China Travel Guide: Visas, Payments, Internet & Everything First-Time Visitors Need to Know

China Travel Guide: Visas, Payments, Internet & Everything First-Time Visitors Need to Know

China Travel Guide: Visas, Payments, Internet & Everything First-Time Visitors Need to Know

Complete China Travel Guide 2026: Visas, Payments, Google Alternatives & Practical Tips
Travel Guide 2026

China Travel Guide: Visas, Payments, Internet & Everything First-Time Visitors Need to Know

Planning a trip to Chinese destinations? This comprehensive guide covers visas, Alipay/WeChat Pay setup, Google alternatives, internet access, and essential tips for traveling China in 2026.

China feels harder to travel than it actually is. The real barrier isn’t the culture—it’s logistics. If you understand visas, payments, and how to stay connected, traveling China transitions from overwhelming to manageable.

This guide covers everything you need to know before landing at Beijing Capital, Shanghai Pudong, or any Chinese destination.

China Visa Requirements 2026: Do You Need One?

The good news: China has significantly expanded its visa-free policies. Whether you need a visa depends entirely on your nationality and planned duration.

Visa-Free Entry for 50+ Countries

Citizens of 50 countries can enter mainland China without any visa for tourism, family visits, or sightseeing for up to 30 days. This includes most of Europe, parts of Asia-Pacific, and the Americas.

European countries (35+): France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Switzerland, Sweden, Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Finland, Iceland, Ireland, Greece, Poland, Portugal, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Bulgaria, Romania, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Malta, Cyprus, Andorra, Monaco, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, UK.

Asia-Pacific (7): Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand, Brunei, Malaysia.

Americas (3): United States, Canada, Brazil.

Check the National Immigration Administration (NIA) website for the complete, updated list.

240-Hour Visa-Free Transit Option

New in 2026: Citizens of 55 countries can now transit through China visa-free for up to 240 hours (10 days) at 60+ designated ports. This expanded from the previous 144-hour policy.

How it works: You must have a confirmed onward ticket to a third country (not your origin) departing within 240 hours. You can visit Beijing, Shanghai, Xi’an, Guangzhou, or any other designated city during your layover.

Eligible entry ports: Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Chengdu, Chongqing, and 55+ other international airports, seaports, and rail ports.

Tourist Visa (L-Type) for Other Nationalities

If your country isn’t visa-exempt, you’ll need an L-type tourist visa. Here’s what you need to know:

Duration

10-year multiple-entry tourist visa. Each entry permits up to 60 days in China.

Cost

Approximately $68 USD for US citizens through 2026 (reduced rates available).

Processing Time

4 business days regular processing, or 2-3 days express (with consular review adding time).

Where to Apply

Chinese embassy or consulate in your home country, or approved visa service center.

Special Permits: Tibet & Regional Travel

Tibet requires additional permits beyond your visa. You must obtain a Tibet Travel Permit through a Chinese travel agency—independent travel to Tibet is not permitted for foreign nationals.

Other restricted regions have different rules. Check before booking.

Payment Systems in China: Alipay, WeChat Pay & Cash

Cash is nearly extinct in Chinese cities. You cannot rely on traditional payment cards or cash. Every transaction—from a bottle of water to temple donations—uses QR code scanning via Alipay or WeChat Pay.

The excellent news: Foreign tourists can now use both apps with international credit/debit cards. No Chinese bank account required.

Alipay for Foreign Tourists: The Easier Option

Alipay is recommended for first-time visitors. It’s more forgiving than WeChat Pay and accepts foreign cards with fewer verification headaches.

How to Set Up Alipay (Step-by-Step)

  • Download the official Alipay app (Apple App Store or Google Play) before you travel
  • Tap “Sign Up” and enter your international phone number (no Chinese number needed)
  • Receive SMS verification code on your home phone number
  • Create a password and set up security features
  • Add your international credit/debit card (Visa, Mastercard, American Express)
  • Verify your identity by photographing your passport (see the glare hack below)

Pro Tip: The Passport Glare Hack

Alipay’s AI verification often fails under bright light (passport holograms reflect glare). Solution: Place your passport on a dark matte surface (black t-shirt or bedsheet) in dimly lit conditions. The AI reads the information zone perfectly, and you pass verification instantly.

Using Alipay in China

At payment terminals: When a cashier shows you a QR code, open Alipay, tap “Scan,” and scan their code. The payment charges automatically to your linked card and converts currency instantly.

Critical rule: Turn off your VPN before paying. Alipay detects VPN usage as a potential fraud risk and blocks the transaction. This is not a bug—it’s intentional security. Turn VPN off, complete the payment, then turn VPN back on.

⚠️ Most Common Issue: About 70% of Alipay failures happen because travelers forget to disable their VPN while making a payment. The system sees conflicting IP addresses (your VPN showing US location while GPS shows China) and blocks the transaction for security. Simple fix: toggle VPN off before paying.

WeChat Pay: More Powerful, More Complex

WeChat Pay is more embedded in Chinese culture and offers more features (peer-to-peer transfers, splitting bills, booking trains). However, it’s harder to set up for foreigners.

In 2026, WeChat eliminated the “friend verification” requirement (where a Chinese friend had to vouch for you). But SMS verification can still fail if your home telecom provider blocks Chinese SMS servers.

Recommendation: Set up both Alipay and WeChat Pay before traveling. Use Alipay as primary, WeChat as backup. Some merchants prefer one or the other.

Payment Limits & Daily Spending

As of 2026, the People’s Bank of China raised single-transaction limits for verified foreign users:

Limit Type Amount Notes
Single transaction $5,000 USD (~35,000 RMB) Can now pay for hotels, medical procedures
Annual limit $50,000 USD (~350,000 RMB) Sufficient for month-long trips
Cash limits entering/exiting 20,000 RMB (~$2,780 USD) max Physical cash on person

Backup Payment Options

  • Carry 1,000–2,000 RMB (~$140–280 USD) in cash as emergency backup
  • Link a Wise or Revolut card to Alipay (these rarely trigger fraud blocks)
  • Visit an ATM to withdraw cash if apps fail (notify your bank first that you’ll be in China)
  • Know the Chinese phrase: “可以用现金吗?” (Can I use cash?) for the rare merchant

Google, WhatsApp & Internet Access in Mainland China

This is the most important pre-travel preparation: Google is not accessible in mainland China. Neither are WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, or most Western services.

This isn’t a temporary outage—it’s the Great Firewall, China’s national internet filtering system.

Services That DON’T Work in China

Communication

WhatsApp, Telegram, Messenger, Skype (sometimes works), email clients.

Search & Navigation

Google Search, Google Maps, Gmail.

Social Media

Facebook, Instagram, TikTok (international), Twitter/X, Snapchat.

Video

YouTube, Netflix (sometimes), most streaming services.

Chinese Alternatives That Work

Need Global Service China Alternative
Maps & Navigation Google Maps Amap (Gaode) or Baidu Maps
Search Google Baidu (Chinese-only)
Messaging WhatsApp WeChat, QQ
Payment Apple Pay/Google Pay Alipay, WeChat Pay
Video Calls FaceTime WeChat Video, QQ

The VPN Solution

A VPN is essential if you want to access Western apps and services. However:

  • Reliable VPNs are getting harder to find in China (the Great Firewall blocks them constantly)
  • Set up your VPN before you arrive. You can’t download it once in China
  • Use VPN only for accessing blocked services—disable it before payments (as mentioned above)
  • Popular options: ExpressVPN, NordVPN, Surfshark (check current status before traveling)

🔍 Reality check: VPN stability varies. Some travelers report consistent access; others experience frequent disconnections. Download multiple VPN apps before traveling as backups. Have low expectations for video streaming inside China.

Mobile Data & Internet Access

Getting Connected in China

You have three options:

Option 1: International Roaming

Pros: Simplest, no setup needed, works immediately.

Cons: Expensive ($15–30+ per day with most carriers).

Option 2: eSIM (Recommended for Travelers)

Pros: Cheap ($0.67–5 per day), works instantly, no physical SIM swap.

Cons: Requires eSIM-compatible phone (iPhone XS+, recent Androids).

Cost: China Mobile eSIM plans start around $0.67/day for high-speed 4G.

Option 3: Local Chinese SIM Card

Pros: Cheapest option, local number useful for apps.

Cons: Requires passport, ID registration, can be confusing at airport kiosks.

Using Chinese Mapping Apps

Google Maps doesn’t work, but Chinese alternatives are actually better for navigating China.

Amap (Gaode): Owned by Alibaba, excellent UI, real-time traffic, subway routes, restaurant reviews (in Chinese). Download before arriving.

Baidu Maps: More comprehensive but interface is Chinese-only. Good backup.

Planning Your China Itinerary: Where to Go & What to Expect

Walking itineraries work beautifully in Chinese cities. Most major destinations are walkable, with excellent public transit connecting neighborhoods.

Top Chinese Destinations for Visitors

Beijing

Capital city. Forbidden City, Summer Palace, Great Wall day trips. Most walkable historic center.

Shanghai

Modern metropolis. The Bund, French Concession, street markets. Best for urban exploration.

Xi’an

Ancient capital. Terracotta Army, City Walls. Compact, walkable, rich history.

Chengdu

Southwest charm. Giant Panda sanctuary, tea culture, street food. More relaxed pace.

Using Wingman to Plan Your China Trip

Create a walking itinerary for any Chinese city using Wingman:

  • Generate an itinerary for Beijing, Shanghai, Xi’an, or any city
  • Each day includes realistic walking routes, distances, and timing
  • Audio guides (where available) provide context as you walk
  • Customize with local restaurants, neighborhoods, cultural sites
  • Share with travel companions and plan together

Pre-Travel Checklist: Your China Readiness List

Documentation

  • Valid passport (6+ months validity beyond travel dates)
  • Visa (if required for your nationality)
  • Travel insurance (recommended for all travelers)
  • Printed/digital copies of passport, visa, hotel confirmations

Apps & Connectivity

  • Download Alipay and WeChat Pay before traveling
  • Download a VPN app (ExpressVPN, NordVPN, etc.)
  • Download Amap or Baidu Maps for navigation
  • Arrange eSIM or international roaming plan
  • Download WhatsApp, Skype, or Telegram for home contact (use over VPN)

Payment & Money

  • Link your international credit/debit card to Alipay (practice before landing)
  • Link backup card to Alipay or WeChat
  • Call your bank to authorize international transactions in China
  • Carry 1,000–2,000 RMB in cash (~$140–280 USD) as emergency backup
  • Consider a Wise or Revolut card as additional backup

Travel Logistics

  • Book hotels (automatically register you with local police)
  • Reserve train/flight tickets in advance
  • Get your hotel’s name, address, and phone number in Chinese (for directions)
  • Enroll in STEP (Smart Traveler Enrollment Program) for US citizens

Frequently Asked Questions

Do Americans need a visa to visit China?

US citizens can use the 240-hour visa-free transit if passing through designated cities to a third country. For longer stays or direct US-China-US trips, you need an L-type tourist visa. Most US citizens receive a 10-year multiple-entry visa ($68).

Can I use my phone’s payment apps (Apple Pay, Google Pay) in China?

No. Apple Pay and Google Pay don’t work in mainland China. You must use Alipay or WeChat Pay.

What if my Alipay payment fails?

In order: (1) Turn off your VPN—this fixes 70% of failures. (2) Ask the merchant for a fresh QR code. (3) Try a different card inside Alipay. (4) Use cash. (5) Call your home bank to authorize the transaction.

Is it safe to travel to China in 2026?

Yes. China is considered one of the safest destinations for travelers. Crime against tourists is rare. Exercise normal precautions (avoid large gatherings, stay aware of surroundings).

Do I need a Chinese phone number?

No. You can set up both Alipay and WeChat Pay using your international phone number. A local number is optional and useful mainly for extra app features.

Can I travel to Hong Kong or Macau from mainland China?

Yes, but Hong Kong and Macau have separate visa regimes. Your mainland China visa/visa-free status doesn’t automatically cover them. You’ll need separate entry permits and may need a new mainland China visa when returning.

What’s the best time to visit China?

Spring (April–May) and Fall (September–October): mild weather, clear skies, perfect for walking itineraries. Summer is hot/humid; winter can be cold in the north but crisp and clear.

Ready to Explore China?

Create a walking itinerary for any Chinese destination. Generate free in 60 seconds using Wingman.

Download Wingman — Plan Your China Trip Free

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Last updated: April 28, 2026. Information is current as of publication date. Visa policies, payment systems, and internet access change frequently. Always verify with official sources before traveling.