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🕌 Xi'an Attractions · Muslim Quarter

Great Mosque of Xi'an (大清真寺)
A 1,280-year-old mosque that looks like a Chinese temple

Imagine a mosque with no dome and no minaret — instead, a carved wooden gateway, curved tiled roofs, a pagoda-shaped prayer-call tower and quiet rock gardens. This is one of the oldest and largest mosques in China, hidden down a narrow lane in Xi'an's Muslim Quarter.

Why it matters

A mosque that speaks fluent Chinese architecture

You push through a street packed with skewer stalls and the smell of grilling lamb, turn down a narrow lane you almost miss, and suddenly the noise drops away. In front of you is an old wall, a carved wooden gateway and a garden so still you can hear the leaves. It is not a Buddhist temple or a Taoist shrine — it is the Great Mosque of Xi'an (西安大清真寺), and if nobody told you, you would walk straight past assuming it was just another Chinese temple.

The mosque was first founded in 742 AD under the Tang dynasty, when Xi'an — then called Chang'an — was the eastern terminus of the Silk Road and home to Persian and Arab merchants. Over the centuries it was expanded under the Ming and Qing dynasties into what is now the largest and most complete Chinese-style mosque in the country, and one of the oldest still in active use.

What makes it remarkable is how little of it matches what most of us picture when we think "mosque." There is no dome and no soaring minaret. Instead, Chinese architects built it in their own language: a long east-west axis divided into four linked courtyards, with stone gateways, wooden pavilions, sweeping tiled roofs and rock gardens. The elements that make it a place of Islamic worship — the mihrab pointing towards Mecca, the Quranic inscriptions — are folded seamlessly into that Chinese form. It is not just a pretty site; it is a thousand-year lesson in two cultures living side by side.

And the most important thing to know before you go: this is not a museum. It is an active place of worship for the Hui community — Chinese-speaking Muslims who have lived in this neighbourhood for generations — and people still come here to pray five times a day. Walk quietly, dress modestly, and treat it as the sacred space it is.

What to look for

Five things not to miss

Follow the long axis from east to west, one courtyard at a time, and you will understand why this feels more like a temple than a mosque.

Stone paifang gateway at the Great Mosque of Xi'an — a paved path through a ginkgo garden leading into the first courtyard 1
Wooden Archway & First Courtyard (木牌坊)
Carved wooden paifang · spirit screen wall · an entirely Chinese first courtyard

Step through the entrance and the first courtyard greets you with a large, centuries-old wooden archway carved end to end with Chinese motifs. Without the Arabic script set into it, you would never guess this was a mosque. The courtyard is paved in stone, edged with trees and anchored by a screen wall (照壁) of the kind found in Chinese palaces. From the very first step, the building announces that it has chosen to speak Chinese throughout.

Location: The first courtyard, just past the entrance gate
Best time: Late morning, when light filters through the ginkgo trees onto the stone path
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The Prayer-Call Tower (省心楼 Shěngxīn Lóu)
A minaret shaped like a Chinese pagoda · centre of the second courtyard

This is the moment that stops people in their tracks. In mosques worldwide, the minaret is usually a tall, slender tower used to call the faithful to prayer. Here in Xi'an, that role is played by a three-storey wooden pavilion in the shape of a Chinese pagoda called Shengxin Lou, standing at the centre of the second courtyard. Its tiered, upturned roofs look exactly like a pavilion in an imperial garden, yet it does the same job as any minaret — dressed entirely in Chinese clothes. It is the whole mosque summed up in a single building.

Location: Centre of the second courtyard, on the main axis
Worth knowing: The name 省心 means "examine the heart" — a reminder to reflect before prayer
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Phoenix Pavilion & Steles (凤凰亭 Fènghuáng Tíng)
A pavilion shaped like a phoenix in flight · Chinese-and-Arabic calligraphy steles

In the third courtyard stands the small Phoenix Pavilion (Fenghuang Ting), named because its three-part roof, seen head-on, resembles a phoenix spreading its wings to take flight — a beautifully detailed piece of Chinese carpentry. Around it sit several ancient stone steles, some inscribed with poems and imperial edicts in the hand of renowned calligraphers. A number of them carry both Chinese and Arabic script on the same stone: tangible evidence of two worlds meeting in one place.

Location: The third courtyard, before the Prayer Hall courtyard
Tip: Stand directly in front of the Phoenix Pavilion to see the "wings" most clearly
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The Main Prayer Hall (礼拜大殿)
A worship hall holding around 1,000 people · reserved for Muslims

At the far western end of the axis is the main Prayer Hall, a large timber building that can hold around 1,000 worshippers. Its western wall, facing Mecca, carries a mihrab decorated with intricate patterning and Arabic calligraphy. This is the spiritual heart of the complex, and it is reserved for Muslims. Non-Muslim visitors are welcome to admire it from outside but do not go in — and during prayer times in particular, keep your distance and stay especially quiet.

Location: The fourth courtyard, at the western end
Etiquette: View from outside the hall · never photograph people praying
Xi'an Muslim Quarter on Beiyuanmen street — red-lantern street-food stalls and crowds surrounding the Great Mosque of Xi'an 5
The Muslim Quarter & Beiyuanmen Street (北院门)
The street-food lanes that ring the mosque · the heart of the Hui community

The mosque does not stand alone — it is the spiritual centre of the surrounding Muslim Quarter. Walk out of Huajue Lane and you are on Beiyuanmen street, lined with grilled-lamb skewers, roujiamo (the Chinese "burger"), biang biang noodles and Hui sweets. The smell and noise are the complete opposite of the calm inside the mosque. The trick is to visit the mosque first, in the quieter late morning, then come out and eat your way through the quarter.

Distance: The street-food lanes are just steps from the mosque gate
Next stop: The Bell and Drum Towers are a 5–6 minute walk away
Before you go

Tickets, hours and how to get there

Everything you actually need to know, in one place.

Admission
¥25 (~฿125) · winter ¥15 (~฿75)
High season Mar–Nov ¥25 · winter Dec–Feb ¥15 · Muslims and children under 120 cm free · buy at the gate
Opening hours
9 am–8 pm (winter to 6 pm)
Open daily · hours can shift with the season, so check before you go · avoid prayer times if you want to wander undisturbed
Metro
Line 2 — Zhonglou (Bell Tower), Exit B
Walk west 6 minutes to the Drum Tower, then into Huajue Lane for 5 minutes · the mosque is 300 m from the Bell Tower
Time needed
30–60 minutes
Comfortable to walk all four courtyards in 30–40 minutes · add time to sit in the gardens or read the steles
Best time to visit
After 10 am, before dusk
Quieter mid-morning, with soft light through the courtyard trees · steer clear of prayer times out of respect for worshippers
Dress code
Modest — cover shoulders and knees
Women should avoid camisoles, shorts and short skirts · move quietly and respect a working place of worship
Worth knowing: The mosque entrance is set deep inside Huajue Lane (化觉巷) — look for a small sign between the souvenir shops. If you lose your way, ask for "Qingzhen Dasi" (清真大寺) and people in the quarter will point you straight there. Tickets are bought at the gate; you can pay in cash or scan Alipay/WeChat Pay.
Getting there

An easy walk from the heart of the old city

The Great Mosque sits in the centre of the old city, in the Muslim Quarter behind the Drum Tower. It is one of the easiest sights in Xi'an to reach, because it is right beside all the major landmarks.

From the Bell Tower
Metro Line 2, Zhonglou station · ~10 min walk

Get off at Zhonglou (钟楼), leave by Exit B and walk west for about 6 minutes to reach the Drum Tower. From there, turn northwest into Huajue Lane for another 5 minutes to the mosque. This is the most convenient approach, and it takes you straight through the street-food quarter.

Metro fare: ¥2–4 · Total: approx. 10–12 minutes
From the City Wall (South Gate)
Metro Line 2 · approx. 15 minutes

If you have just finished cycling the City Wall at the South Gate (Yongningmen), take Line 2 north two stops to Zhonglou and walk into the Muslim Quarter. This works perfectly if you ride the wall in the morning and visit the mosque late morning.

Total time: ~15 minutes · Metro fare: ¥2–3
From the Big Wild Goose Pagoda
Metro Lines 3 then 2 · approx. 35 minutes

Take Line 3 from Dayanta, change to Line 2 and ride to Zhonglou — about 35 minutes in total. This suits a plan that starts at the pagoda in the morning and moves into the old city for the middle of the day, then covers the Bell and Drum Towers, the mosque and the Muslim Quarter in one loop.

Total time: ~30–35 minutes · Metro fare: ¥4–5
Half-day old city plan
Bell Tower + Drum Tower + mosque + Muslim Quarter

If you have a free half-day: climb the Bell and Drum Towers for the old-city views (9–10.30 am), walk into Huajue Lane to the Great Mosque while it is still quiet, then come out to eat roujiamo and grilled lamb in the Muslim Quarter. Done by 1–2 pm, with the City Wall or the Shaanxi History Museum easy to add next.

Total time: 3–4 hours · Budget: ¥80–150 per person including tickets and food
Where to stay nearby

Hotels close to the old city

The Bell and Drum Tower area and the streets inside the City Wall are very close to the mosque and the Muslim Quarter. Staying here puts every landmark within walking distance. Here are the hotels we have reviewed:

Frequently asked

FAQ · Before you visit the Great Mosque

How much does the Great Mosque of Xi'an cost and what are the hours?
Admission is ¥25 (~฿125) in the high season (March to November) and ¥15 (~฿75) in winter (December to February). Muslims and children under 120 cm enter free. The mosque opens 9 am to 8 pm in high season and 9 am to 6 pm in winter. Hours can vary seasonally, so check before you go.
How do I get to the Great Mosque of Xi'an by metro?
Take Metro Line 2 to Zhonglou (Bell Tower / 钟楼) station, Exit B. Walk west for about 6 minutes to the Drum Tower, then turn northwest into Huajue Lane (化觉巷) for another 5 minutes to the mosque entrance. The mosque is only 300 metres from the Bell Tower, tucked behind the Muslim Quarter. Pay metro fares with Alipay, WeChat Pay or a Xi'an transport card.
Why does the Great Mosque of Xi'an not look like a normal mosque?
Because it was built entirely in Chinese architectural style — with no domes and no Middle-Eastern minarets. The prayer-call tower is a three-storey Chinese wooden pavilion called Shengxin Lou (省心楼), and the gateways, pavilions, curved tiled roofs and rock gardens are all Chinese. The complex runs along a long east-west axis through four linked courtyards, so it reads more like a Chinese temple — yet inside it is a fully functioning mosque, with a mihrab oriented towards Mecca.
Can non-Muslim visitors enter, and what should I wear?
Anyone may walk the courtyards and gardens, but the main Prayer Hall is reserved for Muslims. Non-Muslim visitors can admire it from outside. Dress modestly with shoulders and knees covered; women should avoid camisoles, shorts and short skirts. This is a living place of worship for the local Hui community, so move quietly, keep a respectful distance during prayer times and do not photograph people who are praying.
How long should I spend at the Great Mosque, and what can I pair it with?
Allow about 30 to 60 minutes to walk all four courtyards. The best time is after 10 am and before dusk. The mosque sits inside the Muslim Quarter, so it pairs perfectly with the Beiyuanmen street-food street right outside and the Bell and Drum Towers, all within easy walking distance — an ideal half-day in the old city centre.
Klook · Xi'an Tours & Tickets

Build a full old-city day in Xi'an

The mosque and the Muslim Quarter are free and easy to explore on your own. But if you want a guide to tell the history, or pre-booked skip-the-queue tickets for the Terracotta Army and the City Wall, browse Xi'an tours and tickets on Klook.

See Xi'an tours & tickets on Klook →
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