How to Buy Real Longjing Tea in Hangzhou: A Visitor's Guide
Tea Culture

How to Buy Real Longjing Tea in Hangzhou: A Visitor's Guide

May 5, 2026·7 min read·Cultural Research Team
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Most 'Longjing' tea sold in Hangzhou is fake, blended, or grown outside the protected West Lake region. Here is how to find the real thing, what to pay, and where the locals actually buy their tea.

Longjing tea (龙井茶, Dragon Well tea) is China's most famous green tea, produced exclusively in a small area around Hangzhou's West Lake. The finest Longjing — the tea that emperors drank, that diplomats receive as state gifts, that sells for thousands of dollars per kilogram — comes from a protected zone of just 168 square kilometers. Most of the 'Longjing' sold in Hangzhou tourist shops is grown outside this zone, blended with cheaper teas, or simply mislabeled. If you want to buy real Longjing, you need to know what to look for.

1. The Protected Zone: Why Geography Matters

Authentic West Lake Longjing (西湖龙井) can only come from five specific villages around West Lake: Lion Peak (狮峰), Longjing Village (龙井村), Yunqi (云栖), Tiger Spring (虎跑), and Meijiawu (梅家坞). Tea grown outside this zone is called Qiantang Longjing (钱塘龙井) or Yuezhou Longjing (越州龙井) — both are good teas, but they are not West Lake Longjing and should not be priced as such. The most prestigious sub-region is Lion Peak, where the soil and microclimate produce the finest leaves. When a vendor claims their tea is 'Lion Peak Longjing,' ask for the origin certificate — genuine sellers have them.

2. Pre-Qingming vs. Post-Qingming: The Price Gap

The Qingming Festival falls in early April, and it divides the Longjing harvest into two completely different price categories. Pre-Qingming tea (明前茶, Míngqián chá) — picked before the festival — is the most prized. These leaves have spent the winter accumulating nutrients and emerge in spring with exceptional flavor concentration. Pre-Qingming Longjing can cost 3,000–10,000 yuan per kilogram ($400–$1,400 USD). Post-Qingming tea (雨前茶, Yǔqián chá) — picked before the Grain Rain festival in late April — is about 30–50% cheaper and still excellent. After Grain Rain, prices drop dramatically, but so does quality.

Fresh Longjing tea leaves
Authentic West Lake Longjing leaves are flat, jade-green, and have a distinctive chestnut aroma.

3. How to Identify Fake Longjing

Fake Longjing is everywhere in Hangzhou. The most common fraud is selling tea from Zhejiang Province's other growing regions — which produce decent green tea but not authentic West Lake Longjing — under the West Lake label. Another trick is selling last year's tea as fresh harvest. Here is how to spot the fakes: real Longjing leaves are flat and smooth (the pan-firing process flattens them), jade-green in color, and smell faintly of roasted chestnuts. Fake Longjing often has curled or twisted leaves, a darker or more yellow-green color, and a grassy or chemical smell.

  • Real: Flat, smooth leaves with a jade-green color and chestnut aroma
  • Fake: Curled or twisted leaves, darker color, grassy or chemical smell
  • Real: Uniform leaf size — only the bud and one or two leaves are picked
  • Fake: Mixed leaf sizes, including older, larger leaves
  • Real: Brews to a pale yellow-green color with a clean, sweet aftertaste
  • Fake: Brews to a darker yellow or green with a bitter or flat taste

4. Where Locals Actually Buy Their Tea

Tourists buy tea at shops near West Lake, in the city center, or at the airport. Locals buy directly from farmers in Longjing Village and Meijiawu. The best approach is to visit a tea farm during spring harvest (late March to mid-April), watch the picking and roasting process, and buy directly from the farmer. Prices are 50% lower than shops, and you can taste before buying. Many farmers in Longjing Village welcome visitors — look for the small signs outside houses that say 'Tea Tasting' (品茶). Do not buy from the large commercial tea markets near the train station — these are where the fake tea is sold.

5. The Roasting Demonstration: How to Tell Real from Fake

The hand-roasting technique (炒茶, chǎo chá) is the most critical and most difficult part of Longjing production. A master roaster places their bare hands into a wok heated to 200°C and uses specific hand movements — pressing, turning, flicking — to simultaneously dry the leaves, flatten them, and develop their flavor. The temperature must be maintained precisely: too hot and the leaves burn; too cool and they do not develop properly. Watching a roasting demonstration is the best way to understand why real Longjing costs what it costs — the skill is extraordinary, and it cannot be faked.

6. What to Pay: A Realistic Price Guide

Here is what you should expect to pay for genuine West Lake Longjing in 2026. Pre-Qingming first-grade Lion Peak: 5,000–10,000 yuan/kg. Pre-Qingming standard grade: 2,000–4,000 yuan/kg. Post-Qingming (Yu Qian): 800–2,000 yuan/kg. Post-Grain Rain: 300–800 yuan/kg. If you are buying 100g as a souvenir, budget 200–500 yuan for decent quality, or 50–100 yuan for everyday drinking tea. Anything priced below 30 yuan for 100g is almost certainly not West Lake Longjing.

  • Pre-Qingming first-grade: 5,000–10,000 yuan/kg ($700–$1,400 USD)
  • Pre-Qingming standard: 2,000–4,000 yuan/kg
  • Post-Qingming (Yu Qian): 800–2,000 yuan/kg
  • Post-Grain Rain: 300–800 yuan/kg
  • Everyday drinking (100g): 50–100 yuan
  • Gift quality (100g): 200–500 yuan
  • Below 30 yuan for 100g = almost certainly fake

7. Practical Tips for Your Tea Buying Trip

  • Visit during spring harvest (late March to mid-April) for the freshest tea
  • Buy directly from Longjing Village or Meijiawu farmers — 50% cheaper than shops
  • Ask to taste before buying — any genuine seller will offer this
  • Buy small quantities for personal use — 100g is enough for weeks of daily drinking
  • Store in an airtight container in a cool, dark place — never in the refrigerator
  • The 18 imperial tea bushes near Hugong Temple are protected — you can visit but cannot buy from them

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分类:Tea Culture