Colorful Chinese street market with food stalls and lanterns, representing daily travel costs in China
Travel Guide16 min read

China Travel Cost & Budget Guide 2026: Daily Budgets, Prices & Money-Saving Tips

How much does a trip to China cost? Complete 2026 budget breakdown — from $28/day backpacking to $500+/day luxury. Real prices for hotels, food, trains, attractions, and SIM cards with money-saving tips.

Quick Answers

China is remarkably affordable for international travelers. Budget travelers can explore for $28-48/day, mid-range comfort costs $89-157/day, and luxury experiences run $292-778+/day. The best food is often the cheapest, trains are world-class, and most attractions cost under $15. Key money-savers: use Luckin Coffee instead of Starbucks, book trains on 12306, and eat where locals eat.

1

How much does a trip to China cost per day?

Budget travelers spend ¥205-345 ($28-48) per day, mid-range travelers ¥640-1,130 ($89-157), and luxury travelers ¥2,100-5,600+ ($292-778+). A 7-day budget trip to Beijing + Shanghai costs about $381 total, while the same trip mid-range runs about $1,089.

2

Is China expensive to visit?

No — China is one of the most affordable destinations for international travelers. Street food meals cost $1-3, metro rides are $0.40-1.25, and major attractions like the Forbidden City cost just $8.30. The only expensive category is luxury hotels, which rival Western prices.

3

What are the biggest money-saving tips for China?

Set up WeChat Pay and Alipay before you go (many places don't accept cash). Book trains on 12306.cn (zero fees vs. $3-7 on third-party apps). Drink Luckin Coffee instead of Starbucks (¥9-15 vs. ¥35-42). Eat at local noodle shops, not tourist restaurants. Book hotels on Trip.com, not Booking.com.

Overview

Planning a trip to China and wondering how much it'll cost? Here's the short version: China is remarkably affordable for international travelers. You can eat incredible food for $2, ride a bullet train for $10, and visit world-class attractions for under $15.

But "affordable" isn't the same as "cheap." Luxury hotels in Shanghai rival New York prices. A private guide to the Great Wall costs more than a week of budget meals. And if you don't know the local tricks — like using Luckin Coffee instead of Starbucks, or booking trains on 12306 instead of third-party apps — you'll spend 2-3x more than necessary.

This guide breaks down every cost category with real 2026 prices in both CNY and USD, so you can build an accurate budget whether you're backpacking for $40/day or traveling in luxury for $500+/day. First time in China? Start with our essential travel tips guide for app setup and cultural basics.

Cost at a Glance

CategoryBudgetMid-RangeLuxury
Daily Budget (per person)¥205-345 ($28-48)¥640-1,130 ($89-157)¥2,100-5,600+ ($292-778+)
Accommodation¥60-120/night¥350-700/night¥1,200-3,500+/night
Meals¥60-100/day¥150-250/day¥400-800/day
Transport (city)¥15-25/day¥40-80/day¥200-500/day
Attractions¥50-100/day¥100-200/day¥300-800/day

Exchange rate used: 1 USD = 7.2 CNY (approximate rate as of 2026). Check xe.com for the latest rate.


Daily Budget Breakdown by Travel Style

Your daily spending in China depends entirely on your travel style. A budget traveler can get by on $28-48/day, while mid-range comfort costs $89-157/day. Here's what each tier looks like in practice.

Budget Traveler ($28-48/day)

The backpacker and budget-conscious traveler tier. You'll eat like a local, sleep in hostels, and take public transport — and honestly, you won't miss much.

CategoryCNY/dayUSD/day
Accommodation (hostel dorm)80-12011-17
Food (street food + local restaurants)60-1008-14
Transport (metro + city bus)15-252-3.5
Activities & attractions50-1007-14
Total per person205-34528-48

What this looks like: A dorm bed in a clean hostel, jianbing (煎饼) for breakfast, noodles or rice dishes for lunch and dinner, metro everywhere, and 1-2 paid attractions per day. Not luxurious, but genuine and fun.

Mid-Range Traveler ($89-157/day)

The sweet spot for most international travelers. Private rooms, good restaurants, mix of metro and ride-hailing, plus guided tours when useful.

CategoryCNY/dayUSD/day
Accommodation (3-4 star hotel)350-60049-83
Food (local + occasional mid-range restaurants)150-25021-35
Transport (metro + Didi ride-hailing)40-806-11
Activities & attractions100-20014-28
Total per person640-1,13089-157

What this looks like: A comfortable hotel room with good WiFi, a mix of local noodle joints and mid-range restaurants, Didi when the metro isn't convenient, and most major attractions with the occasional guided experience.

Luxury Traveler ($292-778+/day)

5-star international hotels, fine dining, private transfers, and curated experiences with English-speaking guides.

CategoryCNY/dayUSD/day
Accommodation (5-star international brand)1,200-3,500+167-486+
Food (fine dining + premium restaurants)400-80056-111
Transport (private car + business class rail)200-50028-69
Activities & attractions (private tours)300-80042-111
Total per person2,100-5,600+292-778+

What this looks like: A Marriott, Hilton, or Aman property, private Great Wall tours, Peking Duck at top-rated restaurants, and a dedicated English-speaking driver.


Accommodation Costs

China offers accommodation at every price point. Hostel dorms start at ¥60/night, comfortable 4-star hotels run ¥400-700, and 5-star international brands cost ¥900-3,500+. Location and season matter more than star ratings.

Prices by Accommodation Type

TypeCNY/nightUSD/night
Hostel dorm bed (8-12 bed)60-1208-17
Hostel private room150-28021-39
Budget hotel (2-3 star)180-35025-49
Mid-range hotel (4 star)400-70056-97
Luxury hotel (5-star international)900-3,500+125-486+
Airbnb / apartment rental250-60035-83

Price Variations by City

Accommodation costs vary significantly between cities. Shanghai is the most expensive, while cities like Chengdu and Xi'an offer much better value:

TypeBeijingShanghaiChengduSmaller Cities
Hostel dorm¥80-130¥90-150¥60-100¥40-80
Budget hotel¥220-380¥250-420¥160-300¥120-220
Mid-range (4-star)¥500-800¥550-900¥350-600¥250-450
Luxury (5-star)¥1,200-3,000¥1,500-4,000¥900-2,000¥600-1,500

Seasonal surcharges: Prices spike 50-200% during Golden Week (Oct 1-7), Chinese New Year (Jan/Feb), and summer holidays (Jul-Aug). Book months in advance during these periods.

Pro tip: Book on Trip.com (Ctrip) instead of Booking.com or Expedia — same hotels, 10-30% lower prices because it's the Chinese platform.


Food Costs

Food in China is incredibly affordable. Street food meals cost ¥10-20, local restaurant dishes run ¥20-60 per person, and even fine dining is significantly cheaper than Western equivalents. The best food is often the cheapest.

Meal Prices

Food TypeCNYUSD
Street food snack (jianbing, baozi, skewers)5-150.70-2
Street food full meal (noodles, rice dish)10-201.40-2.80
Local restaurant meal (per person)20-602.80-8
Mid-range restaurant (per person)80-18011-25
Western restaurant meal (per person)120-25017-35
Fine dining (per person, excl. drinks)300-800+42-111+
Hotpot (per person, mid-range)100-18014-25
Peking Duck dinner (per person)150-30021-42

Beverage Prices

ItemCNYUSD
Luckin Coffee (latte/americano)9-151.25-2
Starbucks (grande latte)35-424.90-5.80
Heytea / Nayuki milk tea15-352-4.90
Local beer (Tsingtao, Yanjing, 640ml)5-100.70-1.40
Imported beer (Heineken, Corona)20-452.80-6.25
Bottled water (500ml, convenience store)2-30.28-0.42
Bottled water (at tourist attraction)5-100.70-1.40

The Luckin Coffee Trick

This is the single biggest money-saving tip for coffee drinkers: Luckin Coffee (瑞幸咖啡) costs ¥9-15 for a quality latte. Starbucks charges ¥35-42 for the same drink. That's 3x the price with no quality advantage. Luckin frequently runs ¥9.9 promotions through their app. Other good-value chains: Manner Coffee (¥15-25), Tim Hortons (¥20-30).

Eating strategy for budget travelers: The best food in China is often the cheapest. Skip tourist restaurants near major attractions. Walk 10 minutes in any direction and find the local noodle shops (面馆) and dumpling houses (饺子馆) where locals eat. ¥15-35 per meal, and the food is better.


Transport Costs

China's transport system is world-class and affordable. Metro rides cost ¥3-9, Didi (ride-hailing) averages ¥15-25 for a 5km trip, and high-speed trains connect major cities at a fraction of flight costs.

City Transport

Transport TypeCNYUSDNotes
Metro single ride (Beijing)3-70.42-0.97Distance-based
Metro single ride (Shanghai)3-90.42-1.25Distance-based
City bus (flat rate)1-20.14-0.28Most cities
Didi Economy (5km trip)15-252-3.50China's Uber
Didi Express/Premier (5km)25-453.50-6.25Premium tier
Regular taxi (5km)20-352.80-4.90Starting meter ¥13-15
Airport express (Beijing Capital)253.50Train to city center
Maglev (Shanghai Pudong Airport)506.908 minutes to Longyang Rd

High-Speed Rail (Intercity)

China's high-speed rail network is one of the best in the world — and significantly cheaper than equivalent trains in Europe or Japan:

Route2nd Class1st ClassDuration
Beijing → Shanghai¥553 ($77)¥935 ($130)4-5.5h
Beijing → Xi'an¥515 ($72)¥871 ($121)4.5-5h
Shanghai → Hangzhou¥73-87 ($10-12)¥123-147 ($17-20)1h
Shanghai → Nanjing¥134-174 ($19-24)¥226-294 ($31-41)1-1.5h
Guangzhou → Shenzhen¥74 ($10)¥125 ($17)30-35min
Guangzhou → Guilin¥176-213 ($24-30)¥280-340 ($39-47)2-3h
Chengdu → Chongqing¥130-165 ($18-23)¥210-264 ($29-37)1.5h

Booking tip: Use the 12306 website or app — it's the official Chinese rail system with zero booking fees. Trip.com works in English but adds ¥20-50 service fee per ticket. Tickets open 30 days in advance; popular holiday routes sell out fast. Check our best time to visit guide for peak travel dates to avoid.

Domestic Flights

RouteEconomy Range (CNY)Notes
Beijing → Shanghai400-1,200Book 3+ weeks ahead
Beijing → Chengdu500-1,400
Shanghai → Chengdu450-1,300
Beijing → Guilin600-1,500
Shanghai → Xiamen350-900

When to fly vs. train: For routes under 4 hours by HSR, take the train. No airport security wait, city-center stations, and similar total travel time. Flights make sense for longer routes (Beijing-Chengdu, Shanghai-Kunming) or when budget carriers offer deep discounts.

Planning a trip to China?

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Major Attraction Entrance Fees

Most Chinese attractions charge ¥20-250 for entry, with many offering discounted off-peak pricing. Several major sites — including West Lake, the Bund, and Tiananmen Square — are completely free.

AttractionPeak SeasonOff-PeakNotes
Forbidden City, Beijing¥60 ($8.30)¥40 ($5.60)Timed tickets required, 80K daily cap
Great Wall - Mutianyu¥65 ($9)¥65 ($9)Cable car extra ¥100 roundtrip
Great Wall - Badaling¥65 ($9)¥40 ($5.60)Most crowded; book days ahead
Terracotta Warriors, Xi'an¥120 ($17)¥120 ($17)Combined ticket for all 3 pits
Summer Palace, Beijing¥30 ($4.20)¥20 ($2.80)Gardens only; buildings extra
Temple of Heaven, Beijing¥35 ($4.90)¥20 ($2.80)Combined park + buildings ticket
Zhangjiajie National Forest Park¥248 ($34)¥248 ($34)3-day pass; cable car ¥98-258 extra
Jiuzhaigou National Park¥220 ($31)¥80 ($11)Park bus ¥90; book online
Huangshan (Yellow Mountain)¥190 ($26)¥150 ($21)Cable car ¥80-100 one way
Li River Cruise, Guilin-Yangshuo¥210-280 ($29-39)¥210-280 ($29-39)Official boat price
Panda Base, Chengdu¥58 ($8)¥58 ($8)Book online; sells out weekends
Yu Garden, Shanghai¥40 ($5.60)¥40 ($5.60)Surrounding bazaar is free
West Lake, HangzhouFreeFreeMost areas free
The Bund, ShanghaiFreeFreeWaterfront promenade
Tiananmen Square, BeijingFreeFreeThe plaza is free; Forbidden City behind it is paid

Getting Discounts

  • Student discount: Valid international student IDs (ISIC card or university ID) typically get 50% off at state-run attractions
  • Senior discount: Ages 60+ (sometimes 65+) get free or half-price entry at most attractions
  • Off-peak pricing: Many attractions charge ¥10-25 less during November-March
  • Combination tickets: Cities like Xi'an, Suzhou, and Hangzhou offer multi-attraction passes saving 20-40%

Important: Most major attractions now require advance online booking (WeChat mini-program or official website). The Forbidden City has an 80,000 daily visitor cap — book 10-30 days ahead during peak season.


Communication & SIM Cards

A tourist SIM card with data costs ¥50-128 depending on duration. You'll need mobile data — many places only accept QR code payments, and maps apps are essential for navigation.

SIM TypeDurationDataCNYUSD
China Unicom tourist SIM7 days10GB (then throttled)689.40
China Unicom tourist SIM30 days40GB12817.80
China Mobile tourist SIM7 days15GB7810.80
China Telecom tourist SIM5 days10GB506.90

Where to buy: Airport arrivals (slightly more expensive), carrier stores in the city (cheapest, language barrier), or pre-order online with airport pickup (best balance).

VPN warning: Download and set up your VPN before arriving in China. You cannot download VPN apps from the App Store or Google Play once inside China — they're blocked by the Great Firewall. ExpressVPN ($10/month), NordVPN ($7.50/month), and Surfshark (~$6/month) are popular options.

For more details, see our China SIM card guides.


Sample Trip Budgets

Real-world trip budgets showing exactly what you'd spend on popular China itineraries, from a 7-day budget trip ($381) to a 10-day luxury experience ($5,779).

7-Day Beijing + Shanghai — Budget ($381)

Hostel dorms, local food, metro/bus, self-guided sightseeing

ItemCNYUSD
Accommodation (7 nights hostel, avg ¥100/night)70097
Food (avg ¥80/day)56078
Transport: metro/bus (avg ¥20/day)14019
Beijing → Shanghai HSR (2nd class)55377
Airport/station transfers (4 trips × ¥30)12017
Attractions (Forbidden City, Great Wall, Yu Garden, etc.)40056
SIM card (7-day China Unicom)689
Miscellaneous (snacks, souvenirs)20028
Total (1 person)¥2,741$381

7-Day Beijing + Shanghai — Mid-Range ($1,089)

3-4 star hotels, mixed dining, metro + Didi, some guided tours

ItemCNYUSD
Accommodation (7 nights avg ¥500/night)3,500486
Food (avg ¥200/day)1,400194
Transport: metro + Didi (avg ¥60/day)42058
Beijing → Shanghai HSR (1st class)935130
Airport/station transfers (4 trips × ¥80)32044
Attractions + 1 guided tour70097
SIM card689
Miscellaneous (shopping, extras)50069
Total (1 person)¥7,843$1,089

14-Day Multi-City: Beijing → Xi'an → Chengdu → Shanghai — Mid-Range ($1,869)

4 cities, 3 train legs, mid-range hotels, immersive experiences

ItemCNYUSD
Accommodation (14 nights avg ¥450/night)6,300875
Food (avg ¥180/day)2,520350
Transport: metro + Didi (avg ¥55/day)770107
Beijing → Xi'an HSR (2nd class)51572
Xi'an → Chengdu HSR (2nd class)37051
Chengdu → Shanghai HSR (2nd class)67193
Airport/station transfers (6 trips × ¥80)48067
Attractions (Terracotta Warriors, Panda Base, Great Wall, etc.)900125
SIM card (30-day China Unicom)12818
Miscellaneous (shopping, souvenirs)800111
Total (1 person)¥13,454$1,869

10-Day Beijing + Shanghai + Hangzhou — Luxury ($5,779)

5-star international hotels, fine dining, private transfers, business class rail

ItemCNYUSD
Accommodation (10 nights 5-star avg ¥2,200/night)22,0003,056
Food (fine dining avg ¥600/day)6,000833
Private car / premium transport (avg ¥400/day)4,000556
Beijing → Shanghai HSR (Business Class)1,748243
Shanghai → Hangzhou HSR (Business Class)29441
Attractions + private English-speaking guides3,000417
Spa treatments (2-3 sessions)1,500208
SIM card689
Miscellaneous (luxury shopping, extras)3,000417
Total (1 person)¥41,610$5,779

Planning a trip to China?

Our travel experts can help you create a personalized itinerary based on your interests and budget.

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Money-Saving Tips

Knowing a few local tricks can cut your China travel costs by 30-50%. Digital payments, train booking strategy, and eating where locals eat make the biggest difference.

Set Up WeChat Pay & Alipay Before You Go

This is non-negotiable. Many places in China no longer accept cash or international credit cards — only QR code payment. Since 2023, both platforms accept foreign Visa/Mastercard:

  • Alipay: Download the app, set up "Alipay International," link your foreign credit card. Works at most retail shops, restaurants, and transport
  • WeChat Pay: Link a foreign Visa/Mastercard in the WeChat app. Requires a Chinese phone number (tourist SIM works)
  • Set up both apps before arrival. Some smaller vendors accept only one platform

For step-by-step setup instructions and ATM tips, see our Currency & Payment Guide.

Book Trains on 12306

The 12306.cn website and app are the official Chinese rail ticket system — zero booking fees. The website has an English interface. Trip.com works in English but adds ¥20-50 service fee per ticket. Tickets open 30 days in advance — set a reminder for popular routes during holidays.

More Ways to Save

  • Eat at local noodle shops and dumpling houses — the best food costs ¥15-35 per meal
  • Use the metro for all city transport. Didi is cheap, but the metro is even cheaper
  • Book hotels on Trip.com/Ctrip rather than Booking.com — often 10-30% lower for the same property
  • Avoid hotel restaurants and mini-bars — walk 5 minutes outside for dramatically lower prices
  • Buy train station bento boxes (铁路盒饭, ¥15-35) instead of eating at station restaurants
  • Visit attractions on weekdays to avoid weekend crowds and potential surcharges
  • Use student/senior discounts — ISIC cards and university IDs get 50% off at most state-run attractions
  • Check visa-free options — you might not even need to pay for a visa
  • China is very safe — see our safety guide so you know what to expect

Tipping in China

Tipping is not customary in China. Don't tip at restaurants, taxis, or hotels — it's not expected and can sometimes cause confusion.

Tipping culture in China is simple: don't tip. It's not expected or required in virtually all situations:

  • Restaurants: No tipping. Some upscale restaurants add a 10-15% service charge (服务费) to the bill
  • Taxis / Didi: No tipping. Don't round up
  • Hotels: Not expected at budget or mid-range hotels. At luxury international hotels, ¥10-20 for porters is understood but not required
  • Tour guides: Tipping private guides (¥50-200/day) is appreciated for foreign-operated tours, but not expected for local group tours
  • Spa / massage: No standard tipping practice
  • Street food / convenience stores: Absolutely no tipping

Seasonal Price Variations

When you travel matters as much as where. Golden Week and Chinese New Year inflate prices by 50-200%, while the November-March low season offers 20-40% savings on everything.

PeriodPrice ImpactWhy
Golden Week (Oct 1-7)+50-200%National holiday; 800M+ domestic trips
Chinese New Year (Jan/Feb)+50-150%Trains sell out weeks ahead; tourist sites crowded or closed
Summer (Jul-Aug)+20-50%School holidays; beach and mountain destinations surge
Low season (Nov-Mar, excl. CNY)-20-40%Best value; fewer crowds, lower accommodation prices
Shoulder season (Apr-May, Sep)Normal pricingBest balance of weather, crowds, and cost

For detailed seasonal planning, see our Best Time to Visit China guide.


About the Author

This budget guide is maintained by the Gopagoda Travel Team, drawing on years of experience helping international travelers plan their China trips. We update all prices regularly to reflect current conditions. If you spot outdated pricing, contact us.


Editorial Standards

All prices in this guide are based on official sources (12306.cn for rail, official attraction websites for entrance fees), aggregated booking platforms (Trip.com, Dianping), and firsthand verification by our team. Exchange rate: 1 USD = 7.2 CNY. Actual prices may vary by season, booking platform, and specific property. Last verified: February 2026.

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Summary

China delivers exceptional value at every budget level. Whether you're backpacking on $28/day or traveling in luxury at $500+/day, you'll get more for your money than in most Western countries and many Southeast Asian destinations. The key to saving money isn't cutting corners — it's knowing the local platforms (12306, Trip.com, Luckin Coffee, WeChat Pay) that give you the same quality at fraction of the tourist price. Set up your digital payments before arrival, book trains early during holidays, and eat where the locals eat. Your wallet will thank you.

Frequently Asked Questions

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