Expedition to the Everest

505: 8 Days Private Tour of Lhasa - Gyangtse - Shigatse - Dingri - Everest Base Camp - Shigatse - Lhasa
Tour Type: Private tour, any parts of the itinerary can be customized
Guide & Driver: English-speaking guide, experienced driver with an air-conditioned vehicle
Meals: 7 breakfasts, 6 lunches

Highlights:
  • Visit Potala Palace, the splendid Tibetan Buddhist center and treasure trove.
  • See Mt. Everest from the ideal viewing site closest to the snow-capped peak.
  • Join pilgrims to holy Jokhang Temple and witness 12-year-old Sakyamuni statue.
  • Visit a Tibetan family and make small talk over traditional butter tea.
From USD1749 per person Free Inquiry
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Day 1 Arrival in Lhasa
Welcome your arrival anytime at the airport and transfer to hotel.
Welcome to book this 8-days private Tibet tour, designed for you to immerse in the highlights of the sacred and mysterious land. With your knowledgeable guide, you will take in spectacular Buddhist monasteries, ancient palaces, magnificent snow-capped mountains, tranquil blue lakes, and white glaciers. Delve into Tibetan life, beliefs and nature!

Our guide will greet you outside the baggage claim area of Lhasa’s airport and transfer you to check in at the hotel. It is suggested that you have a good rest in the hotel and avoid strenuous activities on the first day to adapt to the 3,650 meters (11,975 ft.) high altitude.

► Suggestion on Where for Dinner
We bet you might want some authentic local food on your first day in Tibet! If so, take a 10 minutes’ walk from Tangka Hotel or 20 minutes’ taxi ride from Shangri-La Hotel to Xin Ling Jie Bai Tibetan-style Restaurant (Jokhang Temple branch). This would be your first experience of a typical traditional-style atmosphere: there are red columns decorated with colorful patterns and white walls with dzi bead-shaped lamps - red stands for passion and white and the agate for auspiciousness in Tibetan beliefs. Try their star dish Flatbread-Covered Stir-fried Beef (Niu Rou Bo Bing), which blends chewy texture with mild spiciness, and accompany it with Tibetan-flavored milk tea. As you leave, you will be presented a white hada, a silk scarf symbolizing good fortune and respect. The average cost per person is CNY 52 / USD 7.
Day 2 Lhasa
Visit Drepung Monastery, Sera Monastery, and Norbulingka Park. (B+L)
Let’s go west and start with a visit to the largest lamasery in the world - the Drepung Monastery, aged over 600. It has a scale to hold a grand assembly hall, a palace for early Dalai Lamas, several colleges, lama’s living quarters - there were over 10,000 lamas at its peak time - and various chapels among other sub-structures! The name Drepung or “a pile of rice” describes what it looks - white buildings sprawl down the hillside, well resembling a rice heap, only that the roofs are red. It will also amaze you with rich collections of Thangka paintings, stupa-tombs, Buddhist statues, and curious artefacts like ancient porcelain ware and armors. You may come around the middle of August to encounter Shoton Festival, when tens of thousands of disciples and travelers would come from afar to worship the Buddha on a giant silk Thangka, which will be unfolded on a mountain side.

In the afternoon, you are going to visit the Sera Monastery - both Sera and Drepung are the greatest monasteries of Gelug Sect, the most popular school of Tibetan Buddhism. Besides appreciating static Buddhist artworks, here you can also witness an impassioned debating of lamas on Buddhist philosophy, which is held in a question-defend form. If the defender cannot answer the question, the audience will loudly boo, and he needs to remove the yellow hat until scoring off the questioner. Generally, the answer can only be "yes", "no" or "indefinite", so the outcome is quick and clear. Even for those who do not understand the Tibetan language, you will be lifted up by the boisterous atmosphere with lamas clapping hand and dramatically gesticulating. Enjoy some serene time next in the Norbulingka Park, Lhasa’s oasis. Originally the second home to Dalai Lamas to escape summer heat, the meticulously laid-out grounds provides beautiful palace shelters, lush gardens, ponds and sometimes cultural performances. Out of the park, transfer back to the hotel.

Meals: Western buffet breakfast, Lunch
Drepung Monastery, Lhasa
Drepung Monastery
Monks Debaitng in Sera Temple, Lhasa
Monks Debating in Sera Temple
Day 3 Lhasa
Visit Potala Palace, Jokhang Temple, Barkhor Street, and a Nunnery. (B+L)
The biggest landmark of the city, the Potala Palace, beckons this morning! Perched atop the Red Hill, this castle, 13 stories high and all wood-and-stone, has played a vital role in the politics and religion of the area for 1,300 years. Its main components are easy to recognize as we approach - the White Palace building for Dalai Lamas to live and work and the Red Palace in the center for housing stupa-tombs and religious rituals. Against the blue sky, the blend of white and red enjoys a vibrant beauty for you to marvel at. This holy site is so revered that it would be repainted every year on Buddha's Descent Day on the 22nd day of Tibetan Calendar, with the white paint said to be a mixture of white lime, milk, sugar, honey and other natural ingredients. Maybe come this day to witness the project! The Palace is also so popular that to preserve it, the management office even set a daily quota which makes its tickets in hot demand - of course, we will ensure that your ticket is booked in advance for a smooth trip.

Out of the Palace, navigate through local life to the spiritual heart of Tibet, the Jokhang Temple. There is an old saying goes that “First there was Jokhang Temple, and then Lhasa City”. Anyway, this is where the statue of 12-year-old Sakyamuni Buddha is worshipped, crafted life-size when Sakyamuni himself was still alive, so you know why it’s the ultimate destination of the Buddhist pilgrims! After the holy visit, continue onwards to the Barkhor Street just outside the temple, which is as prosperous just as it was a thousand years ago except that it has occupied by contemporary people - locals, vendors and travelers. Here you will find local-made handcrafts, street food, paintings, and traditional clothes, just to name a few. The last stop today is a Nunnery, where you’ll have a chance to dig into the life of local women lamas.

Meals: Western buffet breakfast, Lunch
Our Guest at the Potala Palace
Our Guests at the Potala Palace
Jokhang Temple, Lhasa
Jokhang Temple
Day 4 Lhasa - Gyangtse - Shigatse
Drive to Gyangtse first; visit Yamdrok Yumtso Lake and Karola Glacier en route, and then visit Palcho Monastery and Gyangtse Old Street; continue driving to Shigatse. (B+L)
After breakfast, we will drive 230 kilometers (143 mi) southwards to Gyangtse. On the way, visit the Yamdrok Yumtso Lake, one of the three sacred lakes in Tibet. Lakes are thought to have spiritual power for Tibetans, so is Yamdrok Yumtso. Legend has it that it is the manifestation of the protective deity Dorje Geg Kyi Tso, and this is why sometimes you would see lamas and locals on the shore praying. You can meditate towards the pacifying turquoise lake water, which reflects the pure sky, making it a graceful beauty in the arms of the magnificent Himalayas. Also pass by the Karola Glacier. As it is not far from the highway, you can enjoy its splendid snow-capped peaks at a pretty close distance.

► Reminder on Altitude Sickness
While we are in mountain regions with rarified air, to prevent or alleviate altitude sickness, you’d better take in carbohydrate instead of fats and protein that use more oxygen to consume. Know about the symptoms and, if necessary, ask your doctor for some preventive medicines. As mountainous excursions require a good level of health and fitness, please let your guide know if you are feeling even slightly unwell for us to consider adjusting the itinerary or working out other solutions.

After arriving in Gyangtse, our first stop will be the Palcho Monastery on a hill, the only lamasery shared by three sects of Tibetan Buddhism, namely Sakya, Kadam and Gelug. The stunner here is the mandala-shaped, gold-capped Kumbum Stupa, in which you will find thousands of Buddha statues and delicate murals. Climb up to different levels of this multi-layered structure to appreciate these masterpieces as many as possible. Next, go down to the Gyangtse Old Street, an untouched traditional Tibetan quarter, and have a quiet stroll past old houses, cows, dogs, and original Tibetan people and their kids. After that, your trip will continue to Shigatse, the second largest city of Tibet, and check in at the hotel there.

► Suggestion on Where for Dinner
The most popular restaurant around your hotel would be Feng Sheng Tibetan-style Restaurant (Xi Ge Zi Pedestrian Street branch), 15-minute taxi ride from your hotel. In an environment perfect in Tibetan fashion, you may watch locals in traditional robes dance to stringed instruments called “Zha Nian” and sample Tibetan specialties. Here, Potato Stuffed Buns can be found almost on every table, while the Beef Buns are also worth trying. They offer Tsampa, fried barley flour, the staple food of Tibetan people; you might not like it at first taste but it can be a cultural experience! Please note that the service staff tend to recommend more than you can eat. Average cost per person at the restaurant is CNY 100 / USD 14.

Meals: Western buffet breakfast, Lunch
Our Guests at Yamdrok Yumtso Lake
Our Guests at Yamdrok Yumtso Lake
Palkhor Monastery, Gyangtse
Palcho Monastery
Day 5 Shigatse - Dingri
Drive to Dingri; en route visit Sakya Monastery. (B+L)
Today, we will depart from downtown Shigatse to Dingri, which is located in the middle of the Himalayas and at the north foot of Mount Everest. En route, we will pass by Sakya for Sakya Monastery, the seat of Sakya sect that emphasizes on enlightenment through meditation. This monastery will first surprise you with a distinctive architecture painted mainly in grey, as Sakya actually means “grey-white mud”. But the most striking scene should be those sutras-storing bookshelves or walls rising to the ceiling. Imagine more than 84,000 hand-written Buddhist classics that have survived nearly a millennium! Enjoy a panoramic view of the whole precincts on the White Dagoba if you are interested. Continue to Dingri, a picturesque small town. Check in at the best local hotel for a stay.

Meals: Western buffet breakfast, Lunch
Day 6 Dingri - Everest Base Camp - Shigatse
Visit Everest Base Camp and Rongbuk Monastery; drive back to Shigatse. (B+L)
From Dingri, head to the Everest Base Camp - we know you’ve been waiting so long for this moment! Based on our experience, this is the perfect (the closest) place to view the world's highest peak Mt. Everest, which rises 8,848.86 meters (29,031.7 ft.). Prepare to be awestruck as you gaze upon the sublime snow-dusted summit, with changeful clouds creating a magical display, a vista that will leave you with memories to last a lifetime. On our way back down, stop by the Rongbuk Monastery, the world’s highest monastery just a little away from the camp. Though small in size, it is so inclusive as to allow monks and nuns to practice together. Continue with a 6-hour drive to Shigatse. Check in at the hotel upon your arrival.

Meals: Buffet breakfast; Lunch
Our Guests at Everest Base Camp
Our Guests at Everest Base Camp
Rongbuk Monastery, Dingri
Rongbuk Monastery
Day 7 Shigatse - Lhasa
Visit Tashilunpo Monastery; drive back to Lhasa and visit a Tibetan family en route. (B+L)
This morning, you will be accompanied to the grand Tashilunpo Monastery. For Tibetan Buddhists, the monastery holds an equally significant place as Potala Palace. Still remember that Potala is for Dalai Lamas? Tashilunpo is for Panchen Lamas, who are regarded as the Great Scholars and responsible for seeking out the next Dalai Lama. Here, the most eye-appealing structures would be those glorious stupa-tombs of the spiritual leaders.

Later, we will go back to Lhasa. On our 4 hours’ private drive, have your last glance at the scenic villages, mountains and streams you might have seen before. On the way, stop to visit a Tibetan family to experience local daily life. Have a glimpse of the local living conditions, examine the house’s layout and decorative elements, and chat with the friendly host over traditional butter tea. Maybe prepare some questions beforehand, such as what they do for a living and how they educate their children. Stay in Lhasa.

Meals: Western buffet breakfast, Lunch
Tashilunpo Monastery in Shigatse
Visit Tashilunpo Monastery
Local Villagers in Tibet
Local Villagers in Tibet
Day 8 Departure from Lhasa
Transfer to airport and see you off; a pleasant trip home! (B)
Today, our guide and driver will transfer you to the airport for your return flight. Wish you a pleasant trip home! If you are totally enraptured by Tibetan culture, why not extend your tour to explore for more? We are glad to tailor-make this itinerary for you.

Meals: Western buffet breakfast
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This trip can be customized to meet your individual needs!
DestinationsStandard HotelsLuxury Hotels
LhasaTangka Hotel Shangri-La Hotel
ShigatseGesar Hotel - VIP BuildingShigatse Hilton
DingriEverest Hotel Everest Hotel
Tour Prices
Prices with Standard Hotels
2-3 travelers4-5 travelers
USD2469
USD1749
Prices with Luxury Hotels
2-3 travelers4-5 travelers
USD2839
USD2119
  • Prices are per person on twin sharing.
  • If you are a group of 6 people or more, we will offer a more favorable price by your group size.
Price Includes
  • Hotel accommodation with breakfasts
  • Lunches as itinerary specifies
  • Private English-speaking guide
  • Private driver & air-conditioned vehicle
  • Entrance fees to tourist sites
  • Tibet Travel Permit
Price Excludes
  • Airfares of arrival and departure
  • Entry visa fees
  • Personal expenses
  • Tips or gratuities for guides and drivers
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