The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Mount Emei scenic area (entry + shuttle buses)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Real-name booking with a chosen shuttle-bus time slot; bookable up to 15 days ahead. Main gate open roughly 06:00–18:30 in summer, shorter in winter. The two-day ticket suits an overnight
- Price
- ¥160
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Confirmed foreigner-friendly: the official rules list the passport as an accepted ID, and at the boarding gate they check that your passport, booking and ticket all match. You reserve real-name and pick a shuttle-bus time slot, bookable up to 15 days out — a wide window, so lock in busy dates early. The entrance ticket is around ¥160 and valid two days, sensible since the mountain is big and most people stay over. The internal shuttle buses (Baoguo up to Leidongping, where the summit cable car starts) are a separate fee, as is the cable car. The official channel is the 峨眉山景区 WeChat public account or the 峨眉山旅游官方平台 mini-program — Chinese-first, so have your hotel help if the app is a barrier.
officialBookingUrl left null: the official booking sits inside a Chinese WeChat public account / mini-program rather than a self-serve site I can confirm completes for an overseas visitor. Budget the layers: ¥160 entry + shuttle bus + cable car. The full pilgrim climb takes two to three days; most visitors take the bus up to Leidongping and the cable car to the Golden Summit, then walk and bus the temples. Two days lets you do the summit plus the lower temples (Baoguo, Wannian) without a death march. Ticket enquiries: 400-8196-333.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Golden Summit (Jinding) & cable car
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥120
- Foreigners
- Passport works
The Golden Summit cable car (from Jieyin Hall to the top) is a separate fee — roughly ¥65 up, ¥55 down, or ¥120 round trip. Covered by the same real-name system; passport applies. It runs on top of the entry ticket and the shuttle bus up the mountain.
The 3,079 m Golden Summit — with its huge gilded Samantabhadra statue and, on a good day, a sea of clouds — is the climax of Emei. The cable car saves the final brutal climb but you still walk crowded stairs at the top. It's genuinely high and cold; bring warm layers even in summer, and go early before the cloud and crowds build. On a bad day you're in dense fog with everyone else — it's weather-dependent.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Baoguo & Wannian temples and the monkey zone
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
The main temples are covered by the scenic-area ticket; a few charge a small separate incense/entry fee (around ¥10). Reached on foot and by the shuttle buses. No separate booking needed.
Baoguo Temple at the base and Wannian Temple partway up are the cultural heart of the mountain — active monasteries you can stay in. The famous Emei monkeys live around the Qingyin/Ecological Monkey Zone on the mid-mountain trails: they're wild, bold and will grab bags and food, so don't carry visible snacks, don't tease them, and keep a tight hold of your stuff. Entertaining but genuinely aggressive — respect them.
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
- Most foreigners base at the foot of the mountain around Baoguo Temple and the high-speed station, where hotels are used to registering foreign passports; there are also monastery guesthouses and basic hotels partway up and near the summit for sunrise-chasers. Confirm passport registration at smaller places. Emeishan is an easy add-on to Chengdu and Leshan, so many people arrive by high-speed rail with a hotel already booked at the base.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
The monasteries and many mid-mountain guesthouses serve Buddhist vegetarian meals — tofu, mountain greens, mushrooms, mock-meat dishes — and it's the authentic thing to eat up here. Temple meals are simple and cheap; the tourist restaurants near the gates do fancier 'mountain delicacy' versions at a markup.
This is still Sichuan, so expect má-là heat down at the base — local mushrooms, bamboo shoots, 'snow konjac', and Emei's mountain teas. Try the local Zhuyeqing green tea grown on the slopes. Eat your bigger Sichuan meals in Emeishan town or Baoguo rather than up high, where carry-up prices bite.
As on any big Chinese mountain, food and water near the summit carry a steep carry-up premium. Buy water, fruit and snacks at the base and carry them — but keep them out of sight in the monkey zone, or you'll be donating them to the macaques.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Emei is huge, and the common mistake is trying to 'do' it in a day. The two-day ticket is a hint: stay over. The other decision is how you get up — the full climb is a serious two-to-three-day trek, while most visitors take the shuttle bus to Leidongping and the cable car to the Golden Summit, walking selected stretches. Pick the version you actually want and you'll enjoy it; stumble into the full climb unprepared and you won't.
The ¥160 entry is just the start: the shuttle buses up and down the mountain and the Golden Summit cable car are all separate, so a ride-up day easily runs well over ¥300 per person. It's a layered system, not a scam — but plan which segments you'll ride versus walk so the gate fees don't keep surprising you.
Emei's monkeys are a highlight and a hazard. They're used to people, work in troops, and will snatch food, water bottles and unzipped bags. Don't carry visible snacks through the monkey zone, don't feed or tease them, hold children's hands, and consider a walking stick (rentable) if you're nervous. Treat them as wildlife with attitude and you'll be fine.
Mount Emei and the Leshan Giant Buddha share a UNESCO listing and sit about 30 km apart, so they're the natural Sichuan pairing — the Buddha is a half-day, Emei a full day or two. From Chengdu, a common plan is the Buddha on the way in or out and a night on or near Emei for the summit sunrise. Doing only one when you've come this far is a near-miss.
Straight answers
How much does Mount Emei cost and what's included?
The entrance ticket is around ¥160 and valid two days, booked real-name with your passport — which the official rules explicitly accept as ID. You reserve a shuttle-bus time slot and can book up to 15 days ahead, handy for peak dates. The shuttle buses up and down the mountain and the Golden Summit cable car (about ¥65 up / ¥55 down / ¥120 round trip) are all separate, so a ride-up visit comfortably exceeds ¥300 per person. Budget the layers rather than expecting one ticket to cover everything.
Do I have to climb, or can I ride to the Golden Summit?
You can ride most of the way. The full pilgrim climb takes two to three days; most visitors take the shuttle bus up to Leidongping and the cable car to the Golden Summit, then walk selected stretches and visit the temples. Stay overnight to do the summit (ideally for sunrise) plus the lower temples without rushing — the two-day ticket is built for it.
Are the monkeys dangerous?
They're wild and bold rather than dangerous if you're sensible. Around the monkey zone on the mid-mountain trails they'll grab food, bottles and open bags. Keep snacks out of sight, don't feed or tease them, hold children's hands, and a rented walking stick helps if you're nervous. Treat them as assertive wildlife, not a petting zoo.
Can I combine Emei with Leshan, and will my card work?
Yes — Emei and the Leshan Giant Buddha share a UNESCO listing and are about 30 km apart, an easy pairing over two days from Chengdu. For payments, link a foreign Visa or Mastercard to Alipay or WeChat Pay for the ticket, buses, cable car and food; carry some cash for small temple fees and mountain vendors, and set the apps up before you arrive.