Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Lhasa”
Day Plans
Lhasa + Tibet in 7 Days on a Budget
7 Days in Lhasa: Shigatse, Not Everest Base Camp Seven days is exactly where people start asking about Everest Base Camp. Don’t. EBC from the Tibet side sits around 5,200m, needs its own Aliens’ Travel Permit (ATP) on top of your Tibet Travel Permit, and takes several days round trip that leave almost no cushion for things going wrong. Shigatse and Tashilhunpo Monastery is the version of “beyond Lhasa” that actually fits a 7-day budget.
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Day Plans
Lhasa + Tibet in 6 Days on a Budget
6 Days in Lhasa: Don’t Blow the Extra Day on Namtso A sixth day is exactly where agencies push Namtso Lake as an add-on, and it is the wrong move on a trip this length. Namtso sits above 4,700m, a serious jump even after days of acclimatizing, and rushing it as a single long day is a poor trade for the rest a sixth day can otherwise buy you. Want Namtso done properly instead?
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Day Plans
Lhasa + Tibet in 5 Days on a Budget
5 Days in Lhasa: The Car and Driver Is Your Real Budget Line The single biggest cost variable in a Tibet itinerary is not the flight or the hotel, it is the private car and driver every day trip requires. Five days is where that cost first pays off with a genuine high-altitude lake. Want less driving? Our 4-day plan stops at Ganden; our 6-day plan uses the extra day back in the city instead of Namtso.
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Day Plans
Lhasa + Tibet in 4 Days on a Budget
4 Days in Lhasa: Old Town Money vs New City Money Lhasa is really two cities stitched together, and four days is the first itinerary length long enough to see both plus one real day trip beyond them. Coming from a shorter trip? Our 3-day itinerary stays in-city; our 5-day plan adds Yamdrok Lake to this same spine.
Book these before you go
A licensed Tibet agency package: TTP, guide, and driver, processing 10-15 working days, booked 20-25 days ahead.
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Day Plans
Lhasa + Tibet in 3 Days on a Budget
3 Days in Lhasa: What the Package Price Actually Covers Ask three Tibet agencies for a 3-day Lhasa quote and you will get three different numbers for what is legally the same product: a Tibet Travel Permit (TTP), a guide, a driver, and a Potala Palace slot. Need more room for a day trip? Our 4-day and 5-day Lhasa + Tibet itineraries add Ganden and Yamdrok Lake to this same spine.
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Day Plans
Lhasa + Tibet in 2 Days on a Budget
2 Days in Lhasa: The China Logistics Reality Check Two days is not enough time for Everest Base Camp, Namtso Lake, or a scenic overnight train. It buys Lhasa city and nothing higher, plus the agency paperwork that gets you here at all. Longer window available? Our 3-day , 4-day , and 5-day Lhasa + Tibet itineraries start adding real day trips.
Book these before you go
A licensed Tibet agency package: guide, driver, and Tibet Travel Permit (TTP), processing 10-15 working days, book 20-25 days ahead.
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Day Plans
Lhasa in 7 Days on a Budget (With Daily Costs)
Lhasa in 7 Days on a Budget: A Full Week in the City Itself Seven days is enough to know Lhasa properly without ever leaving it: the full core (rest, Potala and Jokhang, Sera and Drepung, Norbulingka and the museum), plus real time in both the old town and the newer Chinese-built district, the food scene, and the market. If you’d rather spend a week reaching Yamdrok Lake, Namtso, or Shigatse, our 7-day Lhasa + Tibet gateway itinerary builds those day trips in instead; this one is the city-only version.
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Day Plans
Lhasa in 5 Days on a Budget (With Daily Costs)
Lhasa in 5 Days on a Budget: The Deep In-City Version Five days is enough to slow down and stay inside the city itself: the full three-day core, plus two extra days for Norbulingka, the Tibet Museum, and the Barkhor’s back streets instead of rushing back to the airport. If you’d rather spend those two extra days on a day trip to Ganden or Yamdrok Lake, our 5-day Lhasa + Tibet gateway itinerary builds that version instead; this one stays in Lhasa proper.
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Day Plans
Lhasa in 3 Days on a Budget (With Daily Costs)
Lhasa in 3 Days on a Budget: The Classic Route Three days is the sweet spot for a first Lhasa trip: enough time for the Potala and Jokhang without rushing, plus a full extra day for the two big monasteries outside the old town, no day trips required. Shorter on time? Our 2-day itinerary strips it to the essentials. Got five or seven? Our 5-day and 7-day plans go deeper into the city itself.
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Day Plans
Lhasa in 2 Days on a Budget (With Daily Costs)
Lhasa in 2 Days on a Budget: The Honest Version Two days buys the essentials only: Potala Palace, Jokhang Temple, and the Barkhor kora, no more. That’s genuinely enough for a tight, honest first look at the city. If you can stretch further, our 3-day , 5-day , and 7-day Lhasa budget itineraries add the monasteries and neighborhoods this one skips.
Book these before you go
Your licensed Tibet agency package (guide, driver, Tibet Travel Permit): mandatory for every foreign visitor except Hong Kong/Macau SAR passport holders, book 20-30 days ahead in peak season.
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Get around
Tibet Beyond Lhasa on a Budget
Tibet Beyond Lhasa: What the Day Trips Actually Cost Lhasa itself is the cheap part of a Tibet trip. The moment you go further, whether that’s Ganden Monastery an hour and a half out or Everest Base Camp five days round-trip, the private vehicle and driver your agency provides becomes the dominant cost, more than any single entrance fee. This guide covers what’s actually out there, what it costs on top of your base package, and which trips are worth the extra permit paperwork.
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Get around
Lhasa on a Budget: 9 Cheap and Free Things to Do
The Real Lhasa Budget: Free Sights, Then One Big Line Item Lhasa itself is cheap. The Barkhor kora costs nothing, a sweet tea house session costs less than a coffee at home, and even the paid monasteries top out around CNY 85. The number that actually sets your budget is the one before any of that: the mandatory licensed-agency tour, guide, and Tibet Travel Permit (TTP) every foreign visitor (except Hong Kong and Macau SAR passport holders) needs just to land here.
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See Eat Do
Lhasa on a Budget: Prices and Free Days
Lhasa on a Budget: What It Actually Costs to Get In Forget entrance fees for a second: the number that matters here is the mandatory agency package (guide, driver, Tibet Travel Permit) every foreign visitor needs before setting foot in the city. Budget for that first. Once you’re here, Lhasa itself is one of the cheaper cities in Tibet to actually spend a day in.
Lhasa at a glance Potala Palace CNY 200 peak season / CNY 100 low season, timed 1-2hr visit, book weeks ahead Sera Monastery debates CNY 50 peak / CNY 25 low season, best 3-5pm Monday to Saturday Mandatory tour package Guide, driver, and Tibet Travel Permit, price varies by group size Time needed 2-4 days minimum, altitude included Booking lead Permit and Potala slot: 20-30 days ahead in peak season What costs money, and what doesn’t Jokhang Temple runs about CNY 85, Sera Monastery around CNY 50 in season (half that in winter) for the afternoon monk debates, and Drepung is a similar CNY 50-60.
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