March in Wuhan. The cherry trees on the university campus hillside start turning pink around the 15th. By the 20th, the whole slope is white and pink. You have about two weeks before it is over. This is China’s most famous cherry blossom display. Most foreign travelers do not know it exists. That gap is closing. Book your accommodation early.
Spring Travel at a Glance
| Destination | Spring Highlight | Best Timing | Notes |
| Wuhan | Cherry blossoms | Mid to late March | Wuhan University + East Lake Garden. Book 4 to 6 weeks ahead. |
| Beijing | Temple parks, mild weather | April | Good crowds, blue skies. Watch for occasional sandstorms. |
| Shanghai | Magnolias, mild weather | Late Feb to March | Jing’an area for magnolias. Rainy season starts June. |
| Wuyuan, Jiangxi | Canola (rape) flower fields | Late March to April | Yellow fields, Huizhou white-wall villages. Very photogenic. |
| Luoping, Yunnan | Canola flower fields | February to March | Earlier than Wuyuan. Less crowded. |
| Suzhou | Wisteria in classical gardens | April | Humble Administrator’s Garden. Short from Shanghai. |
| Qingdao | Cherry blossoms + coastal | Early to mid-April | German colonial architecture adds character. |
Wuhan: China’s Cherry Blossom Capital
Wuhan has more cherry blossom trees than any other city in China. The two main spots are Wuhan University campus and East Lake Cherry Blossom Garden.
Wuhan University opens its campus to visitors during the blossom period (usually a 2-week window). The cherry trees line a hillside. The old university buildings add architecture to the colour. Arrive early morning to beat the day-trippers. East Lake Cherry Blossom Garden has over 10,000 trees and free entry. It hosts outdoor events during the blossom season.
Accommodation in Wuhan fills up completely in the second half of March. Book 4 to 6 weeks ahead. Weekday visits are far more comfortable than weekends.
Beijing in April
April is when Beijing is at its most pleasant. Temperatures sit between 10 and 20°C during the day. The parks are in bloom. Visitor numbers are well below summer and Golden Week levels. The Summer Palace, Jingshan Park, and Temple of Heaven all have flowering trees in April.
One thing nobody warns you about: spring sandstorms. Beijing occasionally gets dust blown in from the Gobi Desert in March and April. A sandstorm reduces visibility and makes outdoor sightseeing unpleasant for a day or two. They are unpredictable. You cannot plan around them. A light dust mask in your bag is the only sensible precaution.
Wuyuan: Yellow Fields and White Villages
Wuyuan in Jiangxi is worth the trip in late March to April. Canola fields turn bright yellow and surround the traditional white-walled, black-roofed Huizhou villages. The contrast between the yellow fields and the architecture is striking. Wuyuan is often overlooked by foreign travelers in spring. That makes it significantly more pleasant than Wuhan during blossom peak.
Qingming Festival: The Short Holiday Spike
Qingming Festival falls in early April (April 4 to 6 in 2026). It is a three-day public holiday for visiting ancestral graves. It creates a short domestic travel spike. Not as severe as Golden Week or Chinese New Year, but trains and transport are busy. Book any transport 2 to 3 weeks ahead if your dates overlap. For a comparison with larger holidays, see Golden Week guide.
Labour Day Golden Week: Late April Alert
Labour Day Golden Week runs May 1 to 5. This is China’s third-busiest travel period after October Golden Week and Chinese New Year. If you are in China in late April or early May, book transport and accommodation at least 6 weeks ahead. Same trains, same sites, smaller version of the same problem.
Frequently Asked Questions
For the full seasonal overview, see Best Time to Visit China. For packing for spring weather, see China Packing List.
