Travel in China
Author
Discussion

Beggarall

Original Poster:

581 posts

260 months

Thursday 2nd October
quotequote all
Hopefully we are going to China shortly and I wondered if there were any particular do's or don't's? In particular are there any useful apps to help get around and how to manage currency/payments? Any advice appreciated. Thanks

HotJambalaya

2,058 posts

199 months

Thursday 2nd October
quotequote all
you'll need wechat or alipay. Weirdly I cant join wechat, you need a user to invite you. I've installed alipay though and linked it to my revolut card. I guess I'll know in a few days if it works or not!

mikef

5,898 posts

270 months

Thursday 2nd October
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PM me with your email address if you need an WeChat invite and I should be able to send one, I’m a registered WeChat developer

PurpleFox

491 posts

104 months

Thursday 2nd October
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We went last October half term (family of 4) for a couple of weeks and enjoyed it so much we are going back this half term too.

Happy to activate your WeChat if you like, just send me a message. You will need it and aliepay and some way of topping up both. If I recall it would only link to a Chinese credit card but I had a Chinese friend who I would bank transfer and she would then transfer funds as and when I needed them.

Apps:

Aliepay and WeChat essential

Google translate is a must. Download the language so it works offline

MetroMan is excellent for all of the subways

Trip (or trip.com) for booking trains. You can only book two weeks ahead maximum and first class and business class often sell out quick.

Use didi for taxis, like uber but cheaper and very reliable.

People friendly and willing to help.

Travel is cheap, very quick and blew my mind. It’s is light years ahead of uk and a fraction of the cost.

It’s also easy to change your plans, you can cancel your tickets and get a refund if you don’t travel, sometimes even after the booked time if not used. Bizarre concept but did this on trains and cancelled a flight a few days before for a full refund.

PurpleFox

491 posts

104 months

Friday 3rd October
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I have just re-familiarised myself with the app.....

You can add UK bank cards but the reason for me doing the bank transfer method was that Wechat charge 3% on anything over 200RMB (£20). If you select your balance as source of funds, there is no extra charge.

Just googled it and there might be some offers on whereby a new user adding a non Chinese bank card can avoid the fees for 60 days, that might help you....

My bank also charged the foreign transaction fee for each purchase via wechat on the paired mastercard so I got a HSBC Global Money card which didn't cost anything and worked really well.

GuigiaroBertone

273 posts

24 months

Friday 3rd October
quotequote all
Alipay is an absolute must. Everywhere I went accepted it and it also includes the DiDi (Chinese Uber) app.

Amap is also good for navigation. I installed WeChat, but Alipay seemed to cover every situation I was in.

Because your phone will be your lifeline - I definitely recommend an esim with lots of data (I used Saily) and carrying an external powerbank.

learn a few basic words (Hello, excuse me, bill please, thank you) and you'll have a great time.


daqinggregg

5,252 posts

148 months

Friday 3rd October
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Don’t underestimate the times to clear passport control.

Most go to websites; you will not have access without a VPN

Money, increasingly most places no longer accept cash, traditional credit cards not widely used except in international hotels. Download ‘Wechat pay’ (most common)or use Alipay.

Travel, don’t underestimate distance; trains, very fast, clean and punctual. Worth trying at least once, forget comparisons to the UK, it’s a world leading network. Metro systems in (available in most major cities) are excellent.

WiFi is not widely available, even when it is, it’s generally pass word protected, which presents its own problems, although often a young member of staff will help you log in. Definitely get an esim so much is done by phone.

WeChat also has many services beside payment, the translation service (online) is excellent, scan a menu or a whole book instantly.

Be patient, many things (official) seem to take a long time to be processed (esp. hotel rooms), but its just people doing their job.













chip*

1,495 posts

247 months

Friday 3rd October
quotequote all
GuigiaroBertone said:
and carrying an external powerbank.
I was informed rental powerbanks (the yellow company is the most common) are readily available for pennies!
If your phone is completely dead, watch the end of this short video smile

https://youtu.be/IKu1K-tCVWQ?si=fLO5xDL7xbtWiQyW

Kawasicki

13,891 posts

254 months

Friday 3rd October
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Just back from a three week long business trip to Shanghai and Beijing. Enjoyed it way more than I expected. People were friendly, food was interesting, Shanghai was crazy hot and humid! The two cities felt like they were racing ahead technically. The working hours and focus on results was also surprising, a real eye opener.

Tip… my external powerbank was confiscated before I got on a train, as it wasn’t CCC marked.

Beggarall

Original Poster:

581 posts

260 months

Sunday 5th October
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Thank you everyone for your helpful comments - we are going shortly and will post up experiences when we get back smile

StoutBench

1,486 posts

47 months

Sunday 5th October
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An amazing country, enjoy!

Ridealong

569 posts

89 months

Monday 3rd November
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Factor in 15 to 60 mins for immigration queues/passport control (adults usually get asked to do digital finger prints) into China, less time on the way out.
You should collect more than 1 immigration card for mistakes or if you are going to re-enter China soon (save time filling them in and if there isn't a pen handy), they use MM/DD/YY for dates.

AliPay, has a built-in translator, the same Google translate icon will appear when there is Chinese text on screen. I can't remember what WeChat has as I only ever use it once when a food outlet didn't accept AliPay earlier this year in Shenzhen.

There are still shops and stalls that accept cash - McDonalds and New Year stalls as I had some paper money (over 20 years old) I wanted to get rid of it.
Also, there was some issue with my AliPay and WeChat account when trying to pay for ticket on the metro/tube, luckily I had paper money on me to use on the ticket machines.

If you have a Halifax Mastercard, there is no exchange rate fee and the FX rate is from Mastercard which is usually the best rate.


DodgyGeezer

45,336 posts

209 months

Thursday 13th November
quotequote all
factor in (potential) long waits/passport checks at both airports (internal and international) and train stations. The amount of security is unbelievable

craigjm

19,926 posts

219 months

Thursday 13th November
quotequote all
GuigiaroBertone said:
Alipay is an absolute must. Everywhere I went accepted it and it also includes the DiDi (Chinese Uber) app.

Amap is also good for navigation. I installed WeChat, but Alipay seemed to cover every situation I was in.

Because your phone will be your lifeline - I definitely recommend an esim with lots of data (I used Saily) and carrying an external powerbank.

learn a few basic words (Hello, excuse me, bill please, thank you) and you'll have a great time.
This but make sure you have a properly marked powerbank of you will have them taken away

fatboy b

9,656 posts

235 months

Saturday
quotequote all
GuigiaroBertone said:
Alipay is an absolute must. Everywhere I went accepted it and it also includes the DiDi (Chinese Uber) app.

Amap is also good for navigation. I installed WeChat, but Alipay seemed to cover every situation I was in.

Because your phone will be your lifeline - I definitely recommend an esim with lots of data (I used Saily) and carrying an external powerbank.

learn a few basic words (Hello, excuse me, bill please, thank you) and you'll have a great time.
If you’re carrying an external power bank and intending to fly internally, then make sure it’s CCC labeled. Otherwise like mine, it’ll get confiscated at airport security.

DodgyGeezer

45,336 posts

209 months

Saturday
quotequote all
fatboy b said:
GuigiaroBertone said:
Alipay is an absolute must. Everywhere I went accepted it and it also includes the DiDi (Chinese Uber) app.

Amap is also good for navigation. I installed WeChat, but Alipay seemed to cover every situation I was in.

Because your phone will be your lifeline - I definitely recommend an esim with lots of data (I used Saily) and carrying an external powerbank.

learn a few basic words (Hello, excuse me, bill please, thank you) and you'll have a great time.
If you re carrying an external power bank and intending to fly internally, then make sure it s CCC labeled. Otherwise like mine, it ll get confiscated at airport security.
happened to several in our group recently, mine (Belkin) was ok