Old Summer Palace (Yuanming Yuan) tickets & tours | Price comparison

Old Summer Palace (Yuanming Yuan)

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Old Summer Palace, also called Yuanmingyuan (圆明园), is Beijing's most haunting imperial garden ruin, where lakes, willow-lined paths, and the shattered stonework of Xiyanglou still carry the scale of a lost Qing world. It feels spacious, beautiful, and quietly devastating at the same time.

For a first visit, choose the all-access pass rather than the main gate ticket alone, because it covers the Western Mansions ruins and the model exhibition, which give the site much more context; book now.
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6 tips for visiting the Old Summer Palace (Yuanming Yuan)

1
Start with Xiyanglou early
If this is your first visit, head to Xiyanglou and the Dashuifa ruins soon after the 7 am ticketed opening. That zone draws the heaviest photo traffic later in the morning, especially on weekends and holidays. An early start gives you more space and cleaner sightlines.
2
Choose the all-access pass
If you want the classic first-time route, buy the all-access pass instead of the main gate ticket alone. It adds the Xiyanglou ruins and the panorama model exhibition, which make the broken landscape much easier to understand. That way you get context as well as scenery.
3
Use Line 4 for the simplest arrival
If your wider route allows it, use Beijing Subway Line 4 to Yuanmingyuan Station, or buses 331, 332, 508, or 584 to the south gate area. Driving can add friction around busy entry windows, while transit drops you closer to a clean start. Save your energy for the walking inside.
4
Do one garden properly
The grounds are huge, so do not zigzag between Qichun Garden, Changchun Garden, and the lake edges without a plan. Pick one major axis, then add one second zone only if your energy is still good. This keeps the visit memorable instead of strangely exhausting.
5
Leave time for the water views
If you want to feel why this place once mattered so much, slow down around Fuhai or the lotus zones after the headline ruins. Many visitors rush from one loss narrative to the next and miss the softer lake-and-willow atmosphere. That calmer hour gives the visit emotional balance.
6
Pair one west-Beijing classic
The cleanest same-area add-on is Summer Palace, which continues the imperial-garden story just to the west. Add Beijing Zoo only if you want a longer Line 4 day and do not mind more walking. One nearby pairing usually works better than forcing central Beijing into the same afternoon.

How to plan a smooth Old Summer Palace visit in west Beijing

At Yuanmingyuan, the challenge is not finding something to see. It is choosing a route that matches the scale of the grounds and the weight of the history. Lock the basics first, and the visit feels focused instead of scattered.

Start with Xiyanglou and Dashuifa

If this is your first time, begin in the Changchun Garden section around Xiyanglou and Dashuifa. This is the most iconic ruin cluster, and it is also the zone that compresses the site's loss into one immediate visual shock. Go early, then let the rest of the park open outward from that first impression.

Choose the ticket that fits your curiosity

Best for most first-time visitors: choose the all-access pass. It covers the main grounds, the Xiyanglou ruins, and the panorama model exhibition, so the park makes sense as both landscape and story. If you only want a short scenic walk, the basic ticket works, but the pass usually gives the stronger visit. Book now.

Use transit and save your legs for the inside

Great when you want the least complicated arrival: take Beijing Subway Line 4 to Yuanmingyuan Station or use the south-gate bus routes. The real energy drain starts once you are inside, because the site is broad and easy to underestimate on a map. A simple arrival leaves more patience for the long walking stretches.

Pair one nearby imperial stop

For most travelers, the smartest same-area add-on is Summer Palace. Families who want a softer second half of the day can keep it to one garden and one lake mood, while repeat visitors with more stamina can stretch the route toward Beijing Zoo. One nearby pairing feels curated; adding half of Beijing after lunch usually does not.

What to see across the three gardens

This is not one single ruin with a ticket booth. It is a broad landscape of water, islands, ceremonial traces, museums, and shattered stone, spread across the linked worlds of Yuanmingyuan, Changchun Garden, and Qichun Garden.

The lakes explain the scale

Much of the grandeur here lives in the spaces between buildings: open water, causeways, willow lines, and long sightlines, especially around Fuhai. If you slow down beside the lake instead of chasing only the famous ruins, the site starts to read as a designed world rather than a list of stops. That shift matters.

Dashuifa is the emotional core

The broken stonework at Dashuifa in the Xiyanglou area is the image most visitors carry home. It is dramatic, photogenic, and historically heavy all at once, which is why crowd control often tightens here during peak windows. If your priority is the most unforgettable first impression, this is where to begin.

The model exhibition rebuilds the vanished palace

Choose this if the outdoor ruins feel too fragmentary at first. The panorama model exhibition helps you connect names, water axes, vanished halls, and distances, so the walk outside becomes much more legible. It is a small planning choice that pays off all day.

Zhengjue Temple adds the recovery story

At Zhengjue Temple, the Yuanmingyuan Museum shifts the visit from loss alone to protection, return, and interpretation. This is especially good for history-focused travelers who want more than scenic melancholy, and for rainy or colder days when a purely outdoor visit feels too thin.

History and memory at Yuanmingyuan

Few places in Beijing compress imperial ambition, destruction, and later recovery as powerfully as Yuanmingyuan. A short timeline changes the walk completely, because every ruin starts to read as evidence instead of background scenery.

From imperial retreat to a three-garden world

Over more than 150 years, the Qing court expanded one imperial retreat into the linked landscape of Yuanmingyuan, Changchun Garden, and Qichun Garden. The result was a world of halls, bridges, islands, libraries, temples, and water scenery used for governance, ceremony, and private leisure, not a single standalone palace building.

1860 changed the meaning of the site

In 1860, Anglo-French forces looted and burned the complex, turning one of the Qing world's greatest gardens into a lasting historical wound. The Xiyanglou ruins make that rupture feel immediate, because the destruction is still readable in stone, not only in books.

1900 deepened the loss, 1976 began modern protection

The surviving fabric was damaged again in 1900, and the site then endured decades of encroachment, theft, and material loss. A dedicated management office was established in 1976, marking the start of systematic protection and restoration of the landscape. What you see today exists because preservation finally became policy, not because the palace was simply rebuilt.

1988 and 2020 made Yuanmingyuan a public civic landmark

Opening to the public in 1988 turned Yuanmingyuan into a shared place of education, mourning, walking, and seasonal festivals. In 2020, the park received national 5A attraction status, underlining how central it has become in Beijing's heritage map. Visit with time, not just a camera roll.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Old Summer Palace best known for?

The Old Summer Palace is best known as the ruined Qing imperial garden called Yuanmingyuan, especially for the shattered Xiyanglou stonework and the way lakes, causeways, and empty traces still suggest the scale of the lost complex. It is as much a place of memory as a scenic park.
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How much time should I plan for a first visit?

For a first route, plan 3 to 5 hours if you want the Xiyanglou ruins, the model or museum context, and one slower lake section. A shorter scenic walk is possible, but below about 2.5 hours the site starts to feel rushed.
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Which ticket is best for first-time visitors?

For most first-time visitors, the all-access pass is the smarter choice. The basic main gate ticket works for a short stroll, but the pass adds the Xiyanglou ruins and panorama model exhibition, which give the site much more meaning.
Read more.

When is the best time to visit Old Summer Palace?

Weekday mornings are usually the smoothest window, especially if you want Dashuifa before the photo crowd thickens. Public holidays, Spring Festival programs, and the late-June to August lotus season bring a busier, more event-like atmosphere.
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Is the park mostly ruins or a reconstructed palace?

It is mostly ruins, water landscapes, and site traces. Do not expect a fully rebuilt palace complex like Forbidden City; use the model exhibition and the museum to imagine what once stood here.
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How do I get to Old Summer Palace by public transport?

The simplest route is Beijing Subway Line 4 to Yuanmingyuan Station. Buses 331, 332, 508, and 584 also reach the south gate area, and that is often the easier option if you are already traveling in west Beijing.
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Can I pair Old Summer Palace with another Beijing stop in one day?

Yes, and Summer Palace is by far the cleanest same-area pairing. If you want a longer west-side route, Beijing Zoo is the more realistic second stop; trying to add too many central-city classics after Yuanmingyuan usually turns into transfer fatigue.
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Do I need to reserve before visiting?

Standard admission is currently listed as no-reservation-required, and on-site purchase is available. If you want to arrive ready, you can also buy in advance through the official Yuanmingyuan Ticket mini-program.
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General information

opening hours

As currently listed, the park gates open from 6 am to 9 pm from April 1 to October 31, with ticket sales and main entry from 7 am to 7 pm. From November 1 to March 31, the gates run from 6:30 am to 7:30 pm, with ticket sales and main entry from 7 am to 5:30 pm. The Xiyanglou ruins zone and the panorama model exhibition follow the ticketed hours rather than the earlier gate opening.

address

Old Summer Palace (Yuanmingyuan)
28 Tsinghua West Road
Haidian District, Beijing
China

tickets

Current listed admission is:
- Main gate ticket: CNY 10 adult, CNY 5 discount
- Xiyanglou ruins zone: CNY 15 adult, CNY 5 discount
- Panorama model exhibition: CNY 10 adult, CNY 5 discount
- All-access pass: CNY 25 adult, CNY 10 discount

Standard entry currently does not require a reservation. Tickets can be bought on site, and advance purchase is also offered through the official Yuanmingyuan Ticket mini-program.

how to get there

The simplest arrival is Beijing Subway Line 4 to Yuanmingyuan Station. Buses 331, 332, 508, and 584 also serve the south gate area. Because the park is spread across a large footprint, the real planning question is not only how to get there, but which direction you want to walk once inside.
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