Introduction
Chongqing is China's largest direct-controlled municipality by area — 82,400 square kilometres, nearly the size of Austria, making it the largest "city" in the world by administrative territory. In reality, the municipality encompasses a dense urban core at the Yangtze-Jialing confluence, a vast rural hinterland of mountains, gorges, and agricultural counties, and several satellite cities. Separated from Sichuan province in 1997 to spearhead the development of western China, Chongqing municipality administers territory that stretches from the urban peninsula to the Three Gorges region.
Discover Chongqing
Chongqing was carved out of Sichuan province in 1997 as a separate municipality to serve as the administrative engine for developing China's western interior. The resulting entity is extraordinary in scale: 82,400 square kilometres (larger than Scotland, roughly equal to Austria) with a registered population of 32 million, though most of that population lives in rural counties far from the urban core. The municipality's territory stretches over 400 kilometres east to west, encompassing the dense river-junction metropolis, industrial satellite cities like Fuling and Wanzhou, agricultural valleys, and the western end of the Three Gorges. This makes Chongqing simultaneously one of the world's largest cities (by population and area of its administrative unit) and one of the most misleading — the urban agglomeration where visitors spend time houses roughly 10 million people, while the remaining 22 million live in the municipality's rural and semi-rural counties. Neighbouring provinces include Sichuan to the west, Guizhou to the south, Hunan to the southeast, and Hubei to the east.
Travel Types
Three Gorges Yangtze Cruise
The classic three-to-five-day river journey from Chongqing through Qutang, Wu, and Xiling gorges — sheer limestone cliffs, misty tributaries, shore temples, and the world's largest dam.
UNESCO Rock Carvings & Cave Art
Dazu's 50,000 Buddhist, Taoist, and Confucian sculptures in hillside grottoes, preserved in remarkable condition since the 9th-13th centuries — one of China's greatest cultural treasures.
Karst Landscapes & Natural Bridges
Wulong's enormous stone arches, deep sinkholes, and crystal-filled caves — UNESCO-listed karst geology in a dramatic canyon setting within the municipality.
Rural Municipality & Mountain Escapes
Hot springs, mountain hiking, river gorges, and agricultural valleys — the vast rural territory beyond the urban core that makes Chongqing the world's largest municipality by area.
Chongqing Municipality Travel Notes
- •Chongqing municipality is 82,400 square kilometres — the urban core where most visitors stay is roughly 10% of the total territory. Destinations like Dazu (130 km), Wulong (170 km), and the Three Gorges (300+ km east) are within the municipality but require significant travel time.
- •Three Gorges cruises depart from Chaotianmen Pier in central Chongqing. Book in advance during peak season (April-May, September-October). Downstream to Yichang takes 3-4 days; upstream takes 4-5 days. Luxury, standard, and budget boats are all available.
- •Chongqing is a 'furnace city' — summer temperatures regularly exceed 40C with oppressive humidity (June-August). Spring (March-May) and autumn (September-November) are ideal. Winter is mild but foggy — the city's ancient nickname 'Fog Capital' (Wudu) reflects persistent river-valley haze.
- •The urban core is hilly with multi-level streets — comfortable shoes are essential. Navigation apps sometimes fail on the vertical axis; addresses may list a floor number that corresponds to a different street level.
- •High-speed rail connects central Chongqing to Chengdu (1.5 hours), Guiyang (2 hours), and Xi'an (5 hours). The Chongqing-Chengdu corridor is one of China's busiest intercity routes with trains every few minutes.
Cities in Chongqing
1 city with detailed travel information