Luquan Yi and Miao Autonomous County is an autonomous county, under the jurisdiction of Kunming, Yunnan, China, bordering Sichuan province to the north. As of the 2020 census the population was 378,881.
The county seat has two bus stations. The first is the long-distance Kunming-Luquan bus station, near the access to the G108 highway. The second is the local public bus station behind the Wuxinglu street market, with buses north to Maoshan, Tuanjie, Zhongping and Sayingpan, south to Songde, east to Cuihua and west to Wuding County.
Luquan County borders Xundian County and Dongchuan District to the east, Fumin County to the south, Wuding County to the west, and Huili and Huidong County of Sichuan across the Jinsha River to the north.
Luquan's agriculture is specialized in sericulture, chestnuts, white kidney beans, coffee, and tobacco.
29.95% of the population in 2020 belonged to ethnic minorities, mainly Yi and Miao.
There are 1,026 ethnic Hani as of 1990, who live in Xiaojing ç¡Â亠and Liuhe å Âå of Chongde Township å´Â德乡, and Xinglong å ´é¾ and Chutu Ã¥ÂÂé of Cuihua Township ç¿ åÂÂ乡 (Luquan County Gazetteer 1995:150). The only Hani-speaking village is Liuhe å Âå of Chongde Township å´Â德乡. Their autonym is Luomian ç½Âç¼ .
Sayingpan-zhen (), north of the county seat of Luquan, was the original site of Salaowu (), the headquarters of the Yi.
The Luquan County Gazetteer (1995:132) lists the following Yi subgroups.