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Tibet Tours from the UK: How to Plan Your Trip (2026)

A clear guide for British travelers on connecting through a mainland China hub to Lhasa, arranging the China visa and Tibet Travel Permit, and picking a guided tour.

Getting to Tibet from the UK is a two-stage journey. There are no direct flights to Lhasa, so you fly to a major city in mainland China, clear immigration, and then continue to Lhasa by a domestic flight or on the Qinghai–Tibet train. Tibet is a permit-controlled region, which means foreign visitors travel on an organized guided tour rather than on their own. Plan around those two points and the rest falls into place.

How to Get to Tibet from the UK

From London and other UK airports, you'll route through a Chinese gateway. Chengdu is the most popular launch point because it has the most frequent flights to Lhasa, but Beijing, Shanghai, Chongqing, and Guangzhou all connect onward as well. If you'd rather ease into the altitude, the train from Xining is a spectacular way to cover the final stretch.

Gateway city Onward to Lhasa Approx time
Chengdu (CTU/TFU) Direct flight ~2.5 hrs
Chongqing (CKG) Direct flight ~3 hrs
Beijing (PEK/PKX) Direct flight ~4.5 hrs
Xining (XNN) Qinghai–Tibet train ~21 hrs

Nonstop flying time from London to Chengdu is roughly 11 hours, and longer with a connection through the Gulf or another hub. We recommend an overnight stop in your gateway city so you reach Lhasa rested rather than stepping off a long flight straight onto the plateau.

China Visa & Tibet Travel Permit

There are two separate documents, and the sequence matters.

First, you arrange a Chinese tourist visa (L visa) yourself through the Chinese visa application service in the UK before you depart. This is what allows you to enter mainland China.

Second, you need a Tibet Travel Permit, which is entirely separate and cannot be obtained independently. We arrange this for you after you book, through the Tibet Tourism Bureau. We'll need clear scans of your passport and your China visa around 15–20 days before departure, so allow enough lead time. Independent travel within Tibet is not open to foreign visitors — every trip includes a licensed guide and arranged transport. Our Tibet Travel Permit page and travel restrictions guide cover the specifics.

Recommended Tibet Tours

Most UK visitors begin with a Lhasa-based itinerary to acclimatize before venturing further. A short Lhasa trip takes in the Potala Palace, Jokhang Temple, and the surrounding monasteries. With more days, a Lhasa–Shigatse route adds Yamdrok Lake and the road west, while the Everest Base Camp tour brings you to the foot of the world's highest peak. See everything on our Tibet tours page.

Practical Tips

  • Respect the altitude. Lhasa sits at around 3,650 m (11,975 ft). Take your first day slowly and drink plenty of water.
  • Leave a buffer day. A spare night in your Chinese gateway protects against delayed flights and tight onward connections.
  • Send scans early. Get us your passport and visa copies 15–20 days ahead so your permit is ready in time.
  • Keep the permit handy. You'll need the physical permit to board your flight or train to Lhasa and at checkpoints; your guide coordinates this.
  • Do your homework. Our how to get to Tibet and Tibet train guide go deeper on routing. Want help with your dates? Contact us.

FAQ — Tibet from the UK

No. There are no direct flights from the UK to Lhasa. You fly to a mainland Chinese gateway such as Chengdu, Beijing, or Shanghai, clear immigration, and then continue to Lhasa by domestic flight or by the Qinghai–Tibet train.

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