Special Region of Yogyakarta (Java)
Borobudur
How to visit Borobudur from Yogyakarta: the two separate tickets, why the capped upper-terrace climb must be booked ahead, and whether the foreign-tourist price and sunrise hype are worth it.
Where
Yogyakarta, Indonesia
Opening hours
Grounds open daily roughly 06:30โ17:00, with last entry around 16:00 and the ticket office closing earlier. The capped upper-terrace climb runs in timed guided slots through the day from about 08:30, with limited places per slot; the separate Manohara sunrise tour starts before dawn (around 04:30โ05:00) from the resort beside the temple. Always confirm your date and slot on borobudurpark.com, and note the climb closes on major Buddhist holidays such as Waisak.
Tickets
Grounds: foreign adult about Rp 455,000 (~ยฃ19); foreign child (3โ10) about Rp 305,000 (~ยฃ13). The capped upper-terrace climb is an extra ~Rp 120,000 (~ยฃ5) on top, sold in timed guided slots. A combined Borobudur + Prambanan ticket is about Rp 800,000 (~ยฃ34). The Manohara sunrise package runs roughly Rp 450,000โ600,000 (~ยฃ19โ26). All prices are in Indonesian rupiah at about Rp 23,500 to ยฃ1.
Time needed
Half a day from Yogyakarta once you add the 40km drive each way; about 2โ3 hours on site, more if you take the upper-terrace climb slot or the pre-dawn sunrise tour.
In short
Visiting Borobudur
Borobudur now sells two separate things and you need to get the right one. The standard grounds ticket lets you walk the base and gardens but no longer the temple itself; climbing onto the upper Arupadhatu terraces with the 72 perforated stupas and the central dome needs a timed, guided slot that is capped at 1,200 people a day and routinely books out, so reserve it online before you arrive rather than turning up. Aim for the first morning slot for cooler stone and thinner crowds, allow a half day with the 40km drive each way from Yogyakarta, and weigh the steep foreign-tourist price against the fact that this is the largest Buddhist temple on earth.
Two tickets, and why the climb is the one to book
The single thing that catches UK visitors out at Borobudur is that there are now two separate tickets, and the cheaper one no longer lets you up the temple. The standard grounds ticket (foreign adult about Rp 455,000, ~ยฃ19) gets you into the park and around the base, but since the 2023โ2024 conservation rules you cannot climb the structure on it. Reaching the three circular upper Arupadhatu terraces โ past the 72 bell-shaped perforated stupas to the central dome โ needs the separate timed climb slot (about Rp 120,000 extra, ~ยฃ5), where you go up in a small group with a guide and wear the supplied upanat sandals that protect the worn 9th-century stone.
That climb is capped at 1,200 people a day, roughly 150 an hour, and it genuinely sells out โ book it on borobudurpark.com before you fly rather than hoping for a walk-up slot at the gate. Aim for the first slot from around half eight: the volcanic stone is cooler, the carved reliefs along the lower galleries read better in low side-light, and you are ahead of the tour-bus crush that builds from late morning. Allow two to three hours on site, plus the 40km drive each way from Yogyakarta, so block out a half day.
Sunrise, and is it worth it?
The postcard Borobudur โ mist over the Kedu Plain with Mount Merapi smoking behind the stupas โ is the sunrise shot, but it is no longer a cheap walk-up. Dawn access runs through the Manohara resort package beside the temple, starting around 04:30 and costing roughly Rp 450,000โ600,000 (~ยฃ19โ26) on top of, or bundled with, entry. If that exact light is why you came to Java, it is worth it once; if you mainly want the temple, a first daytime climb slot is far cheaper and still beats the crowds.
Yogyakarta is the only sensible base, about 40km north-west, so most people hire a car with an English-speaking driver and pair Borobudur at dawn with Prambanan at dusk rather than moving hotels โ the combined Borobudur-plus-Prambanan ticket (~Rp 800,000, ~ยฃ34) softens the per-stop cost. Wear covered shoulders and decent shoes for the steep stairways, and note the climb closes on major Buddhist holidays such as Waisak, when the temple hosts its candle-and-lantern ceremony.
Yes, the foreign price is several times what locals pay and the split ticketing is awkward to navigate โ but this is the largest Buddhist temple on earth, with over 500 Buddha figures and around 2,600 relief panels, and the morning light from the top terrace earns the early start. Book the capped climb ahead, take the first slot, and it is the standout stop on any Java leg.
Planning the rest of your trip? See the Yogyakarta city guide.
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