QR Code Ordering: The New Normal
Forget paper menus. In 2026 China, you walk into a restaurant, sit down, scan a QR code on the table, and a digital menu appears on your phone. Ordering food in China via QR code is like using a self-service kiosk at McDonald's — except every restaurant, from hole-in-the-wall noodle shops to fancy Cantonese restaurants, has one.
How It Works
- Sit down and find the QR code (usually on a table sticker, tent card, or wall)
- Scan with WeChat or Alipay — this opens the restaurant's mini-program menu
- Browse the menu — many have photos, which is a lifesaver when you can't read Chinese
- Use the translate button — WeChat and Alipay mini-programs now include built-in translation (click the ⋯ menu → 翻译)
- Add items to cart and submit your order
- Pay directly through the app — the kitchen starts cooking immediately
Translation Hack
If the menu doesn't auto-translate, use WeChat's "Scan" tool (under the "+" menu) to translate the entire page in real-time. Microsoft Translator and Baidu Translate also work well for photographing physical menus.
When QR Code Ordering Doesn't Work
Some very small restaurants, especially in rural areas, still take orders the old-fashioned way. Here's your survival strategy:
- Point at other tables' food — the universal language of "I'll have what they're having"
- Use photos — show the waiter a photo of a dish from a food app (Dianping or Meituan)
- Paper and pen — write the number of people and hold up fingers for quantity
Essential Phrases for Ordering Food
You don't need to speak Chinese to eat well in China. But these 10 phrases will make your life dramatically easier and earn you genuine smiles from restaurant staff.
| English | Chinese | Pinyin | When to Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Menu, please | 菜单 | càidān | At sit-down restaurants |
| This one, please | 这个 | zhège | Point at menu item or food |
| Two of this | 两个 | liǎng gè | Ordering quantity |
| No spicy | 不要辣 | bú yào là | Essential in Sichuan/Hunan! |
| A little spicy | 微辣 | wēi là | When you want flavor without fire |
| I'm vegetarian | 我吃素 | wǒ chī sù | Vegetarian declaration |
| No MSG | 不要味精 | bú yào wèijīng | Common request |
| The bill please | 买单 | mǎidān | When you're done eating |
| Delicious! | 好吃! | hǎo chī! | Compliment the chef |
| Too much food | 太多了 | tài duō le | When you've over-ordered |
Pro tip: Save these phrases as a note on your phone. Better yet, screenshot this table — you'll use it every day.
Street Food: The Best Eating in China
Street food in China isn't just a budget option — it's where some of the best food in the country is found. The busier the stall, the better (and safer) the food.
How Street Food Works
Street food ordering is beautifully simple:
- Walk up to the stall
- Point at what you want (or say "zhège" — this one)
- Show fingers for quantity
- Pay via QR code scan (almost all street vendors accept WeChat Pay/Alipay) or cash
What to Try
| Dish | What It Is | Price | Where |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jianbing (煎饼) | Savory crepe with egg, crispy wonton, cilantro | 8-12 CNY | Everywhere (breakfast) |
| Chuan'r (串儿) | Grilled meat/vegetable skewers | 2-5 CNY each | Night markets |
| Baozi (包子) | Steamed buns with pork/vegetable filling | 2-5 CNY | Morning vendors |
| Roujiamo (肉夹馍) | "Chinese hamburger" — bread stuffed with stewed meat | 8-15 CNY | Xi'an, nationwide |
| Stinky Tofu (臭豆腐) | Deep-fried fermented tofu — smells terrible, tastes amazing | 10-15 CNY | Changsha, nationwide |
| Tanghulu (糖葫芦) | Candied fruit on a stick | 10-20 CNY | Winter street snack |
Safety Rule: Follow the Crowds
If a street food stall has a long line of locals, the food is fresh and good. If it's empty while neighboring stalls are busy, skip it. High turnover = fresh ingredients.
The Hot Pot Guide
Hot pot is China's most social dining experience — a bubbling cauldron of broth at your table where you cook your own ingredients. Think of it as Chinese fondue, but instead of cheese, you're dipping thinly sliced lamb into spicy Sichuan broth.
Step-by-Step Hot Pot Ordering
- Choose your broth base — usually 2-4 options: spicy (红汤), mild/bone broth (白汤), tomato (番茄), mushroom (菌菇). Get the half-and-half pot (鸳鸯锅) for one spicy and one mild side
- Order your dipping sauce — most hot pot places have a DIY sauce bar (sesame paste + garlic + cilantro + chili oil is the classic combo)
- Order ingredients — meat (thinly sliced lamb is king), vegetables, tofu, mushrooms, noodles, dumplings. Order 2-3 meat plates and 4-5 veggie plates for 2 people
- Cook and eat — drop ingredients in the broth, wait 30 seconds to 3 minutes depending on the item, fish it out with your chopstick strainer
Haidilao (海底捞): The Famous One
Haidilao is China's most famous hot pot chain — and for good reason. The service is legendary (free manicures while you wait, noodle-dancing performances, phone bags to protect from splashing broth). Expect to spend 100-180 CNY per person. Book ahead or expect a 30-60 minute wait during dinner.
Restaurant Types and Price Guide
| Type | What to Expect | Price per Person | Ordering Method |
|---|---|---|---|
| Street food | Standing, no seats | 5-20 CNY | Point + pay |
| Local noodle/rice shop | Basic, fast | 15-35 CNY | Counter or QR |
| Family restaurant | Full menu, atmosphere | 40-80 CNY | QR code or waiter |
| Hot pot | Cook your own | 80-180 CNY | QR code tablet |
| Mid-range restaurant | Good décor, service | 80-200 CNY | QR or waiter |
| Fine dining | Upscale, curated | 200-500+ CNY | Waiter service |
Dietary Restrictions & Allergies
Handling dietary restrictions in China requires preparation. Unlike Western restaurants, there's no standard allergen labeling.
- Vegetarian: Say "我吃素" (wǒ chī sù). Be aware that "vegetarian" in China sometimes includes dishes cooked in lard or with oyster sauce. Buddhist temple restaurants serve genuinely vegan food
- No nuts: "不要坚果" (bú yào jiānguǒ). Show a translated allergy card on your phone
- No gluten: Very difficult in China — soy sauce contains wheat, and noodles/dumplings are staples. Stick to rice-based dishes
- Halal: Look for restaurants with Arabic script and the 清真 (qīngzhēn) symbol — available in every major city
Best strategy: Prepare a food allergy card in Chinese on your phone. Write your restrictions in Chinese characters and show it to the waiter. The China Travel Tips guide has more on this.