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 Tai (Tai Shan) scenic area
✓ 2026-06-13- Release
- Real-name entry with your passport; the mountain is open 24 hours for sunrise climbers. Buy at the gate or the official platform
- Price
- ¥125
- Foreigners
- Passport works
The entrance ticket is around ¥115–127 in peak season (cheaper in winter), real-name with your passport, bought at the gate or the official channel. The mountain bus from the base to the Midway Gate (Zhongtianmen) is a separate ~¥30, and the cable car from there up toward the South Gate (Nantianmen) is roughly ¥100 one way. It's open 24 hours so people climb overnight for the sunrise.
officialBookingUrl left null: entry is real-name through the gate and the official platform, and I won't render a button I can't confirm completes for an overseas visitor. Budget the add-ons honestly: ticket + bus + cable car comes to roughly ¥250+ before you've climbed a step. The classic pilgrim route is ~7,000 stone steps from the Dai Temple area up through the Red Gate — six to nine hours up — but most visitors take the bus to Zhongtianmen and the cable car from there, then walk the last stretch to the summit.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
The summit & sunrise (Nantianmen / Jade Emperor Peak)
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
Covered by the mountain entry ticket; the cable car or the steps get you to the South Gate, then it's a short walk along the summit ridge. To catch sunrise you either climb through the night or sleep in a summit hotel.
The sunrise over the sea of clouds is the whole point for many — but it's weather-dependent and often clouded out, and the summit is cold and windy even in summer (rent or bring a thick coat). Sleeping at a summit hotel the night before is the civilised way to do it; the overnight climb is a rite of passage but exhausting. Manage expectations: a clear sunrise is a lottery.
Source: official ticketing · re-checked monthly
Dai Temple (Dai Miao), Tai'an
✓ 2026-06-13- Price
- —
- Foreigners
- Passport works
A separate gate ticket (around ¥20–30), in the city at the foot of the mountain; passport fine. It's the traditional starting point of the pilgrimage up Tai Shan.
The grand walled temple complex in Tai'an where emperors performed the Fengshan sacrifices before ascending the mountain — a major monument in its own right and far less strenuous than the climb. Worth an hour or two before or after the mountain, and a good rainy-day or tired-legs alternative.
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
- Tai'an, the city at the foot of Mount Tai, has plenty of foreigner-registered hotels near the mountain base and the train station; budget guesthouses can be patchy, so confirm at booking. There are also basic hotels near the summit (Nantianmen) for sunrise-chasers — spartan and pricey for what they are, but they save a brutal pre-dawn climb. Have your hotel's Chinese name and address ready for the taxi from Tai'an station.
Eat like a local
What to order, where locals actually queue, and the food-street traps to skip.
The local dish is the 'three beauties of Tai'an' — a clear stew of the mountain's spring-water tofu, white cabbage and water from the slopes — plus freshwater fish. Simple, clean Shandong cooking; try it in a local Tai'an restaurant rather than at the mountain gate, where it's marked up for the captive crowd.
Stock up on cheap, portable Shandong food before you head up: jianbing pancakes, big steamed buns, eggs and cucumbers. Food sold on the mountain itself, especially near the summit, is expensive and basic for obvious carry-up reasons — buy your snacks and water in town at the bottom.
Everything sold up the mountain carries a steep carry-up premium, fairly enough. The real eating is in Tai'an city — local Shandong restaurants, night-market snacks, normal prices. Plan a proper meal in town before the climb or after you come down rather than relying on summit stalls.
The honest layer
The part a tourism board will never print.
There are two very different Mount Tai trips. The pilgrim climb is roughly 7,000 stone steps from the Red Gate to the summit, six to nine hours of hard work and the traditional experience. The easy version is a bus to the Midway Gate and a cable car most of the rest of the way, leaving a short walk to the top. Both are valid; just don't drift into the climb by accident — know which one you're doing and pack accordingly.
The headline ticket (~¥125) is only part of it. The shuttle bus from the base and the cable car are separate fees, so a ride-up visit easily runs ¥250 or more per person before food. None of it is a scam — it's just a multi-layered pricing system that surprises people who budgeted for one ticket. Decide which segments you'll ride versus walk and you can control the cost.
Mount Tai's sunrise is legendary and genuinely magical when it happens — and it's frequently clouded or hazed out. If a clear sunrise is your only reason to come, accept it's a lottery and have a plan B (the temples, the climb itself, the carved inscriptions). Sleeping in a summit hotel beats the all-night climb if catching dawn matters to you; either way, bring serious warm layers.
Mount Tai and Qufu — the sacred mountain and Confucius's hometown — are the classic Shandong pairing, about an hour apart by rail or road. Two days lets you do the mountain (with a sunrise attempt) and the Confucian sites without rushing. If you've come into central Shandong for one, the other is right there.
Straight answers
Do I have to climb Mount Tai, or can I ride up?
You can ride most of the way. The traditional route is about 7,000 stone steps (six to nine hours up), but most visitors take the shuttle bus from the base to the Midway Gate (Zhongtianmen) and the cable car from there toward the summit, leaving a short walk. The entrance ticket (~¥125), the bus (~¥30) and the cable car (~¥100 one way) are separate, so budget for all three if you ride.
How does the sunrise work?
The mountain is open 24 hours, and people either climb overnight or sleep in a basic summit hotel to be at the top for dawn. The sunrise over the cloud sea is spectacular when conditions are clear — but it's often clouded out, so treat it as a gamble and bring serious warm layers; the summit is cold and windy year-round.
How long do I need, and can I add Qufu?
Mount Tai itself is a full day (more if you climb or chase the sunrise). It pairs naturally with Qufu, the hometown of Confucius about an hour away — two days covers both comfortably. Tai'an is well connected by high-speed rail to Jinan, Qufu and beyond.
Will my foreign card and phone work in Tai'an?
Mobile pay is your best tool — a foreign Visa or Mastercard linked to Alipay or WeChat Pay covers the ticket, the bus, the cable car, food and shops. Physical foreign-card terminals are uncommon, so carry some cash for the mountain buses and summit vendors, and set the wallet apps up before you arrive.