
A road trip by two foreign travelers who recently took a taxi from south China's Hainan Province to Harbin in the country's far northeast, nearly 4,000 kilometers away, has gone viral on social media, unfolding like a real-life drama series.

Snow and ice may have brought travelers to China's winter cities, but it is food, shopping and leisure services that are increasingly shaping how long they will stay and how they will experience the trip.

Baihaba village sits on China's northwesternmost edge, where it occupies overlapping realms of identity, Erik Nilsson reports in Altay, Xinjiang.

On Dadonghai beach in Sanya, a coastal resort in South China's island province of Hainan, foreign tourists are soaking up the winter sun, including Malika from Moscow who has chosen Sanya as her first travel destination in China.

Against the backdrop of towering, otherworldly sandstone pillars and peaks at Zhangjiajie National Forest Park, Hunan province, a group of inbound tourists stands transfixed, their eyes soaking in the sweeping, mist-shrouded landscape.

When mayors from around the world gathered in Harbin recently for the Global Mayors Dialogue, they didn't just talk urban governance — they also got their taste buds working.

Supermarkets in Shanghai have become must-visit stops on the itineraries of South Korean tourists.

The banks of the Songhua River in Harbin, Heilongjiang province, were alive on Monday evening with the sound of fireworks and dazzling lights as the 42nd Harbin International Ice and Snow Festival kicked off.

The Global Mayors Dialogue · Harbin opens tomorrow, where ice and friendship spark together.

China's tropical Hainan island has become a hit among Belarusian tourists according to one of the eastern European country's largest travel agencies.
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