A multi-generational family travelling in China
Family travel to China

A China
The Whole Family
Can Actually Do

Every worry that's made you hesitate
— the food, the language, the grandparents, the kids —
we've built the answer into the itinerary, not just promised it.

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· One travel designer, start to finish · On the ground in 400+ Chinese cities, backed by a NASDAQ-listed partner · Hong Kong registered & licensed

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Eight ways to travel China, as a family

These are modes of travel, not destinations — a way to read what your family is after, and what the children come home carrying. Most journeys blend two or three.

Hands folding dumplings

Hands & Makers

Ages 4–12 · Great for All

Dumplings folded, kites painted, clay shaped — afternoons where everyone leaves with something they made.

Family cycling through the countryside

Field & Trail

Ages 6+ · Teen Favourite

Bikes through rice paddies, ridgeline walks, a glass bridge over the drop. For families who'd rather move than sit.

Golden snub-nosed monkey

Creatures & Wild Things

Ages 3–10 · Really All Ages

Pandas at breakfast, golden monkeys, water buffalo in the shallows — the part of the trip kids retell for months.

A Beijing hutong morning

Everyday China

Ages 8+ · Suits All Ages

Wet markets, a home kitchen, a hutong morning. China at street level, not behind a rope.

The Terracotta Warriors

Legends & Landmarks

Ages 6+

The Wall, the Warriors, the Forbidden City — told as stories worth following, not dates to memorise.

Sichuan opera face-changing

Stage & Spectacle

All Ages

Acrobats mid-air, faces that change in a blink, kung fu drills at dawn. Built for the evening everyone's tired.

China high-speed train

Future China

Ages 8+ · Teens Love It

Three hundred km/h by rail, skylines that out-sci-fi the films, drones writing across the night. The China no one packed for.

A teahouse afternoon

Slow Days

All Ages · Grandparent-Friendly

A garden, a pot of tea, a boat drifting through a water town. The day with nothing to catch.

Eating Across China — With Your Family

From delicate Cantonese dim sum to aromatic Beijing roast duck — we help every family find their perfect Chinese flavours. Every partner restaurant has been test-eaten by our team.

Beijing roast duck

Beijing · Imperial Flavours

Peking Duck & Imperial Cuisine

Peking Duck · Traditional Beijing Dumplings · Zhajiang Noodles · Mongolian Hot Pot. Rich, aromatic, beloved by young and old — centuries of imperial flavour in every bite.

Xiaolongbao

Shanghai & Hangzhou · Jiangnan Elegance

Delicate Jiangnan Flavours

Soup Dumplings · Longjing Prawns · West Lake Vinegar Fish · Pan-Fried Buns. Delicate, mild, and beautiful — even picky eaters ask for seconds.

Sichuan hotpot

Chengdu · Sichuan Soul

Sichuan Comfort Food

Split-Pot Hot Pot · Zhong Dumplings · Long Wontons · Egg Pancakes. The split pot means spicy for adults, mild for kids — one table, everyone happy.

Dim sum

Guangzhou · Cantonese Classics

Cantonese Dim Sum Paradise

Morning Tea · Prawn Dumplings · White-Cut Chicken · Double-Skin Milk. Pure flavours, no chilli, no heavy oil — the most kid-friendly cuisine in China.

Hand-pulled noodles

Xi'an · Northwestern Noodles

Ancient Capital Noodle Culture

BiangBiang Noodles · Roujimo · Soup Buns · Lamb Paomo. A noodle lover's paradise — wide, chewy ribbons dressed in chilli oil, fragrance filling the air.

Cross-bridge rice noodles

Kunming & Dali · Yunnan Flavours

Yunnan Ethnic Flavours

Cross-Bridge Noodles · Steam-Pot Chicken · Wild Mushroom Hot Pot · Grilled Dairy Fan. Ethnic minority flavours, light and umami-rich. The ritual of Cross-Bridge Noodles will have the kids watching wide-eyed.

More than a place to sleep — your home in China

From hutong courtyard homes to five-star resorts, every property has been visited in person. We match the accommodation to your family — not the other way around.

Moonlit Nooks forest cabins, Qingcheng Mountain

Stargazing in the Taoist hills

Moonlit Nooks · Qingcheng Mountain

Forest cabins on a sacred mountain. Clear night skies. Panda bases within reach. Dujiangyan's old waterworks next door. Slow days for kids.

Atlantis Sanya resort, Haitang Bay

A waterpark and an aquarium, indoors

Atlantis Sanya · Haitang Bay

Aquaventure slides and a lazy river. The Lost Chambers aquarium downstairs. A private beach on Haitang Bay. Marine life up close. One resort, no need to leave.

Grand Hyatt Shanghai, Lujiazui

Sleeping above the city, in the clouds

Grand Hyatt Shanghai · Lujiazui

Rooms from the 53rd floor up. Views over the Bund and the river. A soaring glass atrium. An indoor pool in the sky. Lujiazui's icons at the door.

Amanyangyun antique villas, Shanghai

Ming-era villas in a camphor forest

Amanyangyun · Shanghai

Antique houses moved stone by stone. Thousand-year camphor trees. Private villas with room for everyone. A spa, a tea study, quiet grounds.

InterContinental Lijiang, Naxi architecture

Naxi courtyards under a snow mountain

InterContinental Lijiang

Jade Dragon Snow Mountain on the horizon. Naxi architecture and water channels. Walkable to the old town. Pools and a kids' club. Space to spread out.

Seaview rooms above Dameisha, Shenzhen

Waking to the sea at Shenzhen's beach

Seaview stay · Dameisha, Shenzhen

Ocean-view rooms above Dameisha. Steps from the sand. Apartment layouts that sleep four. OCT East close by. An easy coastal base.

Hillside villa above Erhai Lake, Dali

A hillside villa above Erhai Lake

Hillside villa · Erhai Lake, Dali

Villas set into the slope. Erhai Lake filling the view. Room for the whole family. Dali old town and Cangshan close by. Lake light, dawn to dusk.

Royal Garden hotel near Shanghai Disney

A garden base at Disney's doorstep

Royal Garden · Shanghai Disney Resort

Minutes from Shanghai Disneyland. Garden grounds to roam. Family rooms and a pool. A shuttle to the parks. Quiet nights after long park days.

Beijing courtyard hotel by Houhai

A hutong courtyard by Houhai lake

Courtyard hotel · Houhai, Beijing

A real Beijing courtyard to come home to. Houhai's lake and lanes outside. Prince Gong's Mansion around the corner. Rickshaws, snacks, old-city mornings. Kids loose in the hutongs.

Blossom Hill restored courtyard, Houhai Beijing

A designed courtyard in the old lanes

Blossom Hill · Houhai, Beijing

A restored courtyard, quietly done. Tea and a garden inside the walls. Houhai and Prince Gong's Mansion nearby. Hutong life on the doorstep. Calm in the middle of old Beijing.

Manxin hotel by Nanluoguxiang, Beijing

Steps from Nanluoguxiang's lanes

Manxin · Nanluoguxiang, Beijing

In the heart of the hutong quarter. Nanluoguxiang's shops and snacks outside. Shichahai's lake and park close. Drum and Bell Towers within a walk. Old Beijing on foot, all day.

Mountain lodge on Mount Qingcheng

A mountain lodge near the pandas

Mountain lodge · Mount Qingcheng

Forest and quiet on Mount Qingcheng. Dujiangyan panda base nearby. The old irrigation works to walk. Cool air, slow mountain days. Room for the family to settle.

Mountaintop grassland resort, Anji

A mountaintop grassland in bamboo country

Mountain grassland resort · Anji

A grassland park on the summit. Anji's bamboo forests all around. Outdoor play, big open skies. Crouching Tiger filming country. A resort built for running and roaming.

Clifftop villa and infinity pool over Erhai Lake, Dali

A clifftop pool over Erhai Lake

Cliffside stay · Erhai Lake, Dali

Rooms built into the cliff above Erhai Lake. An infinity pool over the water. The lake stretching to the mountains. Dali's old town and Cangshan within reach. Sunrise straight off the water.

Free Download

Family ChinaTravel Guide

2025 Edition · Complete

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Your First-Ever Family China Travel Guide

From ordering at restaurants to finding an A&E, from booking high-speed trains to picking the right hotel room — this guide covers everything you need to know. We spent two years writing it and seventeen drafts refining it. Now it's yours, free.

  • 12 cities scouted in person — restaurants, hotels, hospitals all mapped
  • Bilingual emergency phrases + everyday conversation cards
  • Recommendations by age: 0–2 / 3–6 / 7–12 / Elders
  • Complete guide to train tickets, private car booking & child seats

No spam. No sharing your email. That's it.

The question behind every China trip: "what if something goes wrong?"

Wherever you are in China, real local support is never far away. Our operations network spans 400+ cities — so the answer is always a person, nearby, who already knows your itinerary.

Operations backed by a NASDAQ-listed travel group with two decades on the ground in China.

Our operations partner works with national tourism boards including VisitBritain, Tourism Ireland and the Hawai'i Tourism Authority.

One named travel designer, from first call to final farewell. No call centres, no handoffs.

Because we travel with our own families, too

We're not just a travel company. We're a group of people with kids, parents, and pets of our own. The things you worry about? We've lived through them — and solved them.

We travelled to China with our two-year-old son and seventy-year-old parents. We were so nervous at first. But from the moment we were picked up at the airport, every worry disappeared. Standing on the Great Wall, seeing my parents and my son laughing together — I knew this trip was worth everything.
Mira & Koji Tanaka
Tokyo · Travelled October 2025
My son has a peanut allergy. We're cautious eating out even at home in the US — let alone in China. But the bilingual allergy cards you prepared were a lifesaver. Every restaurant was pre-notified. He ate happily the entire trip, and for the first time, I actually relaxed on holiday instead of watching him like a hawk.
Sarah & Michael Chen
San Francisco · Travelled with 2 kids
Our Golden Retriever Max has never been apart from us. When we learned he could come to China too, the whole family went crazy. The B&B owner in Dali had a pet bed and treats ready just for Max. In that moment we knew we'd come to the right place. Fur babies are family too — not one left behind.
The Andersson Family
Stockholm · Travelled with their dog
Honestly, I lost sleep for two months before this trip. Worried about the language barrier, about my parents' mobility, about whether the kids would eat anything. But you arranged everything so perfectly — hotels with lifts, only 2–3 stops a day, non-spicy options at every meal. My mum says this was the happiest trip of her life. Thank you.
Priya & Raj Kapoor
London · Travelled with 3 generations
Chinese lanterns

Ready to bring your family to China?

Tell us who's coming and what you dream of. We'll handle the rest.

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