
Keep only if the mountain is protected
If Zhangjiajie is the emotional reason for the trip, it needs enough nights, weather buffer, and a clean park sequence.
This sample reviews a 10-day first-China route trying to keep Beijing, Xi'an, Zhangjiajie, and Shanghai. The emotional idea is strong, but the scenic anchor is too fragile to book safely yet.
You do not need a polished itinerary. Send the month, days, travelers, must-see places, and the part that feels risky.
A good sample verdict uses each visual to answer a practical question: keep it, make it optional, or cut it first if the route is short on time.

If Zhangjiajie is the emotional reason for the trip, it needs enough nights, weather buffer, and a clean park sequence.

Lower, calmer scenic time can help the route, but only after the main mountain days and hotel base are protected.

If 10 days are fixed, reduce city variety or side trips before squeezing the scenic anchor into one fragile day.
Most route mistakes happen because every attractive stop is treated as equally important. The first useful verdict separates what deserves protection from what should wait.
At least two real mountain days, three nights when possible, and a cleaner arrival-and-departure pattern around the scenic base.
Either extend the trip, or simplify to Beijing plus Zhangjiajie plus Shanghai, or choose Guilin as the softer scenic anchor.
Do not lock internal flights, park tickets, or hotel nights before the scenic priority and walking comfort are clear.
Amber-red: memorable idea, but too tight as a 10-day first-China route if Zhangjiajie must feel worthwhile.
At least two real mountain days, three nights when possible, and a cleaner arrival-and-departure pattern around the scenic base.
Do not lock internal flights, park tickets, or hotel nights before the scenic priority and walking comfort are clear.
Either extend the trip, or simplify to Beijing plus Zhangjiajie plus Shanghai, or choose Guilin as the softer scenic anchor.
The route spends real money and energy reaching the mountains, but protects only one weather-sensitive sightseeing day.
Airports, luggage, hotel moves, and early departures start to dominate what should have been the emotional highlight.
Flights and hotels may look bookable, but the park sequence, walking comfort, and weather logic are still unresolved.
Many first-China travelers try to keep the classic cities and add Zhangjiajie as if the mountains cost only one extra box on the map.
What gets underestimated is weather sensitivity, hotel placement, walking load, and rushed scenic time.
A better route protects one dramatic reason for the trip instead of forcing every saved place into one loop.
Your route can work emotionally: classic cities plus one dramatic scenic anchor. Right now, Zhangjiajie is under-protected.
Before booking, decide whether Zhangjiajie is the main reason for the trip or only a nice-to-have add-on. If it is the main reason, give it more nights. If comfort matters more, Guilin may fit 10 days better.
The next useful details are travel month, arrival and departure cities, walking comfort, and whether scenery matters more than city variety.