Destinations
-
Tulou Country
Tulou Country (土楼地区) is the rural belt where Hakka and Minnan earthen roundhouses — tulou — cluster by lineage along the ridgelines and streams of south-western Fujian.
-
Quanzhou
Quanzhou (泉州) is the city that was, a thousand years ago, the busiest port in the known world. Marco Polo called it Zayton, an equal to Alexandria.
-
Wuyi Mountains
Wuyi Mountain (武夷山) in the northwest corner of Fujian is the only site in the province inscribed on UNESCO's World Heritage list for both its natural and cultural values.
-
Nanping
Nanping (南平) is the prefecture that holds Wuyishan — and if you only stop at Wuyishan, you miss the rest. The prefecture covers the whole of northwestern Fujian: mountains, river valleys, and a cultural layer that is older and quieter than anywhere else in the province.
-
Putian
Putian (莆田) sits on Fujian's central coast between Fuzhou (30 min north by high-speed rail) and Quanzhou (30 min south) — and most tourists still skip it. That is the appeal.
-
Xiamen
Xiamen (厦门) is the island city that most visitors put at the centre of a Fujian trip — and with good reason.
-
Fuzhou
Fuzhou (福州), capital of Fujian Province and home to roughly 8.3 million people, is the most relaxed gateway into Fujian — culturally deep, walkable, and in 2026 finally stitched together by a complete metro network after the Binhai Express (Line F1) opened at the end of 2025, linking Changle Inte