Wǔ Chè (武徹) was a late-Tang Buddhist literatus active in the Dàlì 大曆 (766–779) and Zhēnyuán 貞元 (785–805) eras. The DILA authority record (A000685) preserves his Tang-court office title from the Taishō colophon of his sole attested work: he served as cháoyì dàifū 朝議大夫 (Court Gentleman for Discussion, prestige rank 5b) and concurrently as shìyùshǐ 侍御史 (Attendant Censor) — a mid-rank censorial post in the Tang central administration. He was not a monastic (monk: 否).

His sole surviving work is the Jiā-jù língyàn fódǐng zūnshèng tuóluóní jì 加句靈驗佛頂尊勝陀羅尼記 (KR6j0154 T974C) — an account of the textual history and miraculous-efficacy of the “phrase-augmented” recension of the Uṣṇīṣa-vijaya-dhāraṇī. The text is one of the principal pre-Sòng witnesses to the Tang jīngchuáng 經幢 (dhāraṇī-pillar) cult and is heavily cited in Liu Shufen’s modern reconstruction of the Tang devotional landscape.