The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Shaolin Temple Scenic Area (monastery + Pagoda Forest + kung fu show)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Online real-name booking required for everyone, including children; kung fu performances run several times daily (typically 09:30, 10:30, 11:30, 14:30, 15:30), about 30 minutes each
- Price
- ¥80
- Foreigners
- Passport works
All tickets must be reserved online in advance, real-name — book through the official 'Songshan Tourism / 畅游嵩山' WeChat account with your passport; there's no simple walk-up window any more, and slots can sell out in peak season. The single scenic-area ticket (around ¥80) covers the Shaolin Monastery, the Pagoda Forest (Talin) and the martial-arts performance at the training hall. Have your hotel help with the Chinese-only booking flow if needed.
officialBookingUrl left null: booking is via the official 嵩山/Songshan WeChat platform rather than a stable public English URL, and I won't render a button I can't confirm works for an overseas visitor. The ¥80 ticket is good value because it bundles the temple, the genuinely impressive Pagoda Forest (a field of 240-odd stone monk-tombs) and the kung fu show. The show is touristy but well done; the temple grounds themselves are crowded and commercial. Ignore touts offering 'private' martial-arts demonstrations or 'free' lessons outside the gate.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Sanhuang Village (Sanhuangzhai) cable car & Songshan ridge
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Reached from inside the Shaolin scenic area; the round-trip cable car up to the Sanhuangzhai ridge is a separate add-on (roughly ¥50–60) on top of the scenic-area ticket. Same online real-name booking; passport applies.
This is the part of Songshan most day-trippers miss: a dramatic ridge walk with plank paths and suspension bridges above the Shaolin valley, far quieter than the temple courtyards below. Allow extra hours and decent shoes; the cable car saves the steep climb but you still walk the ridge. Skip it if you're only here for the temple and the show and short on time.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Zhongyue Temple (Zhongyue Miao)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
A separate small gate ticket (around ¥30), generally straightforward to buy; passport fine. A few km east of Dengfeng town, served by local buses or a short taxi.
One of the oldest and largest Taoist temple complexes in China and part of the UNESCO 'Historic Monuments of Dengfeng' listing, with a long cypress-lined axis of halls and Song-dynasty iron guardians. Far quieter than Shaolin and a good antidote to the kung fu crowds if you care about the actual history of Mount Song as a sacred peak.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Songyang Academy (Songyang Shuyuan)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Small separate gate ticket (around ¥30), buy on site; passport fine. On the lower slopes of Songshan, a short drive from Dengfeng town.
One of the great academies of imperial China and another piece of the UNESCO Dengfeng listing, famous for two enormous cypresses said to be over 4,000 years old. Small, calm and scholarly — pair it with Zhongyue Temple for a half-day of the non-Shaolin side of Mount Song.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Landing & registration
The first-24-hours facts: hotels, police registration, and whether your card works.
- Hotels take foreigners
- Mixed — check first
- Foreign card via Alipay/WeChat
- mixed
- Police registration
- Dengfeng is a small city that most foreigners visit as a day trip from Zhengzhou or Luoyang, so foreigner-registered hotels are concentrated near the centre and the Shaolin scenic area rather than everywhere. Confirm passport registration when you book, especially at budget guesthouses. If you'd rather not stay over, the temple is an easy day trip — high-speed rail and buses reach Dengfeng from both cities in around 1–1.5 hours.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
The regional comfort food: wide hand-pulled noodles in a rich mutton or beef broth with a little lamb, day-lily and wood-ear, often finished with chilli and coriander. Cheap, filling and everywhere in Dengfeng's town centre — a far better lunch than the captive-audience stalls right outside the Shaolin gate.
Henan's signature breakfast: a thick, peppery, slightly sour soup with bits of meat, wheat gluten and vegetables, eaten with a fried-dough stick or a flatbread. An acquired warmth that locals swear by — grab it at a busy morning shop in town before heading up to the temple.
The restaurants clustered at the Shaolin entrance charge a captive premium for ordinary food. Dengfeng town, a short ride away, has the same Henan noodles, dumplings and soups at normal prices. The gap is real and the trip back into town is short — plan to eat there.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
The single most common Shaolin mistake is turning up expecting to buy at the gate. Tickets are real-name and online-only now, through the official Songshan WeChat platform, and in busy periods they genuinely sell out. Reserve a day or two ahead with your passport, or have your hotel do it. Without a reservation you can be left outside the gate of the one thing you came for.
The working monastery is heavily restored, crowded and ringed by commerce, and some people find it underwhelming after the hype. The Pagoda Forest — hundreds of weathered brick-and-stone tomb pagodas for generations of abbots — is the genuinely moving, atmospheric part, and it's included in the same ticket. Give it time; it's a short walk from the main temple and far less mobbed.
Dengfeng is ringed by huge martial-arts academies with thousands of students, and you'll see them training and performing. The official show inside the scenic area is the legit one. Outside the gate, ignore people offering 'private demonstrations', 'free trial lessons' or cut-price 'master' tickets — it's the usual tourist-trap routine. If you actually want to train, arrange it in advance with a reputable school, not a street tout.
Dengfeng sits between Zhengzhou and Luoyang, and from either city it's about 1–1.5 hours each way by train or bus, then a local hop to the scenic area. Add the online-booked entry, the show times and the size of the site, and a 'quick' Shaolin visit eats a full day. Either start early as a day trip or stay one night in Dengfeng to also fit Zhongyue Temple and the Songshan ridge.
Straight answers
Do I need to book Shaolin Temple tickets in advance?
Yes. Tickets are real-name and online-only through the official Songshan / 畅游嵩山 WeChat platform, for everyone including children, and they can sell out in peak season. Book a day or two ahead with your passport, or have your hotel do it — there's no reliable walk-up window any more. The ticket (around ¥80) covers the monastery, the Pagoda Forest and the kung fu show.
Is the kung fu show worth seeing?
Yes, within reason — the official martial-arts performance inside the scenic area runs several times a day (about half an hour each) and is a polished, genuinely impressive display included in your ticket. It's touristy, not a sacred ritual, so set expectations accordingly. Avoid any 'private' or 'free' demonstrations offered by touts outside the gate.
How do I get to Dengfeng and Shaolin?
Most people come as a day trip from Zhengzhou or Luoyang — roughly 1–1.5 hours each way by high-speed rail or bus, then a local bus or taxi to the scenic area. The site is large and entry is timed to your online booking, so start early. Staying one night in Dengfeng lets you add the quieter Zhongyue Temple, Songyang Academy and the Songshan ridge.
Will my foreign card and phone work here?
Mobile pay is the way — a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay covers the ticket reservation, the cable car, restaurants and shops. Physical foreign-card terminals are rare in a small city like this, so carry some cash for buses and small vendors, and set the wallet apps up before you arrive.