An official fee of zero, and the real costs that sit around it
| Permit | Tibet Travel Permit (TTB Permit) |
|---|---|
| Official fee | Free of charge (“No Commission Fee” printed on it) |
| Aliens’ Travel Permit | CNY 50 per person (Ngari routes) |
| Military Permit | No published fee; agency handling applies |
| Tibet Group Visa | USD 60–185 by nationality, paid in Kathmandu |
| Courier | Included in Tibet Daily tour prices |
| Watch for | “Permit fee” surcharges on top of tour prices |
The Tibet Travel Permit costs nothing at the counter: the Tibet Tourism Bureau publishes no fee for issuing it. What costs money is everything the permit is conditional on — a registered agency, a licensed guide, a vehicle with driver, and a fixed itinerary. For a budget traveller the honest framing is that the permit system sets a price floor on a Tibet trip; the paper itself is the cheapest part.
This page itemises the real numbers for 2026: which documents carry fees, which carry none, what is bundled inside a tour price, and the surcharge patterns worth recognising before you compare quotes.
Paperwork costs, line by line
| Document | Official fee | Who pays, where |
|---|---|---|
| Tibet Travel Permit | Free — the document itself prints “No Commission Fee” | Agency files; bundled in tour price |
| Aliens’ Travel Permit (PSB) | CNY 50 per person | Guide pays at the PSB counter; only Ngari and remoter routes need it since June 2025; included in Tibet Daily prices |
| Military Permit + Border Defence Permit | No published fee | Agency handling, filed with the TTB permit for Ngari routes |
| Tibet Group Visa (from Nepal) | USD 155 standard for US passports, USD 85 Canada, USD 60 most others (March 2026 embassy schedule) | Paid to the Chinese Embassy via the Kathmandu agent, plus a USD 20–35 agency service fee |
| Courier delivery of the original | Domestic courier | Included in Tibet Daily prices |
The Group Visa is the only document where nationality changes the bill, because the embassy mirrors bilateral visa fees: the March 2026 schedule runs from USD 38 (Serbian, Chilean and several other passports) through USD 60 for most nationalities to USD 155 for US citizens, with urgent service roughly USD 30 more. Confirm the current band when booking — the embassy revises the table without notice.
Why some quotes show a “permit fee” anyway
Two patterns. The first is unbundling: a low headline tour price with the permit, entry tickets and courier billed back as “fees” — the total lands where everyone else’s total lands, but the comparison was distorted. The second is the fake urgency premium: “express permit processing” sold as an upgrade. Processing time is set by the Tibet Tourism Bureau and is not purchasable; see the processing time page for what actually moves the calendar.
Tibet Daily’s from-prices include the Tibet Travel Permit, the Aliens’ Travel Permit where the route needs it, military permit handling on Ngari routes, all entry tickets, and courier delivery. The line we do not include — and say so — is the Nepal-side Group Visa fee, because the embassy charges it per passport and it changes by nationality.
The cost the permit creates indirectly
Because the permit requires a guide and vehicle, the structural cost of a Tibet trip is the daily rate of that infrastructure. As reference points from our 2026 pricing: joining a group tour spreads guide and 4WD costs across up to sixteen travellers, with the 8-day Lhasa–EBC route from USD 926 per person; a private tour puts the same fixed costs on your party alone, from USD 760 per person on a 2-pax 4-day Lhasa itinerary. The permit’s “cost” is mostly this choice.
Frequently asked questions
Is the Tibet Travel Permit really free?
Yes — the Tibet Tourism Bureau publishes no issuing fee, and reputable agencies bundle the handling into the tour price. What is never free is the condition attached to it: a registered agency, a licensed guide and a vehicle. Any quote with a standalone “TTB permit fee” line deserves a question.
How much is the Aliens’ Travel Permit?
CNY 50 per person, paid by your guide at the Public Security Bureau counter while you are already in Tibet, usually issued within an hour or two. Since 4 June 2025 it is only required for Ngari routes (Mount Kailash, Guge) and some remote eastern counties — EBC, Gyirong, Nyingchi and Samye dropped the requirement. Tibet Daily includes it wherever the route needs it.
How much is the Tibet Group Visa from Nepal?
By the March 2026 embassy schedule: USD 155 for US passports, USD 85 for Canadian, USD 60 for most other nationalities, with urgent service roughly USD 30 more. Standard processing is 4 working days; the embassy lodges applications on Monday, Wednesday and Friday. The fee is paid in Kathmandu and is the one paperwork cost not bundled in our tour prices.
Are there extra fees for Everest or Kailash?
Not permit fees beyond the table above, but both areas carry entrance costs: the Mount Everest scenic area charges CNY 180 per person in peak season (CNY 90 November–March) plus a CNY 405 vehicle environmental fee and a CNY 25 eco-bus leg from Rongbuk, and Kailash routes pay Ngari entry tickets. Tibet Daily itineraries include entry tickets, so the from-price already carries them.
Can I pay more to get the permit faster?
No. Processing is 15–20 working days and the Tibet Tourism Bureau sells no express lane. The only honest acceleration is on your side: clean scans, accurate occupation, and filing early — especially before the Saga Dawa season in May and June and the August Shoton window.
How do I budget the paperwork for a 2026 trip?
For entry via mainland China: zero extra — permits, tickets and courier ride inside the tour price. For entry via Kathmandu: add your nationality’s Group Visa band (USD 60–155 standard) in cash or card at the embassy stage. Then compare tour from-prices knowing the paperwork is already inside them.