The Potala Palace is Lhasa's symbol, but visits need advance booking. This guide tells you how to book, how to tour, and where the photos are prettiest.
Why It's Worth the Trip
The Potala Palace is built up the Red Hill, its white and red palaces stacked into the clouds — the most staggering palace on the plateau. It is both palace and faith; save a breath for the climb.
Recommended Itinerary
- Arrive in Lhasa
- Hotel rest and acclimatize
- Stroll Barkhor Street
- Rest at a sweet-tea house
- Morning: Potala Palace
- Afternoon: Jokhang Temple
- Barkhor kora
- Tibetan dinner
- Morning: Sera Monastery debate
- Afternoon: Drepung Monastery
- Free time
Highlights Along the Way
Potala Palace
The Potala Palace is built up the Red Hill, its white and red palaces stacked into the clouds — the most staggering palace on the plateau. It is both palace and faith; save a breath for the climb.
🧭 Local Tips
- Book tickets ahead by time slot; plan 2–3 hours
- Walk up slowly to ward off altitude sickness
- The square's reflection pool is a classic night-shot spot
Frequently Asked Questions
What season is safest for Lhasa?
June–October is best — higher oxygen, clear roads, wildflowers blooming in the lingka. Winter is sunny but bitterly cold, and some passes close.
How to acclimatize over four to five days?
Day one: no shower, no rushing. Half a day each for Potala and Jokhang, a day for Namtso, the rest for the Barkhor kora and sweet-tea houses.