3-Week Grand Tour: Exploring Western China and Tibet

Three weeks is when China stops feeling like a checklist. You have enough time to move slowly, go west, and see the country beyond the Golden Triangle. Two routes here.

3 weeks in china

At three weeks, something shifts. China National Tourism Administration data shows repeat visitors to China spend significantly longer on their second trip. You stop feeling like you are catching flights and start feeling like you are in China. Two weeks is enough to see the main cities. Three weeks is enough to understand why people keep coming back. Here are the two routes that work best at this length. The shorter version at 14 days is here.

Route 1: Classic Extended: Adding Yunnan

DaysDestinationHow to Get There
Days 1-3BeijingArrive
Days 4-5Xi’anG-train 4.5h
Days 6-8ChengduG-train 3.5h
Days 9-10Leshan + PandasDay trips from Chengdu
Days 11-13Yunnan: Kunming + DaliFly Chengdu to Kunming 1h, bus to Dali 3.5h
Days 14-16Yunnan: Lijiang + Tiger Leaping GorgeBus Dali to Lijiang 2h, then minibus to gorge
Days 17-18Guilin/YangshuoFly Lijiang to Guilin 2h
Days 19-21ShanghaiFly Guilin to Shanghai 2.5h

Yunnan is the reason to add the extra week. It is one of the most diverse provinces in China: 26 ethnic minority groups, altitude that changes from subtropical valley floors to 5,000-metre peaks, food that tastes nothing like what you ate in Beijing. Most importantly, it is where China stops feeling like one country. Full Yunnan guide: Yunnan Itinerary.

Route 2: Western Route: Silk Road and Dunhuang

DaysDestinationHow to Get There
Days 1-3BeijingArrive
Days 4-5Xi’anG-train 4.5h
Days 6-7Dunhuang (Gansu)Fly Xi’an to Dunhuang 2h
Days 8-9Zhangye DanxiaBus from Dunhuang or fly via Jiayuguan
Days 10-11Turpan (Xinjiang)Train from Dunhuang or fly
Days 12-13UrumqiTrain or bus from Turpan
Days 14-15Back to ChengduFly
Days 16-18ChengduPandas, hotpot, Leshan
Days 19-21ShanghaiFly

The Silk Road route is harder to organize and less comfortable than the eastern circuit. No high-speed rail to Dunhuang or Turpan. Roads in Xinjiang are long. But Dunhuang’s Mogao Caves and Crescent Moon Lake, Zhangye’s rainbow mountains, and the Turpan grape valleys are unlike anything else in China. This is also genuinely less-visited territory: you will encounter far fewer foreign tourists and considerably more Uyghur, Kazakh, and Tibetan culture. Full Silk Road guide: Silk Road China Itinerary.

The Honest Tradeoffs at 3 Weeks

  • You will get tired. China is stimulating. Plan one rest day per week with no sightseeing agenda.
  • You will spend more than you planned on entrance fees. Budget ¥150 to ¥300 per major site. They add up. Jiuzhaigou alone is ¥259.
  • Finding other travelers is harder than SE Asia. The hostel hubs are Dali, Yangshuo, and Chengdu. Outside those, you will mostly be solo among Chinese tourists.
  • Language gets harder as you go west. English signage drops significantly in Yunnan and disappears almost entirely in Xinjiang.
  • The slower you move, the better the trip. The best China experiences happen when you are not rushing to a train.

What 3 Weeks Gets Right That 2 Weeks Cannot

Two-week trips feel like a greatest hits tour. You see the famous things, eat the famous food, take the famous train. At three weeks, a different kind of travel emerges. You have a morning with nothing planned and decide to follow a market sound down an alley. You stay an extra night somewhere because you are not ready to leave. You eat the same breakfast three days in a row because it is that good. China opens up to slow travelers in ways it never does to fast ones.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Three weeks is actually the ideal length for a first visit that goes beyond the obvious. Two weeks covers five cities efficiently. Three weeks gives you the same five cities plus Yunnan or the Silk Road, without constantly being on transit mode. The worst China trips are ones where travelers move every two nights. Three weeks allows staying 3 to 4 nights in each place.

The classic route stays on the east coast and south: Beijing, Xi’an, Chengdu, Guilin, Shanghai. The western route dips into Yunnan or the Silk Road, which requires flying more but rewards with far less-visited landscapes. The west feels less like tourism and more like actual travel.

Yes, if you plan carefully and book the Tibet permit 20 to 25 days before you want to enter. The Tibet permit is issued by a licensed agency and takes 10 to 15 working days to process. You cannot apply for it yourself. Budget at least 5 to 6 days in Tibet minimum. Full permit guide: Tibet Travel Permit Guide.

Roughly $2,200 to $3,000 for a mid-range traveler excluding international flights. Food and domestic trains are cheap. Entrance fees add up faster than people expect. The Forbidden City, Terracotta Warriors, Jiuzhaigou, and the Giant Panda Base together cost around ¥700 just in entry. Tibet tours start at around $500 for 4 days, included in the total.

It is easier than most people expect in cities, harder than people expect when you leave the main trail. English signage is good in major cities. The systems (metro, rail booking, Alipay) are learnable. Finding other travelers is harder than in Southeast Asia. The hostel hubs are Dali, Yangshuo, and the big city backpacker neighborhoods. Outside those, you are mostly on your own, which is not a bad thing. Full guide: Backpacking China.

For the 14-day version: 14-Day China Itinerary. For the Silk Road in detail: Silk Road China Itinerary. For backpacking China: Backpacking China Guide.

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