China travel guide
Plan China like a country, not a checklist.
A standalone China travel hub for first-time and returning visitors: what to know before you go, how to choose a route, where each province fits, and when to move from inspiration into booking.
Must know about China
China is easy to travel when the setup is right.
For western long-haul visitors, the hard part is usually not sightseeing. It is choosing the right scale, preparing phone and payment access, and avoiding routes that look close on a map but feel long on the ground.
Check your passport’s visa, transit and permit requirements before booking non-refundable plans. Some regions and special routes need extra planning.
Set up mobile payment, keep a backup card, and carry some cash for small places. Test your payment app before relying on it.
High-speed rail is excellent, but China is huge. Build routes around clusters instead of trying to collect faraway landmarks.
Prepare translation, maps, train booking, ride hailing and data access before landing. A working phone changes the whole trip.
Golden Week, summer holidays and major public holidays affect trains, hotels and famous sites. Book earlier or choose quieter regions.
China is not one cuisine. Sichuan, Cantonese, Yunnan, Xi’an and Jiangnan food can each justify a different route.
How to choose a route
Start with the travel feeling, then pick provinces.
This keeps the page useful for people arriving from search. They can understand the country first, then open a province or itinerary page when the route logic is clear.
Classic China
Beijing, Xi’an, Shanghai and a Jiangnan add-on. Best when you want history, city contrast and iconic sights.
Food, highlands and old towns
Chengdu, Guizhou villages, Dali and Lijiang. Better for travellers who want atmosphere and regional culture.
Mountains and rivers
Zhangjiajie, Guilin, Yangshuo and Yunnan. Best for scenery-first travellers with more patience for transfers.
Silk Road China
Xi’an, Lanzhou, Zhangye, Jiayuguan and Dunhuang. Strong for Buddhist caves, desert, rail and old trade routes.
South China
Guangzhou, Guilin, Yangshuo and Fujian or Hainan. Good for food, coast, karst and warmer seasons.
North China history
Beijing, Datong, Pingyao and Xi’an. Best for old city walls, grottoes, temples and overland rail.
Clickable China map
Choose a province or city from the map.
Where to go first
Open the strongest province pages first.
These are the most useful places for early content depth, photography, affiliate booking links and SEO growth.
Beijing
Best for first-time history, hutongs, museums and Great Wall day trips.

Shanghai
Gateway city with art deco streets, river views and Jiangnan side trips.
Sichuan
Chengdu, teahouses, pandas, spicy food and mountain scenery.
Yunnan
Dali, Lijiang, highlands, rice terraces and slower southwest travel.
Guangxi
Karst rivers, rice terraces, villages and countryside photography.
Gansu
Dunhuang, Zhangye, Jiayuguan and the most visual Silk Road route.
Hunan
Zhangjiajie, old towns, spicy food and dramatic forest scenery.
Guangdong
Cantonese food, Pearl River cities, markets and south China gateways.
China travel tips
The practical layer that makes the trip smoother.
These guides can later become deeper articles inside each country and province page, but the China hub should already answer the basics.
Use reliable mobile data from landing day. Check whether your preferred map, translation and payment setup works with your connection.
Book key high-speed rail legs early around holidays and weekends. Always check the exact station, not just the city name.
For a first trip, stay near a metro line, old town core or station area that matches your transfer plan. Location matters more than room size.
Busy restaurants are usually a good sign. Carry stomach medicine, learn a few dietary phrases, and use food regions as part of route planning.
English varies widely. Prepare Chinese names for hotels, stations and sights, and screenshot anything you must show offline.
Do not change cities every night. China rewards a route with strong bases and focused day trips.
When the route is ready
Book after the shape is clear.
Use the booking page for flights, trains, hotels, eSIM and experiences once you know your China route and key bases.