
Great Wall Hiking Guide for Beginners (2026): Routes, Gear & Essential Tips
A few years ago, a client from Canada told me he wanted to "hike the Great Wall." I asked him which section. He said: "The real one. Not the tourist one."
I took him to Jiankou at sunrise. We hiked six hours across crumbling watchtowers, through wild sections where the wall had collapsed into rubble, up staircases so steep we had to use our hands. We saw exactly seven other people the entire day. At the highest point, we sat on a broken battlement and ate the packed lunches our homestay host had prepared — hard-boiled eggs, sesame bread, and thermos tea.
He messaged me later: "That was the best day of my life in China."
I've now organized Great Wall hikes for dozens of clients — from complete beginners to experienced trekkers. This guide is everything I've learned about hiking the Wall: which sections to choose, what to bring, how to prepare, and how to stay safe.
First: Is This For You?
There are two completely different ways to experience the Great Wall:
**The tourist experience** — cable car up, walk 500 meters on a restored section, take photos, cable car down. This is Mutianyu and Badaling. It takes 3 hours. Almost anyone can do it.
**The hiking experience** — walking on unrestored sections, scrambling over rubble, climbing steep stairs, spending 4-8 hours on the wall. This is Jiankou, Jinshanling, and the wild sections. It requires fitness, preparation, and a willingness to get your hands dirty.
This guide is for the second experience. But here's the honest truth: **not everyone should hike the Great Wall.** If you have bad knees, a serious fear of heights, or absolutely zero hiking experience, stick to Mutianyu. There's no shame in it — I've taken 70-year-olds to Mutianyu who loved every minute.
If you're reasonably fit, don't mind uneven terrain, and want to see the Wall the way it's existed for centuries — keep reading.
The Best Sections for Hiking
1. Jiankou to Mutianyu (The Classic)
**Difficulty:** Hard | **Time:** 5-7 hours | **Distance:** ~10 km
This is the most famous Great Wall hike and for good reason. Jiankou (箭扣) is the wild, unrestored section — crumbling stone walls snaking along razor-sharp mountain ridges. The trail passes through the famous "Beijing Knot" (Beijing Jie), a watchtower where three walls meet at a breathtaking viewpoint. The hike ends at Mutianyu, where you can take the cable car or toboggan down.
The first hour is the hardest — a steep climb up from the village of Xizhazi to the wall. After that, you're on the wall for the duration, following its contour as it climbs and dips across the ridges.
**Best for:** Experienced hikers, photographers, anyone who wants the "wild wall" experience.
**Logistics:**
**What nobody tells you:** Some watchtowers on this route have collapsed stairs that require climbing around the outside of the tower on narrow ledges. If you're scared of heights, this section will test you. I've had clients who handled it fine, and I've had clients who froze halfway through. Be honest with yourself about your comfort level.
2. Jinshanling to Simatai (The Golden Hike)
**Difficulty:** Moderate | **Time:** 4-5 hours | **Distance:** ~8 km
If Jiankou sounds too intense, this is your best alternative. Jinshanling (金山岭) is partially restored but far less crowded than Badaling or Mutianyu. The hike follows a continuous stretch of wall through beautiful mountain scenery, ending at Simatai (司马台).
What makes this section special is the variety — you'll pass through both restored watchtowers and unrestored sections, giving you the full range of Great Wall experiences in a single hike.
**Best for:** First-time hikers who want a genuine wall hike without extreme danger.
**Logistics:**
3. Mutianyu Loop (The Beginner Hike)
**Difficulty:** Easy-Moderate | **Time:** 2-3 hours | **Distance:** ~5 km
Most people go to Mutianyu for the tourist experience. But if you walk past the main area — past watchtower 8, past where most tourists turn around — the crowd disappears and you can get a genuine hiking experience on a well-maintained wall.
Start from the north entrance, take the chairlift up, and walk east along the wall. The further you go, the fewer people you'll see. After watchtower 15, you'll have sections entirely to yourself on most weekdays.
**Best for:** Beginners who want a hiking feel without the danger.
**Logistics:**
4. Huanghuacheng (The Lake Hike)
**Difficulty:** Easy | **Time:** 2-3 hours | **Distance:** ~4 km
This is my secret recommendation for hiking with kids or beginners. Huanghuacheng (黄花城) is a partially submerged section of the wall — parts of it run into a reservoir, creating the unusual sight of wall rising out of water. The hike follows the wall along the lakeshore, with the option to take a boat back.
**Best for:** Families, beginners, photographers.
**Mom says:** I brought my daughter here when she was six. The trail is wide and safe, and the lake kept her interested — she spent half the walk trying to spot fish in the submerged sections. Finished before lunch with energy for the afternoon.
**Logistics:**
What to Bring
This is where most first-time hikers get it wrong. Here's exactly what I pack for a Great Wall hike:
**Essential:**
**Nice to have:**
**Don't bring:**
Best Seasons for Hiking
**Spring (April-May)** is the best season. Temperatures are 15-25 C, the trees are green, and the air is clearest. April can still be chilly on the exposed ridges, so bring a layer.
**Autumn (September-October)** is equally good. 15-22 C, golden foliage, and the clearest skies of the year. October is peak season — weekends can be busy even on the hiking sections.
**Summer (June-August)** is hot, 30-38 C on the exposed wall, with intense sun. If you hike in summer, start before 7 AM and finish by noon. The afternoon heat on the wall, with zero shade and reflected heat from the stones, is genuinely exhausting. I learned this the hard way during a July Jiankou hike with a Swiss client. We started at 6:30 and were fine. A group we passed starting at 10 AM looked about an hour away from calling a helicopter.
**Winter (November-February)** is cold (0-8 C) but spectacular. Snow on the wall is breathtaking, and you'll have sections entirely to yourself. The catch: some homestays close for the season, and cable cars may not run in bad weather.
Guided vs Self-Guided
**Self-guided** works for well-marked sections: Jinshanling to Simatai, Mutianyu loop, Huanghuacheng. The trails are defined, there's phone signal on most sections, and you can navigate with Maps.me.
**Guided** is strongly recommended for: Jiankou, any multi-section hike, or if it's your first time hiking the Wall. A good guide does more than navigate — they know where to stop for the best photos, have backup plans if the weather turns, and can tell you the history of the watchtowers you're passing through.
I've used a few guides over the years. The best ones are from nearby villages — they've been hiking these sections since childhood and know every loose stone. You can find them through homestays in the villages at the base of the hiking sections.
**Cost:** A guide for a full-day hike costs 300-600 RMB including transport from Beijing. Private drivers from Beijing to the hiking starting points cost 400-800 RMB round trip.
Safety Tips
**This is the most important section of this guide.** The Great Wall is ancient, uneven, and unpredictable.
Getting to the Hiking Sections
**By private driver:** This is the most convenient option. Your hotel can arrange a private driver. Cost: 400-800 RMB round trip. The driver will wait for you at the exit point.
**By bus + local taxi:** For Jinshanling, take bus 916 from Dongzhimen to Miyun (12 RMB, 1.5 hours), then a local taxi (50-80 RMB). This takes longer but costs a fraction.
**By homestay pickup:** If you're staying at a village homestay near Jiankou or Jinshanling, they'll often arrange pickup from Beijing for 300-500 RMB. This is what I recommend.
Where to Stay
For a proper Great Wall hiking trip, I recommend staying overnight in a village near the wall. This lets you start hiking at sunrise (when the light is best and the sections are empty) and gives you an extra day to explore.
**Near Jiankou:** Xizhazi Village has several homestays run by local families. The rooms are basic but clean (150-300 RMB/night). The hosts make excellent local dinners — and the fresh hot breakfast before an early morning hike is worth the price of the stay alone.
**Near Jinshanling:** The village at the base of Jinshanling has boutique guesthouses that are more comfortable than the Jiankou options (300-600 RMB/night). Some have hot tubs with views of the wall. After a full day of hiking, sitting in a hot tub watching the sun set over the wall is one of the most satisfying experiences I know.
**Near Simatai:** Gubei Water Town has resort-style accommodation (600-1,500 RMB/night). It's the most comfortable option but also the most touristy. The night tour of Simatai is a 10-minute walk from most hotels.
Pro Tips From 100+ Great Wall Hikes
I've been hiking the Great Wall longer than I've been a travel planner. Some of my clearest memories are from days spent on the wild sections — eating lunch in a crumbling watchtower, watching a storm roll in over the mountains, sitting in silence on a section of wall that hasn't seen maintenance in 400 years.
Every client who does a proper Great Wall hike tells me the same thing: it was the best day of their China trip. Not because the Wall is old or famous — but because walking it, step by step, hour after hour, gives you a connection to it that no cable car ride ever can.
**Want me to arrange a Great Wall hiking trip for you?** I can organize transport, guides, homestays, and a route that matches your fitness level. [Tell me what you're looking for](/plan-your-trip).
**Related:** [Which Section of the Great Wall is Best?](/blog/great-wall-which-section-visit) · [Beijing Travel Guide](/blog/beijing-travel-guide-2026) · [China Solo Travel Guide](/blog/china-solo-travel-guide-2026) · [Best Time to Visit China](/blog/best-time-visit-china-month-guide)
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