The booking wall verified
These sell out or block foreigners if you arrive unprepared — the dates, the official link, and whether your passport works.
Leshan Giant Buddha Scenic Area (cliff staircase + Lingyun & Wuyou temples)
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Real-name online booking; open roughly 07:30–18:30 Apr–Oct and 08:00–17:30 Oct–Mar. Reserve ahead in peak season
- Price
- ¥80
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Book the scenic-area ticket (around ¥80, a little more in peak season) real-name with your passport via the official 乐山大佛 reservation platform or a licensed agent. The ticket includes Lingyun Hill, the temples and the famous Nine-Bend Plank Road down the cliff beside the Buddha. Have your hotel help if the booking flow is Chinese-only.
officialBookingUrl left null: entry is real-name through the official Leshan Giant Buddha platform, and I won't render a button I can't confirm completes for an overseas visitor — book via the official platform or a licensed agent. The 71 m Tang-dynasty Buddha is carved into the cliff at the meeting of three rivers; the single best experience is walking the narrow Nine-Bend staircase down to its feet — which is also where the queue is. In peak season that descent can mean 2–3 hours of slow shuffling on the steps. Go at opening time, on a weekday, off-holiday.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Giant Buddha river cruise
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- ¥70
- Foreigners
- Passport works
A separate ticket (roughly ¥70), real-name; the boat leaves from the river dock and gives you the full head-to-toe view of the Buddha from the water in about 20–30 minutes, with no staircase queue. You don't disembark at the Buddha. Bookable on the official platform, through agents, or at the dock.
This is the honest alternative to the cliff queue: if the staircase line is hours long or your knees aren't up to the steep descent, the boat shows you the whole Buddha — including the guardian figures only really visible from the river — in half an hour. The trade-off is you see it from the water rather than standing at its feet. Many people do the boat and skip the staircase entirely, especially on a tight day-trip schedule.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Mount Emei (Emei Shan) — the natural pairing
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
A separate destination about 30 km away, with its own real-name ticket: entrance is roughly ¥160 (valid two days), plus separate fees for the sightseeing buses and the Golden Summit cable car. Book real-name with your passport on the official Emei platform; it's usually a full day or an overnight, not an add-on to a Buddha day trip.
Leshan and Mount Emei share one UNESCO listing and are usually visited together. Emei is a sacred Buddhist mountain — temples, monkeys, the cloud-sea at the Golden Summit — and it deserves its own day or two; trying to squeeze the Buddha and the summit into one day is a rush. If you only have a day from Chengdu, do the Buddha; if you have two, add Emei and stay over in Emei town or Baoguo.
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 see Leshan as a day trip from Chengdu (about 1–1.5 hours by high-speed rail), so if you do stay over, the foreigner-registered hotels cluster near the centre and the high-speed station rather than out by the scenic area. Confirm passport registration when you book. The Buddha and Mount Emei together justify an overnight; many people base in Chengdu or Emei town and visit the Buddha on the way.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
Leshan is a serious Sichuan food town. Bobo ji — cold poached chicken and vegetables on skewers, dunked in a numbing chilli-oil sauce and charged by the stick — is the local signature. Find a busy local shop in town rather than a stall by the Buddha gate, and pace yourself: the má-là numbing heat sneaks up.
Two more Leshan things worth hunting down: tianpi ya, a 'sweet-skin' roast duck glazed sweet-savoury, and qiaojiao niurou, beef and offal poached in a spicy broth at hole-in-the-wall counters. Both are cheap, local and better in the city than near the scenic area.
The restaurants right by the Buddha entrance charge a captive premium for ordinary food. Leshan city — a short ride or train stop away — is where the real Sichuan snacks are, at normal prices. Plan to eat in town before or after, not at the gate.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
Standing at the Buddha's feet means walking the Nine-Bend Plank Road, a narrow single-file staircase cut into the cliff — and in peak season that's a 2–3 hour queue that defines your visit. The honest planning decision is staircase versus boat: the staircase gives you the awe of scale up close but costs hours; the boat gives you the whole figure from the water in half an hour with no line. Decide before you go, and if you want the staircase, be at the gate when it opens.
Like most big Chinese sights now, the Buddha is real-name and reservation-based, and peak-season and holiday slots sell out. Reserve with your passport a day or two ahead through the official platform or a licensed agent, rather than hoping to buy on arrival. The same goes for Mount Emei if you're adding it.
Leshan is about 1–1.5 hours from Chengdu by high-speed rail, which makes the Buddha a comfortable day trip on its own. But the Buddha and Mount Emei share a UNESCO listing and most itineraries pair them, which really needs two days and an overnight near Emei. Don't try to do the cliff staircase and the Emei summit in a single day — you'll rush both.
The site is open-air, the descent and climb are steep, and Sichuan summers are hot and humid. Bring water, sun cover and shoes you can do stairs in, and expect crowds at the famous viewpoints. Early morning is cooler, quieter and better for photos before the tour groups and the haze build up.
Straight answers
Do I need to book Leshan Giant Buddha tickets in advance?
Yes — entry is real-name and reservation-based (around ¥80), booked with your passport through the official Leshan Giant Buddha platform or a licensed agent, and peak-season slots sell out. The ticket covers Lingyun Hill, the temples and the Nine-Bend staircase down the cliff. Reserve a day or two ahead and arrive at opening time if you want the staircase.
Should I take the staircase or the boat?
The staircase (the Nine-Bend Plank Road) lets you stand at the Buddha's feet but can mean a 2–3 hour queue in peak season; the river cruise (a separate ~¥70 ticket) shows you the whole Buddha from the water in about half an hour with no line, but you don't disembark. If you have time and stamina, do the staircase early; if your schedule or knees are tight, the boat is the smart choice.
Can I do Leshan and Mount Emei in one day?
Not comfortably. Leshan is an easy day trip from Chengdu (1–1.5 hours by high-speed rail), but the Buddha and Mount Emei share a UNESCO listing and each deserves real time. Pairing them properly needs two days with an overnight near Emei. With only one day, choose the Buddha; with two, add Emei.
Will my foreign card and phone work in Leshan?
Mobile pay is your best tool — a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay covers the ticket reservation, the boat, food and shops. Physical foreign-card terminals are uncommon, so carry some cash for small vendors and local buses, and set the wallet apps up before you travel.