The dock timetable from Haian New Port Ferry to Haikou Xiuying Port is: 01:00, 03:00, 05:00, 07:00, 09:00, 11:00, 14:00, 17 :00, 21:00, 23:00.
Hai'an Port consists of three parts: Hai'an Port (commonly known as Hai'an Old Port), Hai'an New Port, and Guangdong-Hai Railway North Port. It is the largest car ferry terminal in the country. Hai'an Port and Haian New Port are car ferry terminals, and Guangdong-Hainan Railway Beigang is a train ferry terminal. On the south side of Hainan, that is, Haikou City, there are two ports, namely Xiuying Port and Guangdong-Hai Railway South Port. Xiuying Port is a car ferry terminal, and Guangdong-Hai Railway South Port is a train ferry terminal.
Hai'an Port and Hai'an New Port on the Hai'an side correspond to Xiuying Port on the Haikou side, and Guangdong-Sea Railway South Port corresponds to North Port. In 2011, there were more than 56,000 ships plying the Qiongzhou Strait, with 10.66 million passengers and 1.55 million vehicles. In 2013, Xuwen County's port cargo throughput was 93.06 million tons, a year-on-year increase of 13.1%, accounting for 51.7% of Zhanjiang City.
Tinmen Haiyun—Hai'an Port
Hai'an Port is located on the southern seaside of Hai'an Town, Xuwen County, Leizhou Peninsula, Guangdong Province. It is commonly known as Haian Old Port. It contains Hongkan and Paiweijiao in the east, Santangjiao in the west, Dashuiqiao Creek in the north, and Qiongzhou Strait in the south. The water is open and it faces Hainan Island across the sea.
"Leizhou Prefecture Chronicles" records that Hai'an was originally called Bozhang Village. Before the Ming Dynasty, there were six major villages in this area, all under the jurisdiction of Taiping Township, Xuwen County, Leizhou Prefecture. With a large population and abundant products, it was a well-known land of fish and rice. However, because it is located on the border and surrounded by the sea on three sides, coastal villages are often attacked by Japanese pirates, and ships passing by are often intercepted and robbed by pirates. People's lives and property are not protected. In the twenty-seventh year of Hongwu in the Ming Dynasty (1394), in order to prevent pirates and Japanese pirates from escaping, the Ming court built the Qianhusuo City here, and later established the Ninghai Inspection Department.