Quick summary: what you actually pay
| Ticket type | Peak season 1 Apr – 31 Oct | Off-season 1 Nov – 31 Mar |
|---|---|---|
| Adult — full ticket | 60 RMB | 40 RMB |
| Student (with valid ID) | 20 RMB | 20 RMB |
| Children 6–18 / under 1.4 m | Half price | Half price |
| Children under 6 or under 1.2 m | Free* | Free* |
| Seniors 60+ | Half price | Half price |
| Treasure Gallery (add-on) | +10 RMB | +10 RMB |
| Clock Gallery (add-on) | +10 RMB | +10 RMB |
*Free tickets still require a real-name reservation under a ticketed adult. Source: official Palace Museum site (en.dpm.org.cn).
How prices break down — the full picture
The Palace Museum keeps general admission deliberately affordable. The headline price has not changed in years: 60 RMB in peak season, 40 RMB in the cooler half of the year. The catch is that this is the headline only — popular extras and tour bundles can push your spend much higher, and most foreign visitors end up paying for convenience rather than for the ticket itself.
Here is how a typical Western visitor's bill looks for one adult in May:
- Admission ticket: 60 RMB
- Treasure Gallery add-on: 10 RMB
- Audio guide (multilingual, optional): 40 RMB
- Convenience fee via international booking platform: 20–40 RMB
- Total: ~130–150 RMB (roughly USD 18–21)
For families and groups, the per-person cost falls quickly once you book a single private guide and share the cost across four to six people.
Peak vs off-season — and which you should choose
Peak season (1 April – 31 October) overlaps with the warmest weather and the busiest crowds. Off-season prices are 33% lower, and the museum is meaningfully quieter from mid-November to mid-March. Tradeoffs:
- Peak: longer daylight, more open side exhibitions, but crowds and queues.
- Off-season: short days, some side halls may rotate closed, occasional snow on the golden roofs.
Personal opinion after several visits: late October and early November are the sweet spot — peak prices end on 31 October, then the same museum becomes 33% cheaper and considerably emptier within a week.
Discount eligibility — read this before you book
Discounts are real but Chinese-administered. The entry gate scans your ID against the booking, and they verify proof:
- Students: bring your physical student card. International student cards (ISIC) are usually accepted, but a university ID with a photo and validity sticker is safer.
- Seniors: passport showing age 60+ is accepted. Some short windows in the year offer free entry to seniors — check the official site.
- Children: the height bar at the entrance is the deciding factor, not just the listed age.
- Disability: Chinese disability cards qualify for free entry; foreign equivalents are accepted at the museum's discretion — present at Wumen.
- Active military: free with Chinese military ID.
The two gallery add-ons — which one is worth it
Treasure Gallery (珍宝馆) — 10 RMB
Located in the eastern Palace of Tranquil Longevity, this is where the imperial jewellery, gold, jade and ceremonial weapons are kept. The 9-Dragon Screen (a 1771 wall of 270 glazed tiles) sits at its entrance. For most visitors this is the highest-impact add-on — pay the 10 RMB.
Clock Gallery (钟表馆) — 10 RMB
European mechanical clocks gifted to the Qing emperors, plus Chinese imitations. Smaller in scope but a connoisseur's delight, with live demonstrations on the hour. Pay for it if you have more than three hours total.
How to book — three working routes
1. Official Palace Museum WeChat mini-program
Cheapest. Needs a Chinese mobile number, WeChat Pay or Alipay, and Chinese language ability. Released at 20:00 Beijing time, seven days in advance.
2. International booking platforms (Klook, Trip.com)
Recommended for foreign visitors. English interface, accept international cards, handle the real-name registration with your passport number. Small markup over official price, but no Chinese phone required and you keep a clean refund policy. This site uses Klook as a booking partner.
3. Walk-up at Wumen, foreign passport counter
Possible on quiet days. Highly unreliable in May, October National Day and Spring Festival. Bring exact RMB or a Chinese mobile-payment app.
Editor's tip — save the booking screenshot
Hotel Wi-Fi at Wumen Gate is intermittent and the security check zone has poor signal. Save the QR code as a screenshot and download a PDF copy before you arrive. We have seen visitors miss their slot waiting for an email to load.
When tickets actually sell out
The 40,000-person daily cap matters in specific windows:
- 1–7 October (National Day): sells out within minutes of release.
- Chinese New Year week: reservations open in waves, expect refresh delays.
- Late April – early June, weekends: book at least 3 days ahead.
- Mid-November – mid-March, weekdays: usually available same-week, sometimes same-day.
If you find your dates sold out, check the international platforms — they hold small inventory pools separately from the official channel.
What is not included in the ticket
- Audio guides — rented at Wumen, 40 RMB with multilingual options.
- Storage lockers — small fee at the entrance; large suitcases not permitted inside.
- Food and drink — limited cafés inside; bring water.
- Re-entry — tickets are single-use; once you exit you cannot return.
Refunds and changes
Official tickets are non-refundable from the moment the slot is locked, but the museum allows a date change up to 24 hours before. Through licensed third-party platforms, refund windows are usually 24–48 hours before the slot — check the listing's policy before paying. If your travel insurance covers attraction cancellations, keep the booking PDF.
Comparing your options — ticket only vs combo
| Bare ticket | Skip-line + audio | Private guided | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical price | ~70–90 RMB | ~150–200 RMB | From ~800 RMB / group |
| Real-name handled | You (or platform) | Platform | Operator |
| Language support | None included | Audio app | Human guide |
| Best for | Independent walkers | First-time visitors | Families, deeper history |
If this is your first visit and you want context without the burden of pre-reading, the skip-line + audio package usually pays off in saved frustration alone.
FAQ — ticket questions we hear most often
Why is the ticket more expensive on Klook than on the official site?
Because Klook handles the real-name reservation for non-Chinese passport holders, provides English support, and accepts international cards. The markup is for service, not for the ticket itself.
Can two people share one ticket?
No. Each ticket is locked to one ID. The gate scans both the QR and the document.
What if I lose my passport between booking and the visit?
You will need to update the document number with the platform that issued the booking. Allow 24 hours for sync.
Are tour groups exempt from the cap?
No. Tour-group seats come from the same daily allocation. Reputable operators secure them in advance.
Can I buy only the Treasure Gallery ticket?
No. Gallery tickets are sold only as add-ons to a general admission ticket.


