Overview
An eight-day chauffeured self-drive along the Hexi Corridor Silk Road, linking Dunhuang's Mogao Caves, Zhangye's rainbow Danxia and the Jiayuguan fort.
About This Tour
The Hexi Corridor is the narrow desert artery between the snowcapped Qilian Mountains and the Gobi that carried caravans, monks and armies along the ancient Silk Road for two thousand years. This eight-day grand drive follows their tracks from the dunes of Dunhuang to the great frontier fortress of Jiayuguan, the westernmost end of the Ming Great Wall, taking in the Mogao Grotto Buddhist cave-temples, the Crescent Lake oasis, the surreal rainbow-striped Danxia landform at Zhangye, the Mati Si grottoes and vast Qilian grasslands. Because foreign visitors cannot legally self-drive in China, this is a chauffeured/guided self-drive: you travel in a private SUV with a professional English-speaking driver-guide who handles routing, history and logistics while you relax, photograph and explore freely. Crucially, this is the most foreigner-friendly of our self-drive routes, requiring no border permits anywhere along the way. Roads are excellent paved highways at moderate elevation, making it comfortable for families and first-time China travellers. It is superb from May through October, with summer ideal for the green Qilian grasslands and autumn for clear desert light. Ideal for history buffs, photographers and culture lovers. Private tour, priced per person. Itinerary may adjust based on weather, road and border-area regulations. Good to know: • This is a chauffeured/guided self-drive: foreign visitors cannot self-drive in China, so a licensed English-speaking driver-guide does the driving • Best season: May to October; summer is greenest for the Qilian grasslands, autumn offers crisp desert light, and winter is cold but uncrowded • No border permits are required anywhere on this route, making it the most foreigner-friendly self-drive we offer • Fitness level: easy; mostly driving with short walks at sites, plus optional dune climbing • Altitude: low to moderate, generally 1,100-2,800 m; no high-altitude concerns for most travellers • Mogao Caves visits are timed and ticketed in advance; bring your passport for booking and entry • Private tour, priced per person
Itinerary
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Day 1: Dunhuang|Arrival at the Edge of the Gobi
Your driver-guide meets you at Dunhuang airport or rail station (around 15 km, 20 min) and transfers you to a comfortable hotel in this legendary oasis town at about 1,100 m. Dunhuang was a thriving Silk Road crossroads where Chinese, Indian and Central Asian cultures met. After settling in there is time to relax and beat the desert heat, then in the cool of evening explore the lively Shazhou night market for hand-pulled noodles, donkey-meat huangmian and apricot juice. Over dinner your guide outlines the eight-day route west to east and the Mogao Caves booking. No driving today. Overnight in a 4-star Dunhuang hotel. Meals: Dinner included.
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Day 2: Dunhuang|Mogao Caves & Singing-Sand Dunes
A full day in Dunhuang with minimal driving (sites are within 30 km). The morning is devoted to the UNESCO-listed Mogao Grottoes, a thousand-year gallery of Buddhist cave-temples with exquisite murals and painted statues; visits run on timed, guided rotations through a selection of caves. In the late afternoon, when the light softens, we drive 6 km to the Mingsha Singing-Sand Dunes and the Crescent Lake, a spring-fed oasis cradled by towering dunes. Climb the ridge for sunset, ride a camel or sandboard if you wish, and watch the desert turn copper. Overnight in your Dunhuang hotel. Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 3: Dunhuang to Jiayuguan|The Western Frontier
An easy 380 km, roughly 4.5 hour drive east on smooth Gobi expressway. En route we detour to the Yumen Pass (Jade Gate) and the eroded Yardang badlands of the Western Thousand Buddha Caves area if time and conditions allow, evoking the lonely outer edge of the empire. Arriving in Jiayuguan, we visit the magnificent Jiayuguan Fort, the grand western terminus of the Ming Great Wall, its watchtowers rising from the desert with the snowy Qilian range behind. We may also see the Overhanging Great Wall clinging to a ridge. Overnight in a comfortable Jiayuguan hotel (around 1,600 m). Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 4: Jiayuguan to Zhangye|Rainbow Mountains
A relaxed 220 km, about 3 hour drive east brings us to Zhangye. In the late afternoon we enter the Zhangye Danxia National Geopark, a sci-fi landscape of sandstone hills striped in red, gold, green and lavender, sharpest under low-angle light. We ride the park shuttle between four viewing platforms, timing the famous ridge overlook for the colour-saturating sunset. The geology is a 24-million-year layering of mineral-rich sediments, uplifted and eroded into rolling rainbow ridges unlike anywhere else in China. Optional: a hot-air balloon over the formations at dawn the next day. Overnight in a comfortable Zhangye hotel (around 1,480 m). Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 5: Zhangye|Mati Si Grottoes & Qilian Grasslands
Today we head south of Zhangye toward the Qilian Mountains, a scenic round trip of around 130 km, 3-4 hours of total driving with frequent stops. We visit the Mati Si (Horseshoe Temple) grottoes, Buddhist shrines and pagodas carved vertically into a sheer red cliff face, reached by atmospheric tunnels and stairways with valley views. Beyond, the road climbs into rolling alpine grasslands grazed by Yugur and Tibetan herders' yaks and sheep, with snow peaks behind, a green sea in summer scattered with wildflowers and Mongolian yurts where we can stop for milk tea. Overnight back in Zhangye. Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 6: Zhangye to Wuwei|Tianti Mountain & Caravan Towns
We continue east along the corridor for about 280 km, roughly 3.5 hours, toward Wuwei (ancient Liangzhou), once the largest city in the northwest and a key Silk Road hub. En route, conditions permitting, we visit the Tiantishan Grottoes, the 'cradle of Chinese cave art' set above a turquoise reservoir, or the Leitai Han Tomb where China's iconic Galloping Horse bronze was unearthed. Wuwei's Confucian Temple and Kumarajiva Pagoda tell of the city's role in spreading Buddhism eastward. The corridor narrows here between desert and mountain, a tangible sense of the historic trade road. Overnight in a comfortable Wuwei hotel (around 1,500 m). Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 7: Wuwei to Lanzhou|Yellow River Capital
A comfortable 270 km, roughly 3.5 hour drive brings the corridor to its eastern mouth at Lanzhou, the provincial capital strung along the Yellow River. En route we can stop to view a stretch of rammed-earth Han or Ming Great Wall standing in the fields, a fitting bookend to Jiayuguan in the west. In Lanzhou we walk the Yellow River embankment, see the Zhongshan Iron Bridge ('First Bridge of the Yellow River') and the Waterwheel Garden, and of course sample a bowl of Lanzhou beef noodles at the source. Overnight in a comfortable Lanzhou hotel (around 1,520 m). Meals: Breakfast, Lunch included.
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Day 8: Lanzhou|Departure
After breakfast, depending on your onward plans, we visit the Gansu Provincial Museum to see the original Galloping Horse bronze and Silk Road artefacts that tie the whole journey together, or take a morning stroll along the river. Your driver-guide then transfers you to Lanzhou Zhongchuan airport (around 70 km, 1 hour) or the high-speed rail station and helps with check-in. For travellers continuing on, we can arrange extensions to Xiahe's Labrang Monastery or the Bingling Si grottoes. This concludes your eight-day Hexi Corridor Silk Road self-drive. Meals: Breakfast included.
What's Included
✓ Included
English-speaking professional driver-guide Private SUV with fuel, tolls and parking Hotels as per itinerary (4-star standard) Listed scenic-area entrance tickets including Mogao Caves and Zhangye Danxia Daily breakfast plus meals as specified (B/L/D) Airport/rail transfers in Dunhuang and Jiayuguan Bottled water in vehicle
✕ Not included
International and domestic flights or trains China visa Travel insurance Meals not specified Tips and gratuities Personal expenses Single supplement Optional camel rides and night shows
Cancellation Policy
Free cancellation is available on most tours up to 24 hours before the start time. The exact cancellation terms for this tour are shown during booking.
Traveler Reviews
4.7★★★★★Based on 198 reviews
Thomas H.🇸🇬 Singapore★★★★★2025-11
Seeing the Mogao Grottoes was even better than the photos, and everything was well planned and stress-free.
Marco F.🇮🇪 Ireland★★★★★2024-10
Beautifully organised visit to the Mogao Grottoes — our guide timed everything to dodge the queues.
Laura D.🇺🇸 USA★★★★★2025-10
Our visit to the Mogao Grottoes is what the kids keep talking about. Wonderful pace for families.

