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Chongqing — Fire, Fog & Flavour for Five: 3 days of cliffside cities, vegetarian hot pot, river nights & mountain adventures in China's wildest megacity

Chongqing doesn't do subtle. Built across steep mountains at the confluence of the Yangtze and Jialing rivers, this is a city of stacked buildings clinging to fog-wrapped hillsides, fiery hot pot bubbling on every corner, and neon-lit night views that rival Hong Kong. For your group of five — three vegetarians and two omnivores — this itinerary threads the needle: legendary hot pot with mushroom and tomato broths alongside the classic beef tallow, Buddhist temple vegetarian feasts, street food crawls through ancient towns, adventure hikes through forested mountains, and relaxing evening river cruises as the city lights up below. Chongqing in late April is warm, green, and alive — spring at its peak, with comfortable temperatures and the city's famous fog adding atmosphere to every vista.

Duration: 2 nights
Dates: April 24 – April 26, 2026
Budget: $
Pace: Balanced
Best for: Groups · Vegetarians · Adventure + Foodie + Relaxation

⚡ Before You Go — Essentials

🌤️ Late April Weather

Chongqing in late April is warm and pleasant — expect 18–25°C (64–77°F) during the day, dropping to 15–17°C at night. Spring showers are common but brief. Pack layers, a light rain jacket, and comfortable walking shoes — this city is built on hills and stairs. Chongqing is famously foggy, which adds atmosphere but means sunscreen isn't always needed.

🚇 Getting Around

Chongqing's metro is extensive, cheap (¥2–7 per ride), and covers most tourist areas. Line 1 and Line 2 are the most useful. The famous Liziba Station — where the monorail passes through a residential building — is worth a visit itself. Didi (China's Uber) is widely available and affordable. For 5+ people, splitting two Didi rides is often cheaper than individual metro fares.

🌿 Vegetarian in Chongqing

Chongqing's signature hot pot uses beef tallow broth, but nearly every hot pot restaurant offers a split pot (鸳鸯锅, yuānyāng guō) with a non-spicy mushroom or tomato broth on one side. Order vegetable, tofu, and mushroom platters — the variety is enormous. Buddhist temple restaurants (素菜馆) serve fully vegetarian meals. Say 'wǒ chī sù' (我吃素, I eat vegetarian) — locals are accommodating. Many noodle shops will make meatless versions on request.

💰 Budget Tips

Chongqing is one of China's most affordable major cities. Street food meals: ¥10–25 ($1.50–3.50). Hot pot for 5 people: ¥200–350 ($28–50). Metro rides: ¥2–7. Two Rivers Night Cruise: ¥100–150/person ($14–21). Temple entry: free to ¥30. A group of 5 can easily spend under $1,000 total for 3 days including food, transport, and activities. WeChat Pay and Alipay are essential — set up before arriving or carry cash as backup.

Day 1 Jiefangbei · Hongya Cave · Chaotianmen · Jialing River

Arrival, River Views & Neon Nights

Arrival, River Views & Neon Nights, Chongqing, China

Hit the ground running in downtown Chongqing — explore the buzzing Jiefangbei pedestrian district, discover the stacked hilltop architecture that makes this city unlike anywhere else, watch the sun set from the iconic Hongya Cave stilted complex, and end with a magical Two Rivers Night Cruise as the entire city skyline erupts in neon.

Afternoon

Jiefangbei Walking Street & People's Liberation Monument

After arriving and checking in, start at Chongqing's beating heart — Jiefangbei (解放碑). This massive pedestrian plaza is surrounded by towering skyscrapers, packed with shoppers, street performers, and snack vendors. The People's Liberation Monument at its centre is where locals gather. It's chaotic, loud, and thrilling — pure Chongqing energy.

🏛️ People's Liberation Monument — 27.5m tall, built 1945, Chongqing's symbolic centre
🛍️ Jiefangbei CBD — largest shopping district in western China
📸 Look up — the surrounding skyscrapers create a dramatic urban canyon
🍡 Street snacks everywhere: try liángfěn (cold jelly noodles) — naturally vegetarian

Luohan Temple (Arhat Temple)

Hidden among the downtown skyscrapers, Luohan Temple is a tranquil Buddhist oasis dating back over 1,000 years. The entrance corridor is lined with 524 painted clay arhat statues — each with a unique expression. The temple courtyard is peaceful, incense-filled, and a perfect contrast to the surrounding city.

🛕 One of Chongqing's oldest temples — originally built in the Song Dynasty
🧘 524 life-sized arhat statues in the entrance corridor — mesmerising
🕊️ Active Buddhist temple — respectful dress and behaviour appreciated
💰 Entry: ¥10 (~$1.40) · Open 8:00am–5:00pm
☕ Late Lunch
Luohan Temple Vegetarian Restaurant (罗汉寺素菜馆)
Right inside the temple complex, this Buddhist vegetarian restaurant serves hearty, affordable plant-based Chinese cuisine — mock meat dishes, stir-fried seasonal vegetables, tofu in chili oil, and fragrant rice. All five of you can eat well here. The atmosphere is serene and the food is surprisingly flavourful.
💰 $ · 📍 Inside Luohan Temple, Jiefangbei · Fully vegetarian · ~¥20–35/person
Evening

Hongya Cave (洪崖洞) at Sunset & Night

This is the image of Chongqing — an 11-storey stilted building complex carved into the cliff face above the Jialing River, resembling a real-life Spirited Away bathhouse. Visit at sunset to watch the transition from golden hour to full neon — the building lights up spectacularly against the darkening river. Walk through all 11 floors: restaurants, shops, a waterfall courtyard, and rooftop bars overlooking the Jialing River Bridge.

🏮 11 storeys built into the cliff — enter from the top (street level) or bottom (riverside)
🌅 Arrive by 5:30pm to catch the sunset-to-neon transition
📸 Best photo spot: across the river on the Qiansimen Bridge walkway, or from Jiangbei side
💰 Free entry · Open until late
⚠️ Extremely crowded on weekends — Friday may be busy but manageable

Two Rivers Night Cruise (两江夜游)

The absolute must-do experience in Chongqing. Board a cruise ship at Chaotianmen Wharf and sail where the Yangtze and Jialing rivers merge. For 90 minutes, you'll glide past a skyline of illuminated skyscrapers, neon-wrapped bridges, and Hongya Cave glowing like a lantern from the water. The scale of Chongqing's night view is staggering — this is one of China's great urban spectacles.

🚢 Departs from Chaotianmen Wharf — multiple operators, boats leave 7:30–9:30pm
⏱️ Duration: ~90 minutes round trip
💰 ¥100–168/person (~$14–24) depending on seat class
📸 Upper deck is best for photos — arrive early to secure a spot
🌉 You'll sail under Qiansimen Bridge, Chaotianmen Bridge, and Dongshuimen Bridge
🍽️ Dinner
Zhu Guang Yu Hot Pot (朱光玉火锅馆)
One of Chongqing's most popular hot pot restaurants — famous for its rich, complex broth and theatrical presentation. Order a split pot (鸳鸯锅): the fiery red beef tallow broth for the adventurous two, and a creamy mushroom or tomato broth for the three vegetarians. The vegetable and tofu selection is enormous — lotus root, winter melon, enoki mushrooms, frozen tofu, potato slices, and handmade tofu skin. This is the quintessential Chongqing experience.
💰 $$ · 📍 Multiple locations — Jiefangbei branch most convenient · Split pot available · ¥60–80/person
Hot pot ordering tip for vegetarians: ask for "jūn tāng guō dǐ" (菌汤锅底, mushroom broth) or "fān qié guō dǐ" (番茄锅底, tomato broth). The vegetable menu is extensive — order lotus root (ǒu piàn), potato (tǔ dòu), tofu skin (dòu pí), enoki mushrooms (jīn zhēn gū), and frozen tofu (dòng dòu fu). Most restaurants will happily accommodate.
Day 2 Ciqikou · Eling Park · Nanshan Mountain · Nanbin Road

Ancient Town, Mountain Tea & Hilltop Gardens

Ancient Town, Mountain Tea & Hilltop Gardens, Chongqing, China

Today balances culture, food, and relaxation. Wander through the thousand-year-old streets of Ciqikou Ancient Town, find tranquillity at Eling Park's hilltop Chinese garden, hike the forested trails of Nanshan Mountain for panoramic city views and traditional tea, and end with a sunset stroll along the riverside Nanbin Road promenade.

Morning

Ciqikou Ancient Town (磁器口古镇)

A 1,000-year-old porcelain trading town preserved on the banks of the Jialing River. The narrow flagstone streets are lined with tea houses, traditional crafts shops, incense-filled temples, and some of the best street food in Chongqing. Arrive early (before 10am) to experience it before the crowds — the morning light on the river is beautiful, and the tea houses are peaceful.

🏘️ Founded during the Song Dynasty (~960 AD) — once a thriving porcelain port
🍵 Traditional tea houses everywhere — sit and watch the river flow by
🛕 Baolun Temple at the top of the hill — quiet Buddhist temple with city views
📸 Best photo spots: the main gate archway, riverside steps, and hilltop temple lookout
💰 Free entry to the town · Open early morning to late evening
⏰ Go before 10am to beat the crowds — by noon it's packed
☕ Breakfast / Snack Crawl
Ciqikou Street Food
Graze your way through the ancient town. Vegetarian-friendly picks: jiānbing (savoury crepe, ask without meat), mápó dòufu on a stick, brown sugar rice cakes (cí bā), roasted sweet potatoes, and fresh soy milk. Chen's Mapo Tofu on the main street is iconic — and naturally vegetarian.
💰 $ · 📍 Along Ciqikou main street · ¥5–15 per snack · Many vegetarian options
Ciqikou tip: walk past the main tourist street and explore the side alleys — they're quieter, more authentic, and where you'll find the best tea houses. The hilltop area near Baolun Temple has stunning Jialing River views that most visitors miss.
Afternoon

Eling Park (鹅岭公园)

A peaceful hilltop Chinese garden with the best daytime panoramic views in Chongqing. From the Kansheng Tower at the summit, you can see both the Yangtze and Jialing rivers curving around the city peninsula. The park is beautifully landscaped with pavilions, a rope bridge, a lakeside pavilion, and manicured gardens — the perfect spot to relax after a morning of walking.

🏯 Kansheng Tower (瞰胜楼) — the highest point, with 360° views of both rivers
🌿 Beautiful Chinese garden: pavilions, bridges, bamboo groves
📸 The best daytime photo of Chongqing's river confluence
🚇 Metro Line 1 to Eling Station, 5-minute walk
💰 Park: free · Kansheng Tower: ¥5

Nanshan Mountain (南山) — One Tree Viewing Platform & Tea Gardens

Cross the Yangtze to Nanshan — Chongqing's green lung. The famous 'One Tree Viewing Platform' (一棵树观景台) offers arguably the most iconic panoramic view of the city, with the entire downtown peninsula, both rivers, and all the bridges spread out below you. After the viewpoint, wind through the mountainside tea gardens where locals spend lazy afternoons sipping tea amid lush greenery.

🌳 One Tree Viewing Platform — the classic Chongqing skyline panorama
🍵 Nanshan tea gardens — sit among the trees with a pot of local green tea
🥾 Walking trails through the forest if you want more exercise
💰 Viewing platform: ¥30 · Tea: ¥20–50/person · Taxi/Didi from downtown: ~¥30
📸 Best visited in late afternoon for golden light on the city — or stay for sunset
☕ Lunch
Tushan Temple Vegetarian Restaurant (涂山寺素食餐厅)
On Nanshan mountain near Tushan Temple, this Buddhist vegetarian restaurant serves simple, wholesome plant-based meals — rice, seasonal stir-fried vegetables, braised tofu, and mushroom dishes. At only ¥10 per person for the set meal, it's absurdly good value. The temple setting is tranquil and the mountain air is fresh.
💰 $ · 📍 Near Tushan Temple, Nanshan · Fully vegetarian · ¥10 set meal
Evening

Nanbin Road Riverside Promenade (南滨路)

After descending Nanshan, walk along Nanbin Road — Chongqing's riverside promenade on the south bank of the Yangtze. As darkness falls, the entire city skyline across the river lights up. This is a relaxed, locals-favourite evening stroll with restaurants, cafés, and unobstructed views of the illuminated downtown peninsula.

🌆 South bank of the Yangtze — facing the entire downtown skyline
🚶 Easy, flat riverside walk — perfect after a day of hills
🌉 Views of Dongshuimen Bridge and Chaotianmen Bridge lit up at night
🍺 Plenty of riverside bars and restaurants along the promenade
🍽️ Dinner
Neighbourhood Jianghu Hot Pot (江湖火锅)
Tonight, try a local 'jiānghú' (riverside) style hot pot — smaller, more authentic neighbourhood joints where Chongqing people actually eat. Order the split pot again: numbing-spicy (málà) on one side, mushroom or clear broth on the other. Jianghu hot pot is rougher, cheaper, and more flavourful than the big chains. Try the handmade sweet potato noodles (hóngshǔ fěn) and fresh bamboo shoots (zhú sǔn).
💰 $ · 📍 Ask your hotel for the nearest jianghu hot pot · ¥40–60/person
Day 3 Liziba · Shibati · Three Gorges Museum · Yuzhong

Urban Adventures, Museum & Farewell Feast

Urban Adventures, Museum & Farewell Feast, Chongqing, China

Your final day is a greatest-hits tour of the things that make Chongqing unique: the famous monorail-through-a-building at Liziba Station, the historic Shibati (18 Steps) neighbourhood, the world-class Three Gorges Museum, and a farewell vegetarian feast. Pack it all in before you head onwards.

Morning

Liziba Monorail Station (李子坝站)

One of the most viral travel moments in China — a monorail train passes directly through the 6th–8th floors of a residential apartment building. It sounds impossible, but it's real, and it's spectacular. Stand at the viewing platform below and watch the train glide into the building, disappear, then emerge from the other side.

🚝 Metro Line 2 — ride through the building from inside for the full experience
📸 Viewing platform below the building — purpose-built for photos
⏰ Trains run every 3–5 minutes — plenty of chances to capture it
💰 Free to watch · Metro ticket: ¥2–3 to ride through it
🏗️ The building was designed around the monorail — built simultaneously

Shibati (十八梯) — 18 Steps Old Town

Shibati — '18 Steps' — is a recently restored historic neighbourhood built on the steep hillside connecting upper and lower Chongqing. Once a working-class warren of narrow alleys and staircase streets, it's been beautifully restored to showcase traditional Chongqing architecture. Wander through the stepped streets, explore small museums on old Chongqing life, and admire the traditional stilted-building architecture.

🏘️ Historic neighbourhood connecting hilltop Jiefangbei to the riverside below
📸 Stepped alleyways, traditional architecture, and street-life scenes
🎭 Small exhibitions on old Chongqing life — bomb shelters, porter culture, tea-house traditions
💰 Free entry · Allow 1–1.5 hours to explore
🚶 Lots of stairs (this is Chongqing!) — wear comfortable shoes
Chongqing is called the 'Mountain City' (山城) because the entire urban area is built on steep hills. Embrace the stairs — they're part of the charm. Try the escalators and elevators built into the hillside (free public transport!) to experience the city's unique 3D geography.
Afternoon

Three Gorges Museum (重庆中国三峡博物馆)

Chongqing's flagship museum, directly facing the grand People's Assembly Hall across a landscaped plaza. The Three Gorges exhibit is the centrepiece — an immersive recreation of sailing through the Yangtze gorges before the dam, with a 360° film experience. Other galleries cover Chongqing's WWII role as China's wartime capital, Ba-Yu culture, and ancient Three Gorges artefacts. World-class and completely free.

🏛️ Facing the People's Assembly Hall — two iconic buildings in one plaza
🎥 Three Gorges immersive experience — 360° film of the gorges before the dam
🏛️ WWII galleries — Chongqing was China's wartime capital 1937–1945
💰 Free entry · Open 9:00am–5:00pm (closed Mondays) · Bring passport for entry
⏱️ Allow 1.5–2 hours for the main exhibits

People's Assembly Hall (人民大礼堂)

Directly across from the museum, this magnificent Ming/Qing-inspired dome was built in the 1950s and seats 4,000 people. The green-tiled roof and red columns are stunning — it looks like a piece of Beijing's Forbidden City transplanted to Chongqing. The plaza between the hall and the museum is one of the city's most photogenic spots.

🏯 Built 1951–1954, inspired by the Temple of Heaven in Beijing
📸 The plaza between the Hall and the Museum is the classic photo angle
💰 Exterior: free · Interior: ¥10
🚇 Metro Line 2 to Zengjiayan Station
☕ Lunch
Pu Ti Su (菩提素) — Vegetarian Life
One of Chongqing's most respected fully vegetarian restaurants, serving creative plant-based interpretations of Sichuan and Chongqing classics. Mushroom-based 'meat' dishes, beautifully plated seasonal vegetables, hand-pulled noodles, and delicate dumplings. Everything is 100% vegetarian. The restaurant has a calm, elegant atmosphere.
💰 $$ · 📍 Downtown Chongqing · Fully vegetarian · ¥50–80/person
Evening

Yangtze River Cableway & Farewell Views

Before leaving Chongqing, ride the Yangtze River Cableway (长江索道) — a retro cable car that swoops across the Yangtze River between Yuzhong and Nan'an districts. The 4-minute ride gives you a bird's-eye view of the river, the bridges, and the city stacked up the hillsides on both sides. It's cheap, thrilling, and a perfect farewell to the Mountain City.

🚡 Yangtze River Cableway — 4-minute ride across the river, stunning views
💰 ¥20 one-way (~$2.80) · ¥30 return
⏰ Runs 7:30am–10:30pm · Busiest at sunset
📸 Best photos from the cable car: looking downriver toward Chaotianmen
✈️ Chongqing Jiangbei Airport is 40 min from downtown by metro (Line 3 direct)
🍽️ Farewell Snacks
Jiefangbei Street Food Round-Up
One last graze through downtown before you go. Vegetarian must-tries: cold rice noodles (liáng fěn) with chili oil, grilled corn on the cob, brown sugar glutinous rice cakes, fresh fruit cups, and soy milk. The omnivores can grab Chongqing small noodles (xiǎo miàn) — or order the vegetable version (sù xiǎo miàn) which is just as good.
💰 $ · 📍 Jiefangbei area · ¥5–20 per snack

💰 Budget Breakdown

CategoryBudgetMidrangeLuxury
Accommodation (per room)¥150–300/night ($21–42)¥400–800/night ($56–112)¥1000–2500/night ($140–350)
Meals (group of 5)¥150–250/day ($21–35)¥300–500/day ($42–70)¥600–1200/day ($84–168)
Transport (metro + Didi)¥50–80/day ($7–11)¥100–150/day ($14–21)¥200–400/day (private)
Night Cruise (5 people)¥500–600 total ($70–84)¥600–840 total ($84–118)¥840+ total (VIP deck)
Attractions¥100–200 total ($14–28)¥200–400 total ($28–56)¥400+ total
3-Day Total (5 people)$300–550$600–1,000$1,200–2,500

✈️ Getting There

  • Chongqing Jiangbei International Airport (CKG) is 30km from downtown
  • Metro Line 3 runs direct from airport to city centre — 50 min, ¥6
  • Taxi/Didi from airport: ¥60–80 (~$8–11), about 40 minutes
  • High-speed rail from Chengdu: 1–1.5 hours on the Chengdu–Chongqing HSR

🏨 Where to Stay

  • Jiefangbei / Yuzhong — walking distance to Hongya Cave, night cruise, and metro ($$–$$$$)
  • Nanbin Road — south bank riverside views of the skyline ($–$$$)
  • Near Chaotianmen — convenient for the night cruise wharf ($–$$)
  • For 5+ people, consider two adjoining rooms or a family suite — very affordable in CQ

🌡️ April Weather

  • Spring: 18–25°C (64–77°F) daytime, 15–17°C at night
  • Frequent but brief rain showers — always carry a compact umbrella
  • Humid and often foggy — the famous Chongqing haze
  • Comfortable for walking — not yet the intense summer heat (35°C+)
  • Sunset around 7:15pm — long, pleasant evenings

💳 Money & Payments

  • WeChat Pay and Alipay dominate — set up before arriving if possible
  • International credit cards accepted at hotels and some larger restaurants
  • Cash (CNY) useful for small vendors, temples, and street food
  • ATMs widely available — Bank of China and ICBC accept foreign cards
  • Tipping is not customary in China

📱 Connectivity & Apps

  • Get a China SIM or eSIM with data — local apps need Chinese internet
  • Download: DiDi (taxi), Alipay/WeChat (payments), Baidu Maps (navigation)
  • VPN recommended for Google, WhatsApp, Instagram access
  • Free WiFi available at hotels and some cafés
  • Amap (高德地图) or Baidu Maps work better than Google Maps in China

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