7-Day Xinjiang Itinerary

Published: 2026-07-08 | Author: Karl Huang

I learned the hard way to build buffer into any Xinjiang day. 7-Day Xinjiang rewarded the slow approach — the gate, the light, the unplanned lunch that turned into an invitation. This guide to 7-Day Xinjiang Itinerary pulls together what I tell clients after eight seasons on the road in Xinjiang (planning-wide) — the practical stuff that actually changes a trip. For the wider plan, start with the xinjiang itinerary and the minfeng if it sits on your route.

Quick Reference

Item Detail
Location Xinjiang (planning-wide)
Best time June-September for scenery; late Sept-Oct for golden forests and deserts; May/Sep for thin crowds.
Elevation n/a
Ticket / cost n/a
Base hub Urumqi (start/end)

7-Day Xinjiang Itinerary

Why 7-Day Xinjiang Earns a Place on the Route

A realistic one-week Xinjiang route. North loop: Urumqi -> Heavenly Lake -> Urumqi -> flight to Altay -> Burqin -> Kanas -> Hemu -> back. Or a south/east loop if autumn colours are the goal. Seven days is enough for one region done well, not the whole map.

The infrastructure has improved enormously since my first visit, but the sense that you are at the edge of a very large map has not changed.

What stays with me is the scale. Xinjiang does not do small, and 7-Day Xinjiang is no exception — you feel the distance in your shoulders by midday.

The sensory memory I keep is specific: the dry cold of the morning, the smell of smoke from a roadside grill, the way a distant range changes colour as the sun clears the ridge. If your loop continues, the colorful beach (wucaitan) is the natural next read, and the silk road ski resort travel guide helps you time the seasons across the region.

Highlights Worth the Stop

  • Keep it to one region (north Altai OR Ili meadows OR a Turpan-Kashgar taste) — Xinjiang’s distances make a ‘see everything’ week a mistake. Build in one flex day.
  • The surrounding Xinjiang (planning-wide) gives 7-Day Xinjiang its context — nearby passes, lakes and villages worth a detour.
  • Local life runs on the market clock; timing a visit around a bazaar or a festival day changes the whole feel.

How to Get There

Urumqi (start/end)

From Urumqi. Most routes start here. Depending on the region that is a 1-hour flight, a 5-10 hour train, or a long highway drive. I treat the Urumqi-to-hub leg as fixed and the hub-to-7-Day Xinjiang leg as the variable I plan around. The xinjiang travel guide covers the bookings and the permits you may need for the final stretch.

By road. Self-driving works where the roads are open (the Duku Highway and the desert highways are seasonal). Otherwise a local driver saves the headache of parking, permits and the long empty stretches between services.

Getting Around Locally

Inside the scenic areas, electric shuttles and fixed-route buses do the work — you rarely need your own wheels once you are in. Between towns, the gap is filled by hired cars and the occasional intercity bus. I pre-arrange drivers through the hotel; it costs a little more than flagging one down but removes the guesswork at 7am.

What to book first. Lock the long-haul flight or train into Xinjiang, then the regional hop to Xinjiang (planning-wide), then the hotel. Tickets to the headline sights sell at the gate, but the transport sells out. I have missed a connection by a day more than once by leaving the booking late in July and October — those are the weeks to be early.

Best Time to Visit

Continental throughout — huge day-night temperature swings everywhere, very dry air, intense high summer sun.

Season What to expect My take
Spring (Apr-May) Apricot blossoms in the Ili valleys, mild desert days, some high passes still closed Quiet and green; a favourite
Summer (Jun-Aug) Alpine meadows at their peak, long daylight, the July-August domestic peak Best scenery, heaviest crowds
Autumn (Sep-Oct) Golden forests and Populus, cool clear days, the headline photo window The best all-round month
Winter (Nov-Mar) Snow scenery, frozen lakes, skiing, many guesthouses shut Great for photography, check access

My recommendation: June-September for scenery; late Sept-Oct for golden forests and deserts; May/Sep for thin crowds. If your dates are fixed, build the rest of the route around the season rather than fighting it. The silk road ski resort travel guide breaks the window down region by region.

Where to Stay

From YHA-style hostels to five-star city hotels; book peak-season (Jul-Aug, Oct) early.

  • Budget (¥120-220/night). County-town hotels and hostels; clean and functional, often with a great local breakfast nearby.
  • Mid-range (¥250-500/night). The comfortable choice — reliable heating, an English-friendly front desk, and a location that saves a transfer.
  • Upper (¥600+/night). Lakeside or old-town properties with character; worth it for a quiet morning you cannot get elsewhere.

For 7-Day Xinjiang I look for three things: heating that works in the cold months, a driver who knows the morning light, and a location that saves me an hour of transfer at dawn. Base yourself sensibly — the xinjiang travel guide has the lodging rundown if this stop sits inside a town.

Food

Polu, dapanji, naan, laghman, kebabs, raisins and dried fruit from every bazaar.

Dishes I actually order in this part of Xinjiang:

  • Polu (hand-grabbed rice) — lamb, carrot and rice cooked together, ¥25-40 a plate.
  • Dapanji (big-plate chicken) — chicken, potato and wide noodles in a savoury sauce, ¥50-80 for two.
  • Naan & kebabs — fresh from the tandir and the grill, ¥3-8 each.
  • Laghman — hand-pulled noodles with stir-fried topping, ¥20-35.
  • Bazaar sweets & dried fruit — raisins, apricot kernels, rose jam, ¥10-30 a bag.

A typical casual meal runs ¥30-60; a sit-down dinner for two is ¥80-150. The colorful beach (wucaitan) has the food-city rundown if you want to eat your way across the region.

Typical Daily Budget (per person)

Tier Lodging Food Transport & tickets Total/day
Budget ¥120-220 ¥60-90 ¥80-150 (shared car, shuttle) ¥260-460
Mid-range ¥250-500 ¥100-150 ¥150-300 ¥500-950
Upper ¥600-1200 ¥200-350 ¥300-600 (private driver) ¥1100-2150

These are planning numbers for Xinjiang (planning-wide), not quotes. The long-haul flight or train into Xinjiang is extra. I tell clients to hold 15% back as a buffer for the unplanned detour that turns out to be the best part of the trip.

A Note on Etiquette

Xinjiang is a mosaic of Uygur, Han, Kazakh, Hui, Kyrgyz and Tajik communities, each with its own customs. A little awareness goes a long way: ask before photographing people, dress modestly near active mosques, and accept the second cup of tea when offered — refusing it reads as a slight. The warmth you get back is worth the small effort, and it is the part of 7-Day Xinjiang that no ticket buys.

Practical Tips

  1. One region, not all. Seven days covers one area well; resist the urge to sprint.
  2. Fly the long legs. Urumqi-Altay or Urumqi-Kashgar flights save days.
  3. Flex day. Weather closes passes; keep one buffer day per week.
  4. Dress in layers, not in fashion. A basin morning at 8C and a noon at 28C in the same valley is a normal Xinjiang day.
  5. Verify permits before the Pamir. The Border Travel Permit is mandatory for the Karakoram Highway and Pamir villages — arrange it in Kashgar.
  6. Start scenic days early. Gates open around 9-10am and the light is best before noon. Crowds and haze both build after lunch.

Sample Itinerary

A realistic pacing for 7-Day Xinjiang:

  • Day 1 morning — arrive at the regional hub, sort permits or tickets, ease into the altitude and the light.
  • Day 1 afternoon — first scenic leg; catch the late light when the tour buses have gone.
  • Day 2 — the headline sight at opening time, then a slow transfer with one unplanned stop.
  • Day 3 (optional) — a side valley or a local market before the long drive or flight out.

To string several stops together, the xinjiang itinerary is the planner I point clients to.

FAQ

Q: Do I need a special visa or permit for Xinjiang?

A standard China visa covers Xinjiang. Only the Pamir Plateau and Karakoram Highway need the extra Border Travel Permit, arranged in Kashgar.

Q: How many days do I need for this part of Xinjiang?

A focused trip is 7-10 days; a relaxed one is 2-3 weeks. Build buffer for weather and long transfers.

Q: Is it safe for foreign travellers?

The region is heavily policed and generally safe for visitors who carry ID and follow permit rules.

Q: What should I pack?

Layers, sun protection, a refill bottle, and cash. In autumn and winter add a real warm jacket.

Q: When is the cheapest time to go?

April-May and September-October (outside the July-August peak) tend to have lower prices and thinner crowds.

7-Day Xinjiang Itinerary scenery

Disclaimer

Prices, permits, opening dates and road status change — sometimes within a season. Treat the figures above as a planning baseline and confirm with official sources and your hotel before you travel. I update routes when clients report changes, but I cannot guarantee real-time accuracy for every gate.

About the author

Karl Huang — Xinjiang Travel Specialist & Founder, Xinjiang Itinerary. Karl has spent eight seasons guiding and documenting travel across Xinjiang, from the Kanas forests of the north to the Pamir Plateau in the south. He founded Xinjiang Itinerary to publish first-hand, practical China travel guidance based on real trips, not brochures.