. Danxia Shan sits at the southern end of the Nanling hiking arc that continues east into the Wuyi and central Nanling ranges.

Selection rationale

The five hikes cover the practical Danxia Shan walking spectrum: the classic Changlaofeng cultural ridge with its temples, cliff inscriptions and Shaoyin Pavilion summit; the short Rudder Stone viewpoint that works as an add-on or a compact route in itself; the Yangyuan Mountain challenge loop combining the Yunya plank road with Ximei Fortress and the Jiujiu Heavenly Ladder; the Xianglong Lake loop for a lower water-focused day; and the less fully verified Shaoshi / Jinguiyan historic walk. Statistics for the first four come from a combination of the official Danxiashan route guide and AllTrails source maps. The Shaoshi entry remains candidate-level because exact route geometry has not been resolved in this pass.

Summary table

# Hike Country Route type Distance Gain Max elevation Difficulty
1 Changlaofeng cultural ridge China Out-and-back / traverse variant 5.95 km 395 m Unresolved Hard
2 Rudder Stone viewpoint China Short out-and-back 1.45 km 122 m Unresolved Moderate
3 Yangyuan Mountain — Ximei Fortress loop China Loop 3.86 km 180 m Unresolved Moderate
4 Xianglong Lake loop China Lake loop 3.86 km 280 m Unresolved Moderate
5 Shaoshi / Jinguiyan historic walk China Scenic-area walk (candidate) Unresolved Unresolved Unresolved Moderate

1. Changlaofeng cultural ridge — Jinshiyan, Biechuan Temple, Shaoyin Pavilion

View from Jinshiyan Temple on the Changlaofeng ridge at Danxia Shan, with red sandstone cliffs falling away below
View from Jinshiyan Temple on the Changlaofeng ridge — the temple sits on a cliff-shelf above the Jin River basin and anchors the cultural ridge route. Photo: Mx. Granger, CC0 1.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Snapshot

CountryChina
Sub-regionDanxia Shan / Danxiashan, Renhua County, Shaoguan, Guangdong
StartChanglaofeng checkpoint or Baozhu Peak cableway lower station, depending on variant
FinishSame area, cableway descent, or official Changlaofeng exit depending on variant
Route typeOut-and-back with official traverse variant
Distance5.95 km on the AllTrails Baozhu Peak — Biechuan Temple — Shaoyin Pavilion core route
Elevation gain395 m on the AllTrails core route
Elevation lossMatches gain on out-and-back
Maximum elevationUnresolved; the route stays on the Changlaofeng / Baozhu massif, lower than the broader Danxia high point
Estimated time2 h 26 min by AllTrails moving estimate; 4–5 h for the official Changlaofeng experiential route with stops
DifficultyHard; sustained stair climbing with cliff-edge sections
Best seasonOctober–April; spring mist can be scenic; avoid summer thunderstorms
Public transportRail to Danxiashan Station, Shaoguan East or Shaoguan HSR, then bus or taxi to the scenic-area gate; internal shuttles connect main scenic stops
Verification statusPartially verified — official itinerary and AllTrails statistics align; exact GPX reuse unresolved

Itinerary

The official experiential Changlaofeng route starts at the Changlaofeng checkpoint and threads together Jinshiyan Temple, Banshan Pavilion, cliff inscriptions, Biechuan Zen Temple, Danti Tiesuo, Luoding Futu, Shaoyin Pavilion and the Rudder Stone / cableway descent area, with red sandstone cliffs, temple courtyards and cliff staircases the entire way. The AllTrails core route covers a shorter Baozhu Peak — Biechuan Temple — Shaoyin Pavilion line as the headline source-statistic route, at 5.95 km out-and-back and 395 m of gain.

A common day plan is to ascend on foot through the Jinshiyan / Biechuan Temple line, take Shaoyin Pavilion at the top for the sunrise or panoramic view, and descend by cableway to save the knees. Allow extra time for the temple complexes — they are part of why the route is the headline Danxia walk, not a detour.

Why it is essential

This is the strongest single Danxia Shan walk — red sandstone cliffs, temple sites, cliff inscriptions, steep stairs and a high summit pavilion, all in the type locality of the Danxia landform. It is the route most directly responsible for the area’s UNESCO and AAAAA reputations.

Equipment

Grippy walking shoes, 1.5–2 L water, a rain shell, sun hat, sunscreen, snacks, and an offline map. Trekking poles help on long stair descents but can be awkward on the narrowest steps.

Hazards and notes

Steep stairs, cliff-edge viewpoints, wet sandstone, heat, thunderstorms and crowding are the main hazards. Stay on the open public paths and respect the January 2024 protected-area notice — the reserve’s core and buffer zones are off-limits to general visitors.

GPX / route file

Source URL Format Notes
AllTrails — Baozhu Peak / Biechuan Temple / Shaoyin Pavilion alltrails.com Source map / app route AllTrails terms apply; direct GPX not retrieved; source-map reference only
Official Danxiashan route guide dxs.sg.gov.cn Official itinerary page Route description verified; no downloadable GPX found
OpenStreetMap — Danxia Shan area openstreetmap.org Map / search OSM data is ODbL; geometry cross-check only

Further reading

2. Rudder Stone viewpoint

Snapshot

CountryChina
Sub-regionChanglaofeng / Baozhu Peak area, Danxia Shan
StartNear Shaoyin Pavilion / Baozhu Peak cableway-side access; confirm current trailhead on arrival
FinishSame as start
Route typeShort out-and-back
Distance1.45 km by AllTrails
Elevation gain122 m by AllTrails
Elevation lossMatches gain
Maximum elevationUnresolved
Estimated timeAbout 40 min by AllTrails moving estimate; allow 1–1.5 h with viewpoint stops
DifficultyModerate; short but stair-heavy
Best seasonOctober–April; early morning or late afternoon for lower heat and softer light
Public transportSame Danxia Shan access and internal shuttle network as Changlaofeng
Verification statusPartially verified from AllTrails and the official Changlaofeng route context

Itinerary

Use the Changlaofeng / Baozhu Peak side of the scenic area to reach the Rudder Stone spur, branching off the main Changlaofeng route at the Shaoyin Pavilion area. The walk is short but steep enough to stand on its own as a compact viewpoint hike or to attach as an add-on to the cultural ridge route in section 1.

Why it is essential

Rudder Stone is one of the clearest short high-viewpoint options in the Danxia Shan core — useful for visitors who want a sharply focused red-rock viewpoint without committing to the full Changlaofeng traverse, or for adding a sunset spur after the main day’s walk.

Equipment

Walking shoes with good grip, water, rain shell, sun protection, and a camera. Carry extra water in hot weather even though the route is short.

Hazards and notes

Short routes here still mean steep stairs, cliff viewpoints, slippery rock, heat and thunderstorm exposure. Treat it as a mountain stair route, not a stroll. Do not bypass closure notices.

GPX / route file

Source URL Format Notes
AllTrails — Rudder Stone Viewpoint alltrails.com Source map / app route AllTrails terms apply; direct GPX not retrieved
Official Danxiashan route guide dxs.sg.gov.cn Official itinerary context Confirms Rudder Stone within the Changlaofeng route
OpenStreetMap — Danxia Shan area openstreetmap.org Map / search OSM data is ODbL; geometry cross-check only

Further reading

3. Yangyuan Mountain — Yunya plank road, Ximei Fortress and Jiujiu Heavenly Ladder

Yangyuan Stone — the iconic red sandstone pillar in the Yangyuan Mountain sector of Danxia Shan
Yangyuan Stone — the iconic red sandstone pillar in the Yangyuan Mountain sector, the centrepiece of this loop. Photo: STW932, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Snapshot

CountryChina
Sub-regionYangyuan Mountain sector, Danxia Shan
StartYangyuan checkpoint
FinishYangyuan checkpoint
Route typeLoop
Distance3.86 km on the AllTrails Qianyun Pavilion / Ximei Fortress loop
Elevation gain180 m by AllTrails
Elevation lossMatches gain
Maximum elevationUnresolved
Estimated time78 min by AllTrails; 2–3 h on the official challenge route with stops
DifficultyModerate; exposed plank-road sections and stair-heavy
Best seasonOctober–April; avoid wet rock and storms
Public transportInternal scenic shuttle to the Yangyuan Mountain stop; confirm current shuttle schedules at the gate
Verification statusPartially verified from the official itinerary and AllTrails statistics

Itinerary

The official challenge route starts at the Yangyuan checkpoint and links the Yangyuan Stone viewpoint, Baiyangtai, the Yunya plank road, Jiadun Pavilion, Ximei Fortress and the Jiujiu Heavenly Ladder before closing the loop back at the checkpoint. The AllTrails Qianyun Pavilion / Ximei Fortress loop provides distance and elevation figures for a closely related line in the same sector, at 3.86 km and 180 m of gain.

This is the most concentrated Danxia route on this list: a short circuit through engineered cliff plank roads, a fortress site and one of the most recognisable rock pillars in southern China.

Why it is essential

Yangyuan is Danxia Shan’s compact challenge loop — red-rock stairs, exposed plank-road sections, fortress history and the famous Yangyuan Stone in one short but memorable day hike. It pairs well with the Changlaofeng cultural ridge as a two-day Danxia plan.

Equipment

Grippy shoes, water, rain shell, sun protection, and a light pack. Avoid bulky loads on ladders or narrow stair sections.

Hazards and notes

Steep ladders and stairs, exposed sandstone, slippery wet surfaces, crowds at Yangyuan Stone, heat and thunderstorms are the main issues. Do not use closed cliff routes; the cliff plank-road sections are sometimes shut for repairs or in high wind.

GPX / route file

Source URL Format Notes
AllTrails — Qianyun Pavilion / Ximei Fortress alltrails.com Source map / app route AllTrails terms apply; direct GPX not retrieved
Official Danxiashan route guide dxs.sg.gov.cn Official itinerary page Route sequence verified; no downloadable GPX found
OpenStreetMap — Danxia Shan area openstreetmap.org Map / search OSM data is ODbL; geometry cross-check only

Further reading

4. Xianglong Lake loop

Boat docked at Chenglong Ting on Xianglong Lake, with the red Danxia cliffs rising directly from the water
Boat docked at Chenglong Ting on Xianglong Lake — the water-level Danxia landscape that contrasts with the higher cliff routes. Photo: Mx. Granger, CC0 1.0, via Wikimedia Commons.

Snapshot

CountryChina
Sub-regionXianglong Lake sector, Danxia Shan
StartXianglong Lake visitor access / scenic stop
FinishSame as start
Route typeLake loop
Distance3.86 km by AllTrails
Elevation gain280 m by AllTrails
Elevation lossMatches gain
Maximum elevationUnresolved
Estimated time99 min by AllTrails; 2–3 h with photo and viewpoint stops
DifficultyModerate
Best seasonOctober–April; usable in warmer months as a lower, shorter route when storms are absent
Public transportInternal scenic transport to the Xianglong Lake area; confirm current schedules at the gate
Verification statusPartially verified — official site lists Xianglong Lake as open, AllTrails supplies route statistics

Itinerary

From the Xianglong Lake access area, follow the public lake path around water, cliff and pavilion viewpoints. Depending on current operations, the walking loop can be combined with boat services to add an on-water section, or linked into nearby scenic paths — keep to open signed routes only. The walking line should match the published AllTrails loop at roughly 3.86 km and 280 m of cumulative climb across the bench paths above the lake.

Why it is essential

Xianglong Lake adds a lower, water-focused Danxia route to the catalogue. It is the natural counterpoint to the steeper Changlaofeng and Yangyuan walks and shows how red cliffs, vegetation and lake corridors define the geopark together rather than separately.

Equipment

Comfortable hiking shoes, rain shell, water, sun protection, and insect protection in warm months.

Hazards and notes

Wet steps, lake-edge paths, heat, thunderstorms and slippery boardwalk or stone surfaces are the main issues. If planning a combined walk-and-boat itinerary, check boat and path operations on arrival.

GPX / route file

Source URL Format Notes
AllTrails — Xianglong Lake Loop alltrails.com Source map / app route AllTrails terms apply; direct GPX not retrieved
Official Danxiashan homepage dxs.sg.gov.cn Official scenic-area overview Confirms Xianglong Lake tourist area; no downloadable route file
OpenStreetMap — Danxia Shan area openstreetmap.org Map / search OSM data is ODbL; geometry cross-check only

Further reading

5. Shaoshi Mountain / Jinguiyan historic scenic walk

Snapshot

CountryChina
Sub-regionShaoshi sector, Danxia Shan
StartShaoshi / Jinguiyan public scenic access; exact current trailhead unresolved
FinishSame as start, or signed scenic exit
Route typeScenic-area walk — candidate
DistanceUnresolved
Elevation gainUnresolved
Elevation lossUnresolved
Maximum elevationUnresolved
Estimated timeApproximately 2–4 h; unresolved
DifficultyModerate, subject to current path condition
Best seasonOctober–April; avoid wet cliff paths and storm days
Public transportDanxia Shan internal transport or local transfer required; route-specific access unresolved
Verification statusCandidate only — the official site confirms Shaoshi as a developed sightseeing and science-tourism area, but route statistics are not published

Itinerary

Use only the official public Shaoshi / Jinguiyan scenic paths open on the day of travel. The intended walk is a historic and geological scenic route through the Shaoshi sector, with red-rock landforms, cultural sites and viewpoint paths. Exact trail geometry, distance, ascent and current opening status need follow-up verification before this entry can be published as anything other than a candidate.

Why it is essential

Shaoshi broadens the Danxia Shan catalogue beyond the better-known Changlaofeng, Yangyuan and Xianglong Lake sectors. It is named by the official scenic-area site as a developed sightseeing and science-tourism area, which makes it a plausible fifth essential route once route data is confirmed on the ground.

Equipment

Standard hiking kit: grippy shoes, rain shell, water, sun protection, snacks, and an offline map. Carry extra water in hot weather.

Hazards and notes

Because route geometry is not verified, do not publish a precise line yet. Stay out of the reserve’s core and buffer zones and avoid unofficial outdoor routes. Cliff steps, wet sandstone, heat and thunderstorms remain the headline hazards.

GPX / route file

Source URL Format Notes
Official Danxiashan homepage dxs.sg.gov.cn Official scenic-area overview Confirms Shaoshi as a developed sightseeing area; no route file
Danxiashan protected-area notice dxs.sg.gov.cn Official access restriction notice Access constraint only; no route file
OpenStreetMap — Danxia Shan area openstreetmap.org Map / search OSM data is ODbL; no verified Shaoshi route

Further reading

Further reading

Source URL
Official Danxiashan homepage dxs.sg.gov.cn
Official Danxiashan route guide dxs.sg.gov.cn
Danxiashan 2026 ticket policy dxs.sg.gov.cn
Danxiashan protected-area notice dxs.sg.gov.cn
UNESCO — China Danxia World Heritage whc.unesco.org
Wikipedia — Mount Danxia en.wikipedia.org
Wikipedia — Danxia landform en.wikipedia.org
Wikipedia — China Danxia en.wikipedia.org
AllTrails — Baozhu Peak / Biechuan Temple / Shaoyin Pavilion alltrails.com
AllTrails — Rudder Stone Viewpoint alltrails.com
AllTrails — Qianyun Pavilion / Ximei Fortress alltrails.com
AllTrails — Xianglong Lake Loop alltrails.com
Wikimedia Commons — Category: Mount Danxia commons.wikimedia.org