Short answer
Use mobile payment, but keep a second layer
The Chinese Embassy in the UK describes several payment options for visitors to China, including bank cards, mobile payment, cash, bank account and e-CNY. For a foreign traveller, the practical conclusion is simple: prepare more than one layer.
Mobile payment is the everyday default in many places, but cards, cash and phone verification still matter when an app, issuer or merchant does not behave as expected.
Already in China
If your card has already failed, slow the route down first
When a linked card fails after arrival, separate the problem into three parts: the app, the card issuer and the merchant scenario. Try a small payment in both Alipay and WeChat Pay if both are set up, contact the issuer to confirm overseas and mobile-wallet transactions are allowed, and keep a small RMB cash layer while you test.
Do not add pressure with a tight transfer day until payment, data and taxi pickup feel stable. A card problem in Beijing can be annoying. The same problem before a Yunnan road transfer, a Zhangjiajie ticket day or a late hotel check-in can change the whole rhythm of the trip.
Checklist
The payment setup we would check first
- Set up WeChat Pay or Alipay where available before departure.
- Keep at least one international card as backup.
- Carry a small amount of RMB cash for edge cases.
- Confirm your phone can receive SMS verification.
- Save hotel names, addresses and phone numbers in Chinese.
- Avoid planning tight transfer days before you have tested payments locally.
Regional travel
Payment friction is not the same everywhere
In Beijing and Shanghai, many mistakes are absorbed by infrastructure and English-language exposure. In Yunnan, Xinjiang, Dunhuang or winter Northeast China, a small payment issue can affect car timing, ticket pickup, hotel check-in or dinner after a long transfer.
This is why we place payment readiness inside route planning rather than treating it as a separate travel tip.
Private check
Let the route decide how much support you need
A resort stay in Sanya needs a different practical plan from a long road across Xinjiang or a quiet Yunnan route through smaller towns. Tell us your season, route, group size and comfort level, and we will flag the practical gaps before they become expensive.
FAQ
Questions travellers search
What payment methods should I prepare for China?
Prepare mobile payment where available, at least one backup card, a small cash layer and reliable phone verification.
Is Alipay or WeChat Pay better for foreigners?
Availability can depend on app version, card issuer, phone number and merchant. Many travellers prepare both when possible, then test after arrival.
Can I use only Visa or Mastercard in China?
Do not rely on card acceptance alone. China is highly mobile-payment oriented, and acceptance varies by city, merchant and scenario.
What should I do before leaving the airport?
Confirm data works, test payment with a small purchase, and save hotel details in Chinese before the first transfer.
What if my card does not work after I arrive?
Test both apps if available, call the issuer, keep cash for edge cases, and avoid tight transfers until payment and pickup are stable.
Private route check
Ask us to check the payment-sensitive parts of your route.
This is useful if you are choosing Yunnan, Xinjiang, Dunhuang, Sanya, Zhangjiajie or winter Northeast China beyond the first cities.
Last checked · 2026-07-06