
Jennifer
Senior Travel Consultant

Vivian
Senior Travel Consultant

Chanson
Senior Travel Consualtant
This 10-day journey is designed as a smooth cultural across China's most iconic eastern destinations. You start from the modern skyline of Shanghai, move through the classical gardens of Suzhou, slow down in the landscapes of Hangzhou's West Lake and tea villages, and finally rise into the dramatic peaks of Mt. Huangshan and the timeless charm of Hongcun Village. Everything is arranged for you—hotel pickup, train coordination, entrance tickets, and daily lunch—so you don't need to manage logistics. You simply travel, observe, and experience.
- Seamlessly travel across Shanghai, Suzhou, Hangzhou, and Huangshan by high-speed train with full private coordination
- Experience Shanghai's contrast of old lanes, spiritual temples, riverfront views, and modern skyline
- Walk through UNESCO-classical gardens and ancient canal landscapes in Suzhou
- Cruise across the iconic waters of West Lake
- Immerse yourself in Zen culture at Lingyin Temple and tea plantations in Meijiawu
- Explore the surreal granite peaks of Huangshan Mountain above the clouds
- Step into the living traditional painting world of Hongcun Village
FROM $1200 per person
Prices vary depending on group size, hotel standards, and how you'd like to tailor your itinerary.
As soon as you land in Shanghai, your driver is already waiting at the arrival hall holding your name sign. From the airport or train station, you are taken directly to your hotel in the city center in a comfortable private vehicle, with all logistics handled smoothly so you don't need to worry about anything.
After hotel check-in assisted by our team, the rest of the day is kept light on purpose. Shanghai can feel intense at first, so we let you settle in at your own rhythm. Depending on your arrival time, you might take a short walk nearby or simply rest.
If you arrive earlier in the day, your driver can suggest a relaxed evening stroll around the riverside area so you can catch your first glimpse of the illuminated skyline before returning to your hotel.
After breakfast, your guide meets you in the hotel lobby and the day begins with a smooth private departure.
You first enter Yuyuan Garden, where carefully arranged rock formations, ponds, and wooden corridors create a peaceful world hidden inside the city. Your guide walks you through the symbolic design details so you can actually understand what you are seeing, not just pass by it.
From there, you continue to Jade Buddha Temple, where the atmosphere shifts completely. The scent of incense, soft chanting, and golden statues bring a calm contrast to Shanghai's modern pace.
A local lunch is arranged at a carefully selected restaurant, where you can try Shanghai-style dishes in a relaxed setting.
In the afternoon, you are driven into Old French Concession. This area feels slower and more intimate—tree-lined streets, European-style villas, and quiet corners where the city feels almost hidden behind its own history. Your guide gives you time to walk freely, stop for coffee, or simply enjoy the architecture.
As evening approaches, your driver takes you to The Bund. The skyline slowly lights up across the river. To end the day, you board a Huangpu River cruise arranged in advance, watching Shanghai transform from historic waterfront to futuristic skyline in a single view before your driver takes you back to your hotel.
After breakfast, your driver picks you up from the hotel, and today's pace shifts slightly compared to yesterday—you are moving from historical storytelling into a deeper understanding of Shanghai's culture, creativity, and modern identity.
Your morning begins at Shanghai Museum. Instead of rushing through, your guide will help you focus on the most meaningful galleries—ancient bronzes, traditional calligraphy, ceramics, and jade collections. These are not just exhibits; they are fragments of how Chinese civilization evolved over thousands of years. As you walk through the halls, you start to notice how design, symbolism, and philosophy are deeply connected in every object.
Leaving the museum, your driver takes you into a very different atmosphere.
Next, you arrive at Tianzifang. The moment you step into the narrow Shikumen lanes, the rhythm changes completely. Old residential architecture is now filled with independent design studios, small art galleries, handmade craft shops, and hidden cafés. Your guide will not rush you here—you can simply wander, stop for photos, or grab a coffee in a quiet corner courtyard while watching daily life unfold around you. This is where Shanghai feels most "alive" in a very local and creative way.
A relaxed lunch is arranged in a nearby local restaurant, giving you time to sit down and reset before the afternoon transition into modern Shanghai.
After lunch, your driver takes you toward the financial district, where the skyline begins to dominate your view. You enter Shanghai World Financial Center, one of the city's most iconic skyscrapers. From the observation deck, you don't just look at Shanghai—you understand its structure. The Huangpu River curves like a boundary between eras: historic Bund buildings on one side, futuristic Pudong towers on the other. Your guide will point out key landmarks so the skyline starts to feel readable rather than overwhelming.
If the weather is clear, this is often one of the most visually impressive moments of the entire Shanghai portion of the trip.
After descending, your driver brings you back to your hotel in the late afternoon. The rest of the evening is free for you to relax, walk around nearby streets, or simply recover before tomorrow's journey to Suzhou.
Early in the morning, your driver picks you up directly from your Shanghai hotel and takes you to the high-speed railway station. Your tickets are pre-arranged, and the transfer is smooth and stress-free, so you simply walk through security and board your train to Suzhou.
The ride takes less than an hour, but the atmosphere changes quickly—from Shanghai's dense skyline to Suzhou's slower rhythm of canals, low-rise rooftops, and traditional water-town scenery.
Upon arrival, your local guide meets you at Suzhou station and you begin your day immediately without waiting or detours.
Your first stop is Lingering Garden, one of the most refined classical gardens in China. Unlike open parks, this garden is designed like a sequence of visual chapters. As you walk through narrow corridors, hidden courtyards, rock formations, and still ponds appear one after another, each carefully framed like a painting. Your guide will help you notice the subtle design logic—how space is controlled, how views are "borrowed" from outside, and how every turn creates a new composition. It's not just beauty; it's architecture designed for slow observation.
From here, you continue to Panmen Gate, one of the oldest remaining city gates in China. This site is especially interesting because it combines land and water defense systems—ancient walls, gate towers, and canal structures all existing together in one space. Standing here, you start to understand how Suzhou was once a strategically important water city, not just a cultural one. The surrounding waterways and bridges give you a very different perspective compared to the peaceful gardens earlier in the morning.
A local lunch is arranged at a carefully selected Suzhou restaurant, where you can try regional specialties such as Suzhou-style noodles and seasonal local dishes. This is a relaxed stop to reset before the cultural highlights continue.
In the afternoon, you head to Hanshan Temple. The temple is peaceful and shaded, and the atmosphere immediately slows your pace again. The famous bell tower and ancient poems associated with this place give it a strong literary and historical identity. Your guide will share the background of the Tang Dynasty poem that made this temple internationally known, helping you connect the site with its cultural meaning.
Next, you visit Suzhou No.1 Silk Mill, where Suzhou's long history of silk production comes to life. Instead of just reading about silk culture, you can actually see how silk threads are processed, woven, and transformed into fabric. It's a very different kind of stop—more practical, but it explains why Suzhou became one of China's most important trade cities.
In the late afternoon, your driver takes you back to Suzhou railway station for your return high-speed train to Shanghai. Once you arrive, your private driver is already waiting and transfers you back to your hotel smoothly. The evening is completely free, giving you time to rest and prepare for tomorrow's transition from Shanghai to Hangzhou.
After breakfast, your driver picks you up from your Shanghai hotel and takes you to the high-speed railway station. Your train tickets are pre-arranged, so you move through the station smoothly and head toward Hangzhou in comfort. In just about an hour, the scenery outside the window begins to soften—high-rise buildings gradually give way to water towns, lakes, and greener landscapes.
Upon arrival in Hangzhou, your local guide and driver are already waiting for you at the station. From here, you are driven directly to your first highlight of the day—West Lake.
You start with a gentle boat ride across the lake. Instead of rushing around viewpoints, you experience West Lake in its most natural rhythm—slow movement over water, willow branches touching the surface, and distant pagodas appearing through soft haze. This is the moment where Hangzhou starts to feel different from Shanghai and Suzhou—it slows you down without you realizing it.
After the boat ride, you continue to Guo Garden, a quiet classical residence located by the lakeside. The layout is intimate and elegant, with small courtyards opening toward lake views. Your guide will explain how traditional Chinese garden design always tries to "borrow scenery," so what you see is never limited to the garden itself, but extends into the lake and surrounding hills.
A local lunch is arranged at a carefully selected restaurant, where you can try authentic Hangzhou cuisine such as seasonal river fish dishes and light, fresh local specialties. This is a relaxed stop, giving you time to enjoy the slower culinary style of the region.
In the afternoon, you visit China National Tea Museum. Here, your experience shifts from landscape to culture. Instead of just learning about tea, you walk through the history of how Longjing tea shaped Hangzhou's identity. Your guide will also explain how tea culture is closely tied to Chinese daily life, etiquette, and philosophy.
After the museum, you are taken into the nearby Longjing tea region, where green tea fields stretch across the hills. Even if you do not stop for a formal tea ceremony, the drive itself gives you a strong sense of why this area is considered one of the most important tea-producing regions in China.
As the afternoon light becomes softer, you head to Leifeng Pagoda. From the top, you get a panoramic view of West Lake as the sun begins to lower. The lake reflects golden light, distant hills fade into layers of blue, and the entire landscape becomes almost painterly. This is often considered one of the most atmospheric moments of the day.
After the visit, your driver takes you directly to your hotel in Hangzhou for check-in. The evening is free for you to rest or explore nearby streets at your own pace, as the journey continues deeper into Hangzhou and beyond tomorrow.
After breakfast, your driver meets you at your hotel and you set off for a full day exploring Hangzhou's spiritual culture, tea countryside, and riverside heritage. Today's route is designed to feel more immersive and relaxed—you move from forested temples to tea hills, then into bamboo paths and historic streets, each stop with a very different rhythm.
Your morning begins at Lingyin Temple, one of the most important Buddhist temples in China. Your driver drops you at the entrance, and your guide leads you through the surrounding Feilai Feng grotto area first, where hundreds of ancient stone carvings are hidden among cliffs and forest.
As you enter the temple complex itself, the atmosphere becomes noticeably quieter. Incense smoke rises through the air, monks move slowly through courtyards, and ancient halls sit beneath tall trees that have been here for centuries. Your guide will point out the key halls and explain the cultural meaning behind the architecture and statues, so you can understand the site beyond its surface beauty.
From here, you continue into the nearby tea countryside of Meijiawu, part of the famous Longjing tea region. Here, the landscape opens up into rolling green hills filled with tea terraces. At Meijiawu Tea Village, you don't just pass through—you actually walk between the tea fields, watching how leaves are picked and processed depending on the season.
A countryside-style lunch is arranged here, usually in a local tea farmhouse, where dishes are light, fresh, and closely tied to the region's agricultural lifestyle. This is also where you get a closer look at how tea tasting is traditionally done in Hangzhou.
In the afternoon, your driver takes you to the peaceful Yunqi Bamboo Lined Path. This is one of the most calming walking routes in the city. Tall bamboo grows densely on both sides, forming a natural green corridor. As you walk, the sound becomes softer, the temperature slightly cooler, and the entire environment feels separated from the city. Your guide will let you move at your own pace here, since this stop is more about atmosphere than sightseeing intensity.
Next, you head toward the riverside to visit Six Harmonies Pagoda. Standing near the Qiantang River, this historic pagoda offers wide, open views of the river landscape. Compared to the enclosed gardens and bamboo paths earlier in the day, this stop feels much more expansive and structured, showing another side of Hangzhou's geography and history.
As the day approaches its end, your final stop is Qinghefang Old Street. Here, the energy shifts again. Traditional shops, local snacks, tea houses, and handicraft stores line the old street, and the atmosphere becomes lively but still rooted in history. Your guide will point out local specialties and give you time to explore freely, whether you want to shop, try street food, or simply walk through the lantern-lit lanes.
After the visit, your driver takes you back to your hotel in Hangzhou. The rest of the evening is free for you to rest, as tomorrow you begin the journey toward Huangshan and its mountain landscapes.
After breakfast at your hotel in Hangzhou, your driver meets you in the lobby and takes you to the high-speed railway station. Your train tickets are arranged in advance, so you simply pass through the station and board your train toward Huangshan. As the train leaves Hangzhou behind, the scenery gradually changes again—lakes and rivers give way to rolling hills, farmland, and distant mountain silhouettes.
This is the transition day of the journey, where the pace naturally slows down as you move closer to China's most iconic mountain landscape.
Upon arrival at Huangshan railway station, your local driver is already waiting at the exit with your name sign. From here, you are transferred directly to your hotel in the Tunxi area. The drive is short, but it already introduces you to a very different atmosphere—quieter streets, traditional architecture, and a slower rhythm compared to Hangzhou. After check-in, you have time to rest before heading out again in the late afternoon.
Later in the day, your driver takes you to Tunxi Old Street, one of the best-preserved historic streets in the region. This area is known for its Hui-style architecture, with white walls, dark tiled roofs, and wooden storefronts that reflect the merchant culture of southern Anhui.
Walking along the stone-paved street, you'll notice small tea shops, ink-and-brush stores, traditional snack stalls, and family-run workshops that have been operating for generations. Your guide will point out the architectural details and explain how this region historically served as a trading hub between mountain villages and larger cities.
A relaxed local dinner is arranged at a carefully selected restaurant in the old street area, giving you a first taste of Anhui cuisine—more earthy, slightly richer in flavor, and very different from the lighter tastes of Hangzhou and Shanghai.
After dinner, your driver takes you back to your hotel. The rest of the evening is free for you to rest and prepare for tomorrow's full-day exploration of Huangshan Mountain, the highlight of the entire journey.
After breakfast in Tunxi, your driver picks you up from the hotel and takes you directly to the entrance of Huangshan Mountain. Today is not just a sightseeing day—you will actually stay overnight on the mountain, which gives you a completely different experience compared to a same-day visit. All logistics are arranged in advance, including entrance tickets, cable car access, luggage handling support, and mountain accommodation coordination. You only carry a small overnight bag, while the rest can be safely stored and transferred by the team.
After arriving at the scenic area, you take the cable car up the mountain. As you rise above the forest line, the landscape changes quickly—dense greenery disappears, replaced by steep granite peaks, twisted pine trees, and drifting clouds moving between cliffs.
Your first section on the mountain is the Yuping area, where iconic scenery begins to unfold. This is where you start to understand why Huangshan is often described as a "living landscape painting." Every few steps opens a new composition—rock formations shaped by time, ancient pines growing directly from stone cracks, and valleys filled with shifting mist.
As you continue toward Bright Summit, the terrain becomes more open and elevated. This is one of the best places on the mountain to experience wide panoramic views. If weather conditions are favorable, you may witness the famous "sea of clouds" rolling beneath the peaks, where mountain ridges appear and disappear like islands floating in the sky.
Your guide will adjust the walking route depending on visibility and crowd flow, ensuring you always reach the clearest viewpoints without rushing through the experience.
In the afternoon, you continue toward the dramatic cliff formations around Flying-over Rock. This area is known for its surreal balance of massive granite stones seemingly placed on narrow platforms. It often feels like nature is defying gravity here. Instead of rushing through checkpoints, you move slowly between viewpoints, allowing time for photography, short breaks, and simply standing still to take in the scale of the landscape.
By late afternoon, you are transferred to your mountain hotel for check-in. Staying overnight on Huangshan is a completely different experience from a day trip—the atmosphere becomes quiet, mist often moves through the peaks, and as the crowds leave, the mountain slowly returns to its natural rhythm.
After dinner arranged at the hotel, you can step outside briefly to experience the sunset light over the peaks. As night falls, the temperature drops, and the mountain becomes extremely peaceful, with only wind and distant natural sounds around you.
You stay overnight on the mountain, which gives you the rare chance to experience sunrise potential the next morning if weather conditions allow.
Waking up on Huangshan Mountain is a completely different experience from anything in the cities below. If weather conditions allow, your early morning begins with a short walk near your hotel to catch the sunrise. The mountain is quiet at this time—no crowds, only wind, shifting mist, and the first light slowly breaking over the granite peaks.
When clouds are low, you may witness the famous "sea of clouds" effect, where mountain ridges appear like islands floating above white mist. It is one of those moments where everything feels still, even though the landscape is constantly moving.
After sunrise, you return to the hotel for breakfast and check-out, while your luggage is handled and transferred back down the mountain by our arranged service.
In the morning, you continue exploring a nearby scenic section of Huangshan, including viewpoints around Lion Peak area. This is one of the most photogenic parts of the mountain, where pine trees grow from steep cliffs and rock formations take on dramatic shapes depending on light and weather. Compared to yesterday's longer hiking day, today is more relaxed, allowing you to revisit highlights at a slower pace and enjoy different angles of the same landscape. Your guide will adjust the route depending on visibility and timing, making sure you get the best possible views before descending.
Late morning, you begin your descent from the mountain by cable car, leaving behind the high-altitude scenery and gradually returning to the valley below. Once you meet your driver, you continue directly toward Hongcun Village.
The drive itself is a transition from natural mountain landscape to rural cultural scenery—small villages, terraced fields, and traditional Hui-style architecture appear along the way, signaling your arrival into one of China's most iconic ancient village regions.
Upon arrival at Hongcun, you enter a completely different visual world. The village is built around a carefully designed water system, where canals run between whitewashed houses with black-tiled roofs, reflecting perfectly in still pools. It feels less like a settlement and more like a living painting.
Your guide will take you through the main highlights such as the Moon Pond and the surrounding ancestral halls, explaining how merchant families once designed the entire village layout based on feng shui principles and water management systems. Instead of rushing, you walk slowly through narrow lanes, bridges, and courtyards, absorbing the atmosphere of daily rural life that still continues here today.
A local lunch is arranged in or near the village, giving you time to rest and enjoy authentic Anhui-style cuisine in a quiet setting.
In the afternoon, you begin your return journey back to Tunxi. Upon arrival, your driver takes you once again to Tunxi Old Street for a final relaxed walk. After days of mountains and villages, this street feels familiar now—traditional architecture, tea shops, ink stores, and small local restaurants all blending into a calm evening atmosphere. You have time here for light shopping, tea tasting, or simply walking without any schedule pressure. After the visit, your driver transfers you back to your hotel in Tunxi.
After an unforgettable journey through Shanghai, Suzhou, Hangzhou, and the mountains of Huangshan, your final morning in Huangshan Mountain starts at a relaxed pace. There's no rush today. You wake up at your hotel in Tunxi and enjoy a slow breakfast while taking in the last bit of the local atmosphere. Depending on your train schedule, you still have a short window to simply sit back and let the journey settle in your memory.
At the agreed time, your driver meets you in the hotel lobby and assists you with your luggage. Everything is handled smoothly and on time, so you don't need to worry about navigating or carrying bags through the station.
You are then transferred directly to Huangshan Railway Station by private car. The drive is comfortable and straightforward, passing familiar streets of Tunxi and surrounding countryside one last time. Upon arrival at the high-speed rail station, your driver helps you with directions and ensures you reach the correct departure area before saying goodbye.
This marks the end of your 10-day journey across eastern China—from Shanghai's skyline to Suzhou's gardens, from Hangzhou's West Lake to the misty peaks of Huangshan. You leave with a full collection of landscapes, but more importantly, a complete experience of China's most iconic cultural and natural contrasts.
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Very Smooth and Well-Organized Tour
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Highly Recommended for First-Time Visitors to China
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