Chengdu 3-Day Panda & Leisure Journey
Giant Pandas, Teahouses, and the Art of Slow Living
Gallery
Giant Panda Base
A morning with China's most beloved residents at the world's leading panda breeding center.
Kuanzhai Alley
Restored Qing-era lanes of teahouses, courtyards, and Sichuan snacks.
Teahouse Culture
People's Park's open-air teahouse — the unhurried soul of Chengdu, ear-cleaning included.
Sichuan Flavors
Hotpot, mapo tofu, and street-market bites in the spice capital of China.
The City That Taught China to Slow Down
Chengdu has a reputation, and it earns it: this is the city of the teahouse and the mahjong table, of bamboo-munching pandas and bottomless pots of hotpot, where the pace is gentler and the pleasures are simple. Behind the leisure lies real depth — Three Kingdoms history, 1,400-year-old temples, restored Qing lanes — and three unhurried days, with a private guide, let you have both the icons and the ease.
Day 1: The Heart of the City
The journey opens at Chunxi Road, the buzzing pulse of modern Chengdu, with the serene Daci Temple — fourteen centuries old — tucked just behind. The afternoon drifts along snack-lined Xiangxiang Lane and the riverside to Dongmen Bridge, ending at the glowing Anshun covered bridge as it lights up over the Jin River.
Day 2: History & Teahouse Calm
Morning brings the Wuhou Shrine, China’s foremost memorial to the heroes of the Three Kingdoms, all red walls and bamboo. You trace the city’s long story at the Chengdu Museum, then do as the locals do — a cup of tea, perhaps an ear-cleaning, at the open-air teahouse in People’s Park. The afternoon belongs to the restored Qing-era lanes of Kuanzhai Alley and the lively bites of Kuixinglou Street.
Day 3: Pandas & Easy Pleasures
An early start for the moment everyone comes for: the Giant Panda Breeding Base, where the morning catches the pandas at their most playful, tumbling and feasting on bamboo. The afternoon turns to the industrial-chic Eastern Suburb Memory arts district and the incense-wreathed calm of Wenshu Monastery, before the city’s beloved street food at the Jianshe Road night market sends you off happy.
What’s Included
A private car with a dedicated English-speaking guide for all three days, your Panda Base, Wuhou Shrine and museum tickets, the advance reservations Chengdu requires, two nights at a centrally located hotel, daily breakfast and two lunches, and all transfers. The early panda booking, the cross-city hops, the queues — handled, so the days stay as relaxed as the city itself.
Pricing
- USD $568 / RMB ¥3,920 per person (standard)
- USD $798 per person (premium hotel & private upgrades)
- Group rates available on request
Three easy days in China’s most relaxed city — pandas in the morning, tea in the afternoon, and a bowl of something fiery after dark.
Itinerary
Chunxi Road & Daci Temple
Begin in the buzzing heart of modern Chengdu at Chunxi Road, then step into the calm of the 1,400-year-old Daci Temple just behind it.
Xiangxiang Lane & Dongmen Bridge
Wander the snack-lined Xiangxiang Lane and along the river to Dongmen Bridge, the city's laid-back waterfront.
Anshun Bridge
End the day at the illuminated Anshun covered bridge, glowing over the Jin River — a Chengdu icon after dark.
Wuhou Shrine & Jinli
Explore the Wuhou Shrine, China's foremost memorial to the heroes of the Three Kingdoms, set among red walls and bamboo.
Chengdu Museum & People's Park
Trace the city's story at the excellent Chengdu Museum, then join the locals for tea at the open-air teahouse in People's Park.
Kuanzhai Alley & Kuixinglou Street
The restored Qing-era lanes of Kuanzhai Alley — teahouses and courtyards — followed by the trendy bites of Kuixinglou Street.
Giant Panda Breeding Base
An early start for the day's highlight: the pandas at their most active in the morning, tumbling and munching bamboo at the world's leading research base. Advance booking essential.
Eastern Suburb Memory & Wenshu Monastery
The industrial-chic arts district of Eastern Suburb Memory, then the serene Wenshu Monastery, Chengdu's best-preserved Buddhist temple.
Jianshe Road Night Market
Close with the city's favorite street food at the Jianshe Road night market before a final, well-earned rest.
Route Map
per person
Good to Know
- Best Season
- Spring (Mar–May) and autumn (Sep–Nov); flowers peak in spring
- Meeting Point
- Your Chengdu hotel lobby
- Group Size
- Private — your party only
- Languages
- English-speaking guide (other languages on request)
- What to Bring
-
- Comfortable walking shoes
- ID/passport for site entry and reservations
- Light layers (Chengdu is mild and humid)
- Camera
What's Included
- Private car with English-speaking guide (3 days)
- Giant Panda Base entrance ticket
- Wuhou Shrine & Chengdu Museum tickets
- Advance reservations for sites that require them
- 2 nights centrally located hotel
- Daily breakfast + 2 lunches
- All transfers between sites
Not Included
- Dinners (recommendations provided)
- Optional hotpot or Sichuan opera experience
- Personal expenses
- Gratuities
Ideal For
Frequently Asked Questions
What time do we visit the pandas, and why so early?
We start early because pandas are most active in the cool of the morning, feeding and playing; by midday they tend to sleep. The base also requires advance timed booking, which we arrange.
Can we add Leshan Giant Buddha or Dujiangyan?
Yes — both are popular day trips from Chengdu and can be added with an extra day; just let us know in advance.
Is the food very spicy?
Sichuan cuisine is famously bold, but your guide helps you find milder dishes and the best authentic spots to match your taste.
Can the itinerary be customized?
Absolutely. A hotpot dinner, a Sichuan opera face-changing show, or a tea ceremony can be added to suit your interests.