Winter Sports in China: A Growing Passion for Ice and Snow

Winter Sports in China: A Growing Passion for Ice and Snow

If you want to try winter sports in China, focus on the north first. Harbin and the areas around Beijing give you direct access to ice rinks, ski runs, and snow parks without long travel once you land.

Many locals started after the 2022 Games. Resorts added beginner runs and English signs, so you do not need prior experience or fluent Mandarin to get on the snow.

  • Harbin Ice and Snow World for skating and lantern-lit trails at night
  • Yabuli Ski Resort for groomed slopes and night skiing until 9 p.m.
  • Zhangjiakou for high-speed chairlifts and cross-country loops

Planning a First Trip

Book a package that includes gear rental and one lesson. Most resorts list prices in RMB on their apps, and you can pay with WeChat or Alipay at the ticket window.

Follow these steps on arrival:

  1. Land in Harbin or Beijing, then take the high-speed train (under three hours to most resorts).
  2. Rent boots and skis at the base; sizes run standard and staff adjust bindings on site.
  3. Start on the green run before lunch when lifts have shorter lines.
  4. Finish with hotpot nearby to warm up.

Check snow reports on the resort WeChat account the night before. Conditions change fast after a cold front, and the best powder days often fall mid-week when crowds stay home.

Resort Drive time from Beijing Best for
Yabuli 5 hours Full-day skiing
Chongli 2.5 hours Quick weekend trips
Harbin Flight plus 1 hour Ice activities

Bring layers you can peel off. Indoor base lodges stay warm, but chairlift rides get cold once the sun drops.

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