Tour Guide

Historic Building

🏛️ Forbidden City

The world's largest palatial complex and seat of imperial power

Aerial view of the Forbidden City in Beijing from Jingshan Park
Photo: Pixelflake · Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 3.0

Overview

The Forbidden City, known in Chinese as the Palace Museum (Gùgōng), occupies 72 hectares at the heart of Beijing and served as the exclusive home to 24 emperors across the Ming and Qing dynasties from 1420 to 1912. Its 980 surviving buildings represent the pinnacle of traditional Chinese wooden architecture, organized along a strict north-south axis that reflects Confucian principles of cosmic order. Visitors enter from the south through the massive Meridian Gate, pass through ceremonial outer courts where the emperor held audiences, then penetrate deeper into the intimate inner courts where imperial families lived surrounded by gardens, theaters, and treasure vaults. A guide transforms this overwhelming expanse into a coherent narrative spanning five centuries of power, art, and intrigue. For official information, see Palace Museum official site.

Architecture

Hall of Supreme Harmony: The largest wooden structure in the Forbidden City, used for coronations and grand ceremonies. Nine-Dragon Screen: A stunning glazed-tile wall featuring nine writhing dragons, each unique in pose and color. Imperial Garden: A compact paradise of ancient cypresses, bronze sculptures, and ornate pavilions behind the inner palace. Clock Exhibition: An astonishing collection of 18th-century mechanical timepieces gifted by European diplomats. Treasure Gallery: Gold vessels, jade carvings, and imperial robes that showcase the breathtaking wealth of the Qing court. Meridian Gate views: Climb the gate towers for an aerial perspective over the entire central axis

When to Visit

Open: Tuesday - Sunday, 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM (last entry 4:00 PM). Closed: Every Monday (except national holidays). Peak season (Apr-Oct): Closes at 5:00 PM, tickets ¥60. Off season (Nov-Mar): Closes at 4:30 PM, tickets ¥40. Best: Arrive at 8:30 AM opening for the quietest courtyards and best light.

Admission and Costs

General admission: ¥60 peak / ¥40 off-season. Clock Exhibition Hall: ¥10 additional. Treasure Gallery: ¥10 additional. Audio guide rental: ¥20 (available in English). Daily visitor cap: 80,000 — book online in advance.

Tips for Visitors

Book online days ahead: Tickets sell out during holidays and weekends - only passport holders can purchase at the gate. Wear comfortable shoes: The complex stretches over a kilometer from south to north on stone and brick paving. One-way flow: Enter from the south (Meridian Gate) and exit from the north (Gate of Divine Might) - you cannot re-enter. Avoid Golden Week: The first week of October sees massive crowds that can make the visit unpleasant. Side halls matter: Most tourists stick to the central axis — detour east or west for quieter galleries with remarkable art.

Historical Timeline

  1. Emperor Yongle of the Ming dynasty orders construction of a grand imperial palace in Beijing, mobilizing over one million laborers and 100,000 artisans for the project that would reshape the city's layout around a central north-south axis.

  2. Construction completes after fourteen years and the Forbidden City officially becomes the seat of imperial power, housing Emperor Yongle and his court within 980 buildings spanning 72 hectares.

  3. The last Ming emperor Chongzhen hangs himself on Coal Hill as rebel forces breach the walls, ending Ming rule and ushering in the Qing dynasty which would occupy the palace for nearly three more centuries.

  4. During the Second Opium War, Anglo-French forces occupy Beijing and loot the Old Summer Palace, though the Forbidden City itself narrowly escapes destruction through diplomatic negotiations.

  5. The abdication of the child emperor Puyi ends 2,000 years of imperial rule in China, though the former emperor continues to reside in the inner court under the Articles of Favorable Treatment.

  6. The Palace Museum opens to the public for the first time, transforming the exclusive imperial compound into a national cultural institution accessible to ordinary Chinese citizens.

  7. UNESCO inscribes the Forbidden City as a World Heritage Site, recognizing it as the largest collection of preserved ancient wooden structures in the world and a masterpiece of Chinese palatial architecture.

Frequently Asked Questions

What months are ideal for touring the Forbidden City?

Late April through May and September through October deliver Beijing's finest weather — clear blue skies, mild temperatures, and the golden autumn light that makes the yellow-glazed roof tiles glow against the sky. The Golden Week holiday (early October) brings enormous crowds despite perfect weather, so late September or mid-October after the holiday is the true sweet spot. Summer swelters above 35°C with minimal shade across the 72-hectare complex, and winter's biting wind sweeps unobstructed through the vast courtyards.

When can visitors tour Forbidden City?

Open: Tuesday - Sunday, 8:30 AM - 5:00 PM (last entry 4:00 PM). Closed: Every Monday (except national holidays). Peak season (Apr-Oct): Closes at 5:00 PM, tickets ¥60. Off season (Nov-Mar): Closes at 4:30 PM, tickets ¥40.

How much is the entrance fee for Forbidden City?

General admission: ¥60 peak / ¥40 off-season. Clock Exhibition Hall: ¥10 additional. Treasure Gallery: ¥10 additional. Audio guide rental: ¥20 (available in English). Daily visitor cap: 80,000 - book online in advance

What do guided tours of Forbidden City include?

A guide transforms this overwhelming 72-hectare expanse into a coherent narrative spanning five centuries of power, art, and intrigue across 980 surviving buildings along the strict north-south imperial axis.