Do I need to book Gyanak Mani / Mani Temple stone city (新寨嘉那嘛呢石经城) (Yushu) in advance?
No reservation wall here — walk-up works. officialBookingUrl null and prices null: this is a working pilgrimage site rather than a ticketed attraction, and we could not verify a current standardised admission, so treat any figure as unconfirmed and ask locally. The Gyanak Mani (Jiana Mani) is the headline sight: the largest pile of carved mani prayer-stones in the Tibetan world — flat stones each hand-carved with the mantra 'om mani padme hum' or scripture, heaped over roughly two centuries into a vast walled mound said to hold on the order of two billion stones across about a square kilometre. Pilgrims circle it endlessly, adding stones; you'll hear the murmur of prayer and the click of prayer wheels. It was damaged in the 2010 earthquake and has been restored. Go at dawn or late afternoon for the light and the pilgrim traffic.
Can I buy Gyanak Mani / Mani Temple stone city (新寨嘉那嘛呢石经城) tickets from a third-party app or OTA?
No — only the official channel works. Third-party listings are markup or scams.
Can foreigners book Gyanak Mani / Mani Temple stone city (新寨嘉那嘛呢石经城) with a passport?
Walk-up. It's a few kilometres outside the town centre — roughly ¥15 by taxi, or bus no. 1 or no. 2 for a couple of yuan. No advance booking; bring your passport as ID. This is a living religious site, not a managed ticketed park, so move quietly and walk clockwise around the mounds as pilgrims do.
Do I need to book Princess Wencheng Temple (文成公主庙 / Bangu Monastery) (Yushu) in advance?
No reservation wall here — walk-up works. officialBookingUrl and prices null — no official ticketing channel or reliably current admission price we could verify; ask on arrival. A small but atmospheric Tang-era shrine tucked into a cliff gorge, dedicated to Princess Wencheng, the Tang princess married to the Tibetan king Songtsen Gampo in the 7th century, who is said to have passed through here on the journey to Lhasa; the rock is carved with relief Buddhas and draped in prayer flags. If you wander into the monastery beside the temple you may meet a resident monk who, travellers note, sometimes speaks some English and is happy to show visitors around. The gorge setting and the prayer-flag-covered cliffs are the draw as much as the shrine itself.
Can I buy Princess Wencheng Temple (文成公主庙 / Bangu Monastery) tickets from a third-party app or OTA?
No — only the official channel works. Third-party listings are markup or scams.
Can foreigners book Princess Wencheng Temple (文成公主庙 / Bangu Monastery) with a passport?
Walk-up, no booking. It's about 20 km out of town down a gorge — roughly ¥50 by taxi one way, and travellers report it's easy to hitch a ride as there's little else on that road. Negotiate a driver to wait, or combine it with the Mani stones (they're in different directions, so agree the route and price first). Passport as ID.
Do I need to book Jyekundo Dondrubling Monastery (结古寺) (Yushu) in advance?
No reservation wall here — walk-up works. officialBookingUrl and prices null — an active monastery rather than a ticketed park; no official booking channel and no verified standard fee, so ask locally. Jyekundo Dondrubling (Jiegu) is the large hilltop Sakya-school monastery that overlooks the town and gives Yushu its Tibetan name, Jyekundo. It was badly damaged in the 2010 earthquake and has been rebuilt; the climb up gives the best overview of the rebuilt valley town. It's the easiest major Tibetan-Buddhist site to reach here since it's right above the centre — a good first-afternoon walk once you've started to acclimatise.
Can I buy Jyekundo Dondrubling Monastery (结古寺) tickets from a third-party app or OTA?
No — only the official channel works. Third-party listings are markup or scams.
Can foreigners book Jyekundo Dondrubling Monastery (结古寺) with a passport?
Walk-up from town — you can walk up the hill to it. No booking; passport as ID. As at any active monastery, dress modestly, ask before photographing monks or interiors, and walk clockwise around chapels and stupas.
Can foreigners book Longbao black-necked crane reserve & the Sanjiangyuan / source-of-three-rivers country (隆宝滩 · 三江源) with a passport?
This is remote high-plateau wildland, not a turnstile attraction. The Longbao (Longbaotan) wetland reserve is roughly 80 km west of Yushu toward Nangqen and is reached by hired car or a local driver, not public transport; you'd arrange a vehicle in town. There's no online booking and access to a national nature reserve's core zones can be restricted, so ask locally about current access and whether a guide or permit is needed before setting out. Passport as ID.
Can I pay with a foreign card (Visa/Mastercard) in Yushu?
It's hit-and-miss in Yushu. Don't rely on swiping a foreign card — set up Alipay or WeChat Pay for mobile payment and carry cash as a fallback.
Do hotels in Yushu accept foreign passports?
It varies in Yushu — mid-range and chain hotels usually register foreigners, while cheaper local guesthouses may not. Confirm foreign registration when booking.
What should foreigners know about hotels and registration in Yushu?
Two things matter most about Yushu and neither is paperwork in the Lhasa sense. First, altitude: the town (Tibetan Jyekundo / Gyêgu) sits at roughly 3,700 m on the Tibetan Plateau, and the surrounding sights and passes go higher, so altitude sickness is a genuine risk — don't fly straight in from sea level and charge up a monastery hill on day one. Give yourself a slow day to acclimatise, drink water, skip alcohol at first, and treat any bad headache, breathlessness or vomiting seriously. Second, permits: Yushu is in Qinghai province, NOT the Tibet Autonomous Region, so unlike Lhasa or Shannan you do NOT need a Tibet Travel Permit and you are not forced onto a guided tour — you arrive and move around on a normal passport. That said, this is a sensitive Tibetan-cultural frontier region, and Qinghai has at times imposed sudden, ad-hoc restrictions on foreigners travelling or staying overnight in parts of the province; these come and go without notice, so check the current situation before a long trip out. On the ground, carry your original passport — it is your ID for hotel check-in and any ticketed site. Foreign registration is hit-or-miss here: Yushu was largely rebuilt after the devastating April 2010 (magnitude ~7.1) earthquake, and while there are now proper hotels in the rebuilt town, smaller and budget places may not be set up to register a foreign passport with the police, so confirm a property takes foreigners before you pay. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works in town, but this is remote high country — carry cash, there's a China Construction Bank ATM on the main street, and don't assume card or signal coverage out at the monasteries, the crane reserve or on the long-distance buses.
What's the main thing to know before visiting Yushu?
No Tibet permit here — this is Qinghai, not the TAR. This is the single most useful thing to know about Yushu. It is unmistakably Tibetan — Kham Tibetan country, monasteries, prayer stones, butter tea — but it sits in Qinghai province, not the Tibet Autonomous Region. That means you do NOT need the Tibet Travel Permit, you are NOT forced onto a guided tour with a registered guide, and you do NOT have to book through an agency the way you would for Lhasa or Shannan. You simply arrive on your passport and move around independently. The one caveat: Qinghai has occasionally slapped sudden, unannounced restrictions on foreigners travelling or staying overnight in parts of the province, and those come and go, so check the current state of play before committing to the long journey. But in normal times this is open, permit-free, passport-entry travel into a deeply Tibetan place — which is much of its appeal.
Any tourist traps or surprises to watch for in Yushu?
The altitude is the real gatekeeper, not paperwork. Yushu town sits at around 3,700 m, and the sights, passes and the Sanjiangyuan country beyond go higher still. If you fly straight in from low elevation — Yushu Batang Airport has flights from Xining, Chengdu and Lhasa — you can feel altitude sickness fast: pounding headache, breathlessness, nausea, bad sleep. The move is to take it slow: an easy first day, lots of water, no alcohol at the start, and don't sprint up the monastery hill the moment you land. If symptoms get severe, descending is the only sure fix, and out here that's a long way. People with heart or lung conditions should take real advice before coming. Treat the altitude with the respect you'd give a serious mountain, because that's what this is.
What should I eat in Yushu?
Eat Tibetan-Kham: yak, tsampa, yogurt, butter tea. This is Tibetan Plateau food and that's the point. The staples are yak — yak meat, yak-milk yogurt, yak butter — plus tsampa (roasted barley flour) and butter tea, the salty yak-butter-and-tea brew that fuels people at altitude. The yak-milk yogurt sold by nomad women around Yak Square is the local highlight: very thick, very creamy, properly strong. One honest tip travellers pass on: yak butter, eaten plain or in tea, often tastes rancid to outside palates even when it's fresh, so don't judge the place by it — try it once and decide. Highland barley wine (qingke) shows up at festivals and gatherings.
Where do locals eat in Yushu, and what else is worth trying?
Noodles, lamb and the practical reality of eating high. Beyond the Tibetan staples, you'll eat well from the Hui (Muslim) noodle and lamb tradition that runs through Qinghai: hand-pulled beef noodles in clear broth, cumin-and-chilli lamb skewers, and stir-fried noodle dishes. There's decent food across the town's main streets and at the night market on the square; the more adventurous can try sheep's head. At altitude your appetite may drop and digestion slows, so lean on warm, simple, cooked food and hot drinks rather than anything heavy or raw, and keep drinking water and tea — both help with the elevation as much as the cold.
Do I need a Tibet Travel Permit or a guided tour to visit Yushu?
No. This is the key distinction: Yushu is in Qinghai province, not the Tibet Autonomous Region, so you do NOT need the Tibet Travel Permit and you are NOT required to join a guided tour the way you would be for Lhasa or Shannan. You enter and travel independently on a normal passport. The only caveat is that Qinghai has occasionally imposed sudden, ad-hoc restrictions on foreigners travelling or staying overnight in parts of the province; these come and go, so check the current situation before a long trip. In normal times it's open, permit-free, passport travel.
How high is Yushu and how do I avoid altitude sickness?
Yushu town (Jyekundo) sits at roughly 3,700 m, and the sights and the headwater country beyond go higher. Altitude sickness is a real risk, especially if you fly in from low elevation. Acclimatise slowly: take an easy first day, drink lots of water, avoid alcohol at the start, and don't charge up the monastery hill on arrival. Watch for a severe headache, breathlessness, nausea or bad sleep; if it gets serious the reliable fix is to descend, which from here is a long way. Anyone with heart or lung issues should get medical advice before coming.
How do I get to Yushu from Xining, and is there a train?
There's no railway to Yushu. By road it's a long haul from Xining — buses take roughly 12 to 20 hours (the seated buses are faster than the sleepers) across high, empty, spectacular plateau, with a fare historically around ¥207; reconfirm current schedules and price. The faster option is to fly into Yushu Batang Airport (YUS), about 18 km south of town, which has flights from Xining, Chengdu and Lhasa, with a bus and taxis into town. Flying straight in, though, gives your body no time to adjust to the altitude, so build in an easy first day either way.
What's actually worth seeing in and around Yushu?
The standout is the Gyanak Mani (新寨嘉那嘛呢石经城), the world's largest pile of carved mani prayer-stones — said to hold around two billion stones over roughly a square kilometre — a living pilgrimage site a few kilometres from town. Add the Tang-era Princess Wencheng Temple in a prayer-flag-draped gorge about 20 km out, and the hilltop Jyekundo Dondrubling (Jiegu) Monastery that overlooks the rebuilt town. Further out, Longbao is a black-necked crane reserve (cranes in the warm months) and Yushu is the gateway into the Sanjiangyuan headwater country where the Yangtze, Yellow River and Mekong all rise. Most of the out-of-town sights are best reached with a hired driver.
Can foreigners stay in hotels here, and will my foreign card work?
Mostly yes, with care. Yushu was largely rebuilt after the 2010 earthquake and now has proper hotels, but foreign registration is hit-or-miss and smaller or budget places may not be set up to register a foreign passport with the police — confirm a property takes foreigners before you pay, and carry your original passport for check-in. Mobile pay (a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay) works in town, but this is remote high country: carry cash, use the China Construction Bank ATM on the main street, and don't count on card acceptance or signal out at the monasteries, the crane reserve or on long-distance buses.
Rules change. We re-check these facts on a schedule and date-stamp every page — but always confirm on the official channel before relying on a time.