
LyrikTrip
China is now one of the world's most accessible destinations, but its unique digital ecosystem, cashless economy, and internet restrictions require specific preparation that no other country demands. In 2025, China recorded over 150 million inbound visits --- a 17% year-on-year increase --- with visa-free entries by foreigners exceeding 30 million, driven by the most significant expansion of visa-free access in the country's history. This guide covers the 10 essential preparation areas that will transform your trip from overwhelming to seamless: visa-free entry, mobile payments, internet access, transportation, language strategies, food, accommodation, cultural etiquette, health and safety, and common challenges with proven solutions --- all based on real feedback from 10,000+ international travelers guided by the LyrikTrip team since 2020. [[1]](https://english.www.gov.cn/news/202603/07/content_WS69aba1f9c6d00ca5f9a09b0f.html) [[2]](https://news.cgtn.com/news/2026-03-07/China-says-2025-inbound-trips-top-150-million-up-17-yoy-1Ljy6eDBwyY/index.html)
Quick Answer: What Are the Most Important Things to Know Before Visiting China?
Three things will make or break your China trip: set up mobile payments (Alipay or WeChat Pay) before arrival, download a VPN while still outside China, and carry your passport everywhere. China runs on QR code payments --- approximately 90% of transactions happen via mobile --- and Google, WhatsApp, Instagram, and most Western apps are blocked by the Great Firewall. Without these two preparations, even buying a bottle of water or messaging your family becomes a challenge.
Essential China Travel Tips 2026: What Every First-Time Traveler Must Know
Last Updated: March 2026 | Author: LyrikTrip Advisory Team | Reading Time: 18 minutes
Do You Need a Visa to Visit China in 2026?
How Do Mobile Payments Work in China for Foreigners?
How Do You Access the Internet in China?
What Is the Best Way to Get Around China?
How Do You Communicate Without Speaking Chinese?
How Do You Order Food Without Knowing Chinese?
What Should You Know About Hotels in China?
What Cultural Etiquette Should You Follow in China?
How Safe Is China for Tourists?
What Common Challenges Will You Face in China?
Pre-Departure Checklist
Most Western travelers no longer need a visa. As of March 2026, citizens of 50+ countries --- including France, Germany, the UK, Canada, Australia, Japan, South Korea, and New Zealand --- can enter China visa-free for up to 30 days with nothing more than a valid passport and a return ticket. This is the most expansive visa-free policy in China's history: in 2025, 30.08 million foreign visitors entered China under visa-free schemes, a 49.5% year-on-year increase, according to data released by the National Bureau of Statistics. [[3]](https://www.travelandtourworld.com/news/article/visa-free-entry-sparks-more-than-forty-five-percent-growth-in-chinese-tourism-welcoming-millions-of-foreign-visitors-to-china/) [[4]](https://news.cgtn.com/news/2026-03-04/Graphics-China-tourism-snapshot-in-2025-1LeQJCheoTK/p.html)
US citizens are not included in the 30-day visa-free list but qualify for 240-hour (10-day) visa-free transit through 65 designated ports across 24 provinces, provided they hold an onward ticket to a third country or region. Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan all count as "third countries" for this purpose --- meaning a New York → Beijing → Hong Kong itinerary is a valid transit. [[5]](https://english.www.gov.cn/news/202412/17/content_WS6760ead6c6d0868f4e8ee0c1.html)
If your nationality appears on neither list, you'll need a standard L (tourist) visa. The new COVA online application system has streamlined the process: apply online, upload documents digitally, and visit the visa center only once for biometrics. Processing takes 4--7 business days and costs approximately \$140--185 depending on nationality.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LyrikTrip Tip: For a comprehensive breakdown of every entry option by nationality, see our Complete China Visa Guide 2026. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Download everything before you board your flight --- several critical apps cannot be installed once you're inside China. This is the single most common mistake first-time travelers make, and it's entirely preventable.
| App | Why It's Essential | Setup Notes |
|---|---|---|
| VPN (ExpressVPN, NordVPN, or Surfshark) | Access Google, Gmail, WhatsApp, Instagram, YouTube --- all blocked in China | Download, install, and test before entering China. VPN provider websites are blocked inside China. Cost: \$8--13/month |
| Alipay | Mobile payment --- accepted virtually everywhere | Register with international phone number, link Visa/Mastercard. Complete identity verification with passport |
| Messaging + payment + mini-programs (China's super-app) | Register account, verify identity, enable WeChat Pay. Essential for communicating with hotels, guides, and locals | |
| Amap (高德地图) | Navigation --- Google Maps is blocked and inaccurate in China | Some English support. Download offline maps for your destination cities |
| Trip.com | Book trains, flights, hotels with English interface | Accepts international credit cards. Best English-language booking platform for China |
| Microsoft Translator | Real-time voice and camera translation | Download Chinese offline language pack. Works without internet. Google Translate requires VPN |
| DiDi | Ride-hailing (China's Uber) | Register with international number, link Alipay/WeChat Pay |
"Mobile payments have become part of foreign visitors' travel experience," confirmed Minister of Culture and Tourism Sun Yeli at the March 2026 National People's Congress press conference. In 2025, mobile payment transactions by inbound tourists reached approximately 80 billion yuan (\$11 billion). Among visitors from countries such as Kazakhstan and Malaysia, more than 80% now use mobile payment services. [[6]](https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202603/07/WS69abc0b4a310d6866eb3c581.html)
Beyond normal travel items, China requires a few specific preparations that most travelers overlook:
Passport with 6+ months validity
Visa documents or visa-free entry proof
Travel insurance documents (minimum \$50,000 medical coverage recommended)
Hotel confirmations with Chinese-language addresses
Emergency contact list including your country's embassy in China
Portable charger --- your phone is your wallet, map, translator, and communication device. A dead battery in China means you can't pay, navigate, or communicate
Universal power adapter --- China uses Type A, C, and I plugs at 220V
Toilet paper/tissues --- most public restrooms do not provide toilet paper
Face masks --- useful for air quality days and crowded public transport
Prescription medications in original containers --- bring documentation; some common Western medications are restricted in China
Yes --- and this is not an exaggeration. Approximately 90% of online payment users in China rely on Alipay or WeChat Pay, which together command about 90% of the mobile payment market. China's nearly 970 million mobile payment users have created an ecosystem where many vendors, restaurants, and even street food stalls no longer accept cash or credit cards. Alipay alone has 1.4 billion global monthly active users, while approximately 935 million people use WeChat Pay in China. [[7]](https://coinlaw.io/alipay-vs-wechat-pay-statistics/) [[8]](https://www.thunes.com/insights/trends/china-asia-digital-payments-titan/)
Dennis Chang, Executive Vice-President at Mastercard, described the current landscape at a December 2025 industry event: "Today, as Mastercard expands our domestic operations in China, we are proud to upgrade our Pay Like a Local payment facilitation program --- enable inbound tourists to make QR code payments in China through Alipay and WeChat Pay, expand the acceptance of overseas-issued bank cards, and allow riders to use Mastercard directly for seamless Tap-and-Go urban rail transit." [[9]](https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202512/04/WS6930df15a310d6866eb2ccae.html)
Alipay is the recommended payment app for tourists --- it's the most widely accepted and the most foreigner-friendly to set up. Here's the step-by-step process:
Download Alipay from the App Store or Google Play (do this before entering China)
Register with your international phone number
Verify your identity by scanning your passport
Link an international credit card (Visa, Mastercard, JCB, Diners Club, or Discover are all supported)
Start paying --- scan the merchant's QR code or show your payment QR code
Service fee: approximately 3% per transaction
Daily spending limit: typically ¥2,000--5,000 (\$280--700) for foreign-card-linked accounts
Annual limit: ¥50,000 (\$7,000) without additional verification; up to ¥200,000 (\$28,000) with enhanced verification
What you can pay for with Alipay: Restaurants, cafés, street food vendors, taxis, DiDi rides, metro systems (40+ cities), convenience stores, supermarkets, attractions, museums, and most hotels.
Cash is your backup, not your primary payment method. Carry ¥500--1,000 (\$70--140) for emergencies. You'll need cash for:
Small vendors in rural areas or traditional markets
Some older taxi drivers who don't use mobile payment
Temple donation boxes
Emergencies when your phone battery dies or mobile payment fails
Where to get cash: Airport ATMs upon arrival (most convenient), Bank of China branches (best exchange rates), or any ATM displaying Visa/Mastercard/UnionPay logos. Daily ATM withdrawal limit: ¥2,500--3,000 (\$350--420). Expect fees of ¥15--30 per transaction plus your home bank's international fee.
Credit cards are NOT widely accepted. They work at international hotel chains, high-end restaurants in major cities, airport shops, and some large department stores --- but not at local restaurants, street vendors, taxis, public transportation, or most attractions.
China operates the world's most extensive internet censorship system, known as the Great Firewall (防火长城), which blocks most Western websites and apps. This is not a minor inconvenience --- it fundamentally changes how you use the internet. [[10]](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_censorship_in_China)
❌ Google (Search, Gmail, Maps, Drive, Photos, YouTube)
❌ Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Messenger
❌ Twitter/X, Telegram, Signal
❌ Many news websites (BBC, NYT, Reuters, etc.)
❌ ChatGPT, Claude, and most AI assistants
❌ Dropbox, Notion, Slack
✅ WeChat (China's messaging super-app)
✅ Bing (Microsoft search)
✅ Apple iMessage, FaceTime
✅ Microsoft Outlook, Teams
✅ Most banking apps
Yes --- a VPN is essential for any traveler who needs to access Gmail, Google Maps, WhatsApp, or social media. A VPN (Virtual Private Network) routes your internet traffic through a server outside China, bypassing the Great Firewall and restoring access to blocked services. [[11]](https://www.travelchinacheaper.com/index-blocked-websites-in-china)
Download and install your VPN before entering China. VPN provider websites are blocked inside China --- if you arrive without one, you cannot easily get one
Install two different VPN providers. The Great Firewall periodically blocks specific VPN protocols, and having a backup is essential. ExpressVPN and NordVPN are the two most consistently reliable options based on 2025--2026 testing from Beijing, Shanghai, and Shenzhen [[12]](https://www.travelchinacheaper.com/is-it-legal-to-use-a-vpn-in-china)
Test your VPN before relying on it. Connect to a China-optimized server and verify it works
Expect imperfect performance. VPN speeds can be slow, especially during politically sensitive periods. Some protocols get temporarily blocked. This is normal --- switch servers or protocols when it happens
In practice, enforcement targets VPN providers and political activists, not individual foreign travelers checking Gmail. Thousands of expats, students, and business travelers use personal VPNs daily without incident. [[13]](https://www.localnomad.club/zh-cn/blog/tips/china-great-firewall-vpn-guide-2026)
An eSIM is the best option for most travelers --- it's the fastest to set up, lets you keep your home number active, and requires no physical SIM card swap.
| Option | Cost | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|---|
| eSIM (Recommended) | \$4.50--99 for 1GB--unlimited data, 5--90 days | Activate before departure, keep home number, no shop visit needed | Phone must support eSIM (iPhone XS+, Pixel 3+, Samsung S20+) |
| Physical SIM | ¥50--150 (\$7--21) for 7--30 days | Cheap, works on any unlocked phone | Must buy at airport or shop, requires passport, staff setup |
| Pocket WiFi | \$5--10/day rental | Share with travel companions, connect multiple devices | Extra device to carry and charge, more expensive for solo travelers |
eSIM providers: Airalo (\$4.50--37 for 1GB--20GB), Holafly (\$19--99 for unlimited data, 5--90 days), Nomad (\$8--50 for 1GB--10GB). All can be activated before you leave home.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ LyrikTrip Tip: Most eSIM and local SIM plans provide Chinese internet access but do NOT bypass the Great Firewall. You still need a separate VPN to access Google, WhatsApp, and other blocked services. Some premium eSIM providers (like Holafly) include VPN-like routing that bypasses the firewall --- check before purchasing. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For distances under 1,000 km, China's high-speed rail is faster, cheaper, and more convenient than flying. China operates the world's largest high-speed rail network, which expanded beyond 50,000 kilometers in 2025 --- a 33% increase from 37,900 km at the start of the 14th Five-Year Plan in 2021. The network carried 4.26 billion passenger trips in 2025, and trains reach speeds of 300--350 km/h, connecting virtually every major city center-to-center with no airport security hassle. [[14]](https://english.news.cn/20251226/558786c99de5428b98a84c3ff93300e3/c.html) [[15]](https://global.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202601/04/WS6959e0bba310d6866eb31c92.html)
Guo Zhuxue, President of China State Railway Group, announced at the company's 2026 annual conference that national railways are expected to handle approximately 4.4 billion passenger trips in 2026, with plans to extend the total network to 180,000 kilometers --- including 60,000 km of high-speed rail --- by 2030. [[16]](https://www.travelmole.com/news/china-high-speed-rail-rise/)
High-speed train: ¥553 (\$77) second class, 4.5 hours, city center to city center
Flight: ¥600--1,200 (\$84--168) + 2 hours airport time each end, effectively 6--7 hours total
Train wins on price, convenience, and often total travel time
Trip.com (recommended for foreigners): English interface, accepts international credit cards, small service fee (\~¥20--40)
12306 app (official, cheapest): Chinese interface, requires passport verification, can be tricky for foreigners
Book popular routes 7--10 days ahead; Chinese holidays 15--30 days ahead
Second class: Standard, comfortable, most travelers use this. Comparable to European business class
First class: More spacious, quieter, 30--50% more expensive
Business class: Lie-flat seats, meals included, 2--3x the price of second class
The metro is the fastest and cheapest way to navigate any major Chinese city. Over 40 cities now have metro systems, with Beijing (27 lines) and Shanghai (20 lines) operating two of the world's largest networks. A single ride costs ¥2--10 (\$0.30--1.40) based on distance, and you can pay by scanning your Alipay or WeChat Pay QR code at the gate --- no need to buy a physical ticket.
For taxis and ride-hailing: DiDi (China's Uber) is the most convenient option. Download the app, link Alipay or WeChat Pay, enter your destination using the map pin (avoids language issues), and the driver arrives. Prices are similar to or cheaper than street taxis. Traditional taxis charge ¥10--14 starting fare plus ¥2--3 per km.
Essential tip: Always have your destination address written in Chinese characters. Show it to the driver on your phone. Even DiDi drivers may call you to confirm pickup --- use your translation app or have the Chinese address ready.
When to fly: For distances over 1,000 km or to remote regions (Tibet, Xinjiang, Inner Mongolia), domestic flights are often the practical choice. Book 2--4 weeks ahead for best prices via Trip.com. Arrive 2 hours early --- security can be slow. Bring your passport (required for all domestic flights in China).
English is not widely spoken outside international hotels and major airports --- plan to rely on technology rather than verbal communication. This is the reality that surprises most first-time visitors. You'll find English-speaking staff at 5-star international hotel chains, major airport information desks, and some tourist attractions in Beijing and Shanghai. Beyond that --- at restaurants, train stations, taxis, shops, local attractions, and in conversations with most Chinese people --- English will not work.
Microsoft Translator: Download the Chinese offline pack before your trip. Use camera mode to translate signs, menus, and documents in real-time. Use voice mode for conversations. Works without internet
Google Translate: Equally powerful but requires a VPN in China. Download the Chinese offline pack as backup
Pleco: The best Chinese dictionary app. Features handwriting recognition (draw a character you see) and camera OCR
Save your destination addresses in Chinese characters as screenshots on your phone. Show the screenshot to your taxi driver. This works 100% of the time, requires no internet, and eliminates pronunciation issues entirely.
| English | Chinese | Pinyin | When to Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hello | 你好 | nǐ hǎo | Greeting anyone |
| Thank you | 谢谢 | xiè xie | After any interaction |
| How much? | 多少钱? | duō shao qián? | Shopping, restaurants |
| I want this | 我要这个 | wǒ yào zhè ge | Pointing at menu items |
| Bill please | 买单 | mǎi dān | At restaurants |
| Where is...? | ......在哪里? | ...zài nǎ lǐ? | Asking directions |
| I don't understand | 我不懂 | wǒ bù dǒng | When confused |
| Use the meter | 打表 | dǎ biǎo | In taxis |
You don't need to speak Chinese to eat well in China --- but you do need the right strategies. Chinese cuisine is one of the world's great culinary traditions, with dramatic regional variation that means you'll encounter entirely different flavors in Sichuan, Guangdong, Shaanxi, and Shanghai.
Strategy 1: Point at pictures. Most Chinese restaurants --- from street-side noodle shops to upscale dining rooms --- have picture menus, either printed or displayed on wall-mounted screens. Point at what looks appealing. This works in roughly 80% of dining situations.
Strategy 2: Use your translation app's camera mode. For text-only menus, open Microsoft Translator or Google Translate, point your phone camera at the menu, and read the instant translation overlay. This is remarkably effective and has become a standard tool for foreign visitors.
Strategy 3: Follow the crowd. In popular restaurants, look at what other tables are eating. Point at a dish that looks good and say "我要这个" (wǒ yào zhè ge --- "I want this"). Chinese diners are generally amused and helpful when foreigners do this.
Strategy 4: Order via apps. Many restaurants now use QR code ordering --- scan the code on your table, browse the menu with pictures, select items, and pay via Alipay or WeChat Pay. Some apps offer English translation.
Cooked food in China is generally safe, but tap water is not drinkable. This is the single most important food safety rule: never drink tap water, and avoid ice in drinks (often made from tap water). Hotels provide free bottled water daily. Boiled water (开水, kāi shuǐ) is safe --- every hotel room has an electric kettle.
Safe to eat: Hot, freshly cooked food from busy restaurants (high turnover = fresh ingredients), peeled fruits, sealed bottled water, street food that's cooked in front of you at popular stalls.
Exercise caution with: Raw vegetables and salads (may be washed in tap water), unpeeled fruit, street food from vendors with few customers, dairy products from small vendors.
Vegetarian: 我吃素 (wǒ chī sù) --- Note: many "vegetable" dishes use meat stock or oyster sauce. Buddhist vegetarian restaurants (素食餐厅) are the safest option
Peanut allergy: 我对花生过敏 (wǒ duì huā shēng guò mǐn)
Shellfish allergy: 我对海鲜过敏 (wǒ duì hǎi xiān guò mǐn)
Halal food: Look for 清真 (qīng zhēn) signs. Xi'an's Muslim Quarter and Lanzhou-style restaurants are widely available nationwide
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LyrikTrip Tip: Carry a printed allergy card in Chinese with your specific dietary restrictions. Show it to restaurant staff before ordering. We provide these cards to all our clients --- they've prevented countless issues. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No --- and this is a critical detail that catches many travelers off guard. Under China's Exit and Entry Administration Law (Article 39), all hotels are legally required to register foreign guests with the local public security organ within 24 hours of check-in. However, not all hotels have the system or license to process foreign passports. [[17]](https://www.travelchinacheaper.com/chinese-hotels-what-to-expect) [[18]](https://chinasurvivalkit.com/blog/china-hotel-check-in-foreigner)
International chains (Marriott, Hilton, Hyatt, IHG, Shangri-La, Accor)
Most 4-star and 5-star Chinese hotels
Hotels explicitly marked "foreign guest friendly" on booking platforms
Budget chains under ¥150/night (\$21)
Small local hotels and guesthouses
Some hostels, especially in smaller cities
How to avoid problems: When booking, use Trip.com (which clearly indicates foreign guest acceptance) or contact the hotel directly to confirm they accept foreign passports. Arriving at midnight to discover your hotel can't check you in is a real scenario that happens to unprepared travelers.
Check-in process: Present your original passport (not a copy). The hotel scans it, completes a registration form, and submits your information to local police --- this is a legal requirement, not optional. Keep the hotel's business card with its Chinese-language address for taxi returns.
In March 2026, China's National Immigration Administration launched a pilot online accommodation registration service for foreigners staying in non-hotel lodgings (homestays, short-term rentals, rural villas), aiming to make the process more convenient for overseas visitors. [[19]](https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202603/20/WS69bcf125a310d6866eb3ef2d.html)
Chinese culture places enormous value on "face" (面子, miànzi) --- social reputation and dignity --- and most etiquette rules flow from this concept. You don't need to master every nuance, but understanding a few key principles will earn genuine respect and warmth from the people you meet.
✅ Remove shoes when entering someone's home --- this is universal and non-negotiable
✅ Use both hands when giving or receiving anything --- business cards, gifts, money, even a cup of tea. This signals respect
✅ Try local food when offered --- declining food is considered impolite. Even a small taste shows respect
✅ Learn and use basic Chinese phrases --- even a clumsy "谢谢" (thank you) earns disproportionate goodwill
✅ Bring a small gift when visiting someone's home --- fruit, tea, or treats from your home country are ideal
❌ Tip --- tipping is not part of Chinese culture and may cause confusion or be declined. This applies to restaurants, taxis, hotels, and tour guides (unless specifically arranged through a Western-style tour operator)
❌ Stick chopsticks upright in rice --- this resembles incense offerings at funerals and is considered deeply inauspicious
❌ Get visibly angry in public --- causing someone to "lose face" publicly is one of the most serious social offenses in Chinese culture. Stay calm, smile, and resolve issues privately
❌ Discuss sensitive political topics --- Taiwan, Tibet, Xinjiang, and historical political events are topics to avoid with people you don't know well
❌ Point with one finger --- use your whole hand or an open palm to gesture
Wait for the host or eldest person to begin eating before you start
Chinese meals are communal --- dishes are shared from the center of the table
Slurping noodles is perfectly acceptable (and often a sign of enjoyment)
Leaving a small amount of food on your plate signals you've been well-fed
When toasting, "干杯" (gān bēi) means "bottoms up," but you can say "随意" (suí yì --- "drink as you like") for a more relaxed pace
China is one of the safest countries in the world for tourists. Violent crime rates are low compared to most Western countries, and major cities like Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou have extensive public security systems including widespread surveillance and a strong police presence. Walking alone at night in most Chinese cities is significantly safer than in comparable Western cities. [[20]](https://authentictourasia.com/how-safe-is-china-for-tourists/)
The Global Residence Index notes that China's homicide rate is low by global standards, and the Chinese government has invested heavily in community policing, technology-assisted crime prevention, and international security cooperation. [[21]](https://globalresidenceindex.com/hnwi-index/safety-index/)
Pickpocketing: Possible in crowded tourist areas (the Bund in Shanghai, Tiananmen Square, busy metro stations). Keep valuables in front pockets or a cross-body bag. This is the same advice you'd follow in Paris or Rome.
Tea ceremony scam: Friendly English-speaking locals approach you near tourist sites, invite you for "tea" or "to practice English," then take you to a tea house where you're presented with a bill for hundreds of dollars. Rule: never follow strangers to a restaurant or tea house
Art student scam: "Students" invite you to view their "exhibition," then pressure you to buy overpriced art
Taxi scams: Refusing to use the meter or taking unnecessarily long routes. Solution: use DiDi instead --- the price is fixed before you ride
Fake monks: People dressed as monks asking for "donations" near temples. Real monks do not solicit money from tourists on the street
Police: 110
Ambulance: 120
Fire: 119
Medical care: International hospitals with English-speaking staff exist in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, and Chengdu. Consultations cost ¥100--500 (\$14--70). Public hospitals are cheaper but have limited English. Travel insurance with minimum \$50,000 medical coverage and medical evacuation is strongly recommended.
Air quality: Variable by city and season. Northern cities (Beijing, Xi'an) can experience poor air quality in winter. Download the AirVisual app, check the AQI (Air Quality Index) daily, and carry N95 masks for days when AQI exceeds 150. Southern and coastal cities (Guilin, Kunming, Xiamen, Sanya) generally have excellent air quality year-round.
Every traveler encounters a few "culture shock" moments in China. Knowing about them in advance transforms frustration into amusement.
Toilets: Public restrooms in China frequently use squat toilets rather than Western-style seated toilets, and most do not provide toilet paper. Solution: Carry tissues everywhere. Western-style toilets are standard in hotels, shopping malls, international restaurants, and airports. Look for accessible/family restrooms in public spaces --- these are almost always Western-style.
Crowds: China has 1.4 billion people, and popular attractions get extraordinarily crowded --- especially during Chinese national holidays (May 1--7 and October 1--7) and weekends. Solution: Visit major attractions at opening time (7--9 AM), avoid weekends when possible, and absolutely avoid the first week of May and October. Off-season travel (November--March) offers dramatically fewer crowds at a significant discount.
Personal space: The concept of personal space in China is different from Western norms. People stand closer in lines, pushing in crowds is normal behavior (not rude), and strangers may stare at foreigners out of curiosity rather than hostility. Solution: Be patient, smile, and don't take it personally. In smaller cities and rural areas, you may attract genuine fascination --- especially if you're visibly non-Asian. This is almost always friendly curiosity.
Noise levels: Chinese restaurants, markets, and public spaces tend to be louder than Western equivalents. Animated conversation, phone calls on speaker, and lively table discussions are normal. Solution: Embrace it as part of the atmosphere. If you need quiet, international hotel restaurants and cafés offer a more subdued environment.
Smoking: While indoor smoking bans exist in major cities (Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen), enforcement varies. Smoking remains common among older men, especially in smaller cities and rural areas. Solution: Choose non-smoking sections when available, and be prepared for occasional exposure.
☐ Verify visa requirements for your nationality (or confirm visa-free eligibility)
☐ Download and set up VPN (two providers recommended)
☐ Download and configure Alipay --- link international credit card, complete identity verification
☐ Download WeChat --- register account, enable WeChat Pay
☐ Download Amap, Trip.com, DiDi, Microsoft Translator
☐ Download Chinese offline language pack in your translation app
☐ Purchase travel insurance (minimum \$50,000 medical coverage)
☐ Notify your bank of travel dates to prevent card blocks
☐ Make photocopies of passport and store separately from original
☐ Save hotel addresses in Chinese characters as phone screenshots
☐ Purchase eSIM or arrange mobile data plan
☐ Activate eSIM or purchase local SIM card
☐ Test VPN connection
☐ Withdraw ¥500--1,000 cash from airport ATM
☐ Download offline maps for your first city in Amap
☐ Confirm hotel can accept foreign guests (if not pre-verified)
☐ Collect hotel business card at check-in (Chinese address for taxis)
☐ Obtain "Registration Form of Temporary Residence" from hotel front desk
☐ Carry passport (required for train stations, some attractions, hotel check-ins)
☐ Keep phone charged (portable charger essential --- your phone is everything)
☐ Carry tissues/toilet paper
☐ Drink bottled water only
☐ Check AQI before outdoor activities
☐ Have hotel card/address screenshot ready for taxi returns
Disclaimer: Information accurate as of March 2026. Policies, prices, and conditions may change. Always verify current visa requirements through official channels (visaforchina.cn) before travel.
About the Author: This guide is created by the LyrikTrip Advisory Team, with over 15 years of experience guiding international travelers through China. Our insights are based on real-world feedback from 10,000+ clients and continuous field research across all regions of China. For personalized trip planning assistance, visit [lyriktrip.com](https://lyriktrip.com).
Credit cards are not widely accepted in China. They work at international hotel chains, high-end restaurants in major cities, airport shops, and some large department stores. They do NOT work at local restaurants, street vendors, taxis, metro systems, convenience stores, or most attractions. Mobile payment (Alipay or WeChat Pay) is essential for daily transactions.
No, but you need a translation app. English is limited to international hotels and major airports. Microsoft Translator with the offline Chinese pack is your most reliable tool --- it offers real-time camera translation for signs and menus, and voice translation for conversations. Combine this with the "screenshot method" (saving Chinese addresses as phone screenshots) and you can navigate effectively without speaking a word of Chinese.
No. Never drink tap water in China. Always use sealed bottled water, which is inexpensive (¥2--5 / \$0.30--0.70) and available everywhere. Hotels provide free bottled water daily. Boiled water is safe --- every hotel room has an electric kettle. Avoid ice in drinks at local restaurants, as it may be made from tap water.
Budget travelers can manage on \$50--80/day, mid-range travelers should plan for \$100--200/day, and luxury travelers will spend \$300+/day. China offers exceptional value compared to Japan, Western Europe, and the US, with costs typically 30--50% lower for equivalent quality. A restaurant meal costs ¥30--80 (\$4--11) at local restaurants, metro rides cost ¥2--10 (\$0.30--1.40), and 4-star hotel rooms run ¥400--800 (\$56--112) per night in major cities.
This is a real risk in China's cashless society. Your phone is your wallet, map, translator, and communication device. Carry a portable charger at all times --- this is not optional, it's essential. Keep ¥500--1,000 in cash as emergency backup. If your phone dies completely, you can still pay cash at most larger stores, hail a traditional taxi, and ask hotel staff for assistance.
Yes, with common sense. Choose stalls that are busy (high turnover means fresh ingredients), watch your food being cooked in front of you, and stick to hot, freshly prepared items. Avoid pre-made cold dishes from street vendors. Chinese street food culture is one of the country's great pleasures --- skipping it entirely means missing a significant part of the experience.
Your hotel handles this automatically. Under Chinese law, hotels must register foreign guests with local police within 24 hours of check-in. You simply present your passport at check-in, and the hotel completes the registration. If you stay in non-hotel accommodation (Airbnb, homestay, friend's apartment), you or your host must register at the local police station within 24 hours --- as of March 2026, a pilot online registration system is being rolled out to simplify this process. [[19]](https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202603/20/WS69bcf125a310d6866eb3ef2d.html)