Resources/ Mainland China/ Practical Life
Practical Life 2026

Living in China —
the practical reality

WeChat, VPN, bank accounts, housing, healthcare, the Great Firewall — everything you need to set up and survive daily life in China as a foreigner in 2026.

First two weeks survival guide

China operates on a distinct, hermetically sealed technological and financial ecosystem. The global apps, payment systems, and digital infrastructure used in the West are functionally useless here. Arriving without proper preparation results in immediate, profound paralysis — you cannot pay for food, navigate the city, or receive your salary without the right setup. The absolute survival priority for your first two weeks: establishing the digital trinity of a registered local SIM card, a Chinese bank account, and a verified WeChat and Alipay profile. Without these three interconnected tools, participating in modern Chinese society is fundamentally impossible.

3Digital tools needed before anything else
24hPolice registration deadline upon arrival
77Countries with visa-free entry to China
Do these first
The digital trinity — week one priorities
01
Local SIM card
Available at airports and carrier stores (China Mobile, China Unicom, China Telecom) with your passport. A registered Chinese phone number is the gateway to everything else — required for WeChat verification, bank account opening, DiDi, Alipay, and most government services. Get this on day one, before leaving the airport if possible. Monthly plans with unlimited data run ¥50–150.
02
WeChat & Alipay accounts
Set up WeChat before you arrive if possible — new accounts created inside China require an existing Chinese user to scan a QR code to verify you, which can take days to arrange. WeChat Pay now supports foreign credit cards (Visa, Mastercard, Amex) with no fee on transactions under ¥200. Alipay’s international version is user-friendly and universally accepted. Both apps handle payments for everything from street food to rent.
03
Chinese bank account
Operating without a local bank account is feasible for 2–3 weeks but becomes financially ruinous — 3% foreign card fees on every transaction and no way to receive a local RMB salary. Best options for expats: China Merchants Bank (CMB) or ICBC. Requires: passport, Residence Permit, local phone number, and stamped employment contract. Must be done in person; plan for 2–4 hours.
The app ecosystem
WeChat, Alipay & the apps that run daily life

WeChat (微信) is not merely a messaging app — it is the fundamental operating system of daily Chinese life. It handles messaging, payments, social media, mini-programs (embedded apps for ordering food, booking taxis, paying bills), and professional networking. Setting up a new WeChat account from abroad is exceptionally difficult in 2026: it requires an existing Chinese WeChat user with an account in good standing for over six months to physically scan a QR code to authorize the new account. Create your WeChat account before your flight.

Alipay (支付宝) is equally ubiquitous for payments. Its international app version features an English interface and accepts foreign credit cards directly. Reliable for scanning vendor QR codes, ordering on Taobao, and booking high-speed rail without navigating Chinese menus. As of 2026, WeChat Pay accepts foreign cards (Visa, Mastercard, Amex, JCB) with no fees on transactions under ¥200; a 3% fee applies to larger amounts.

DiDi — ride-hailing
China’s Uber equivalent with a fully functional English interface. Integrates with WeChat and Alipay for auto-payment. A 20-minute city ride costs ¥25–60. More reliable than taxis in most cities.
Meituan / Ele.me — food delivery
Dominant food delivery platforms. Neither has robust English support — expats navigate by screenshot + translation app, or rote memorisation of the interface layout.
Amap (高德地图) — navigation
Google Maps is blocked and GPS data is outdated due to Chinese coordinate offsets. Use Amap or Baidu Maps. Apple Maps works well as it pulls data from Chinese sources.
Taobao / JD.com — shopping
Primary e-commerce platforms for everything from groceries to electronics. Prices 60–80% lower than import stores. Delivery within 24–48 hours in major cities.
WeChat Pay foreign card fee
No fee under ¥200 · 3% above ¥200
WeChat setup rule
Create account before arriving — in-China setup requires a verified local user to authorize you
Google Maps in China
Blocked and unreliable. Use Amap or Apple Maps
Food delivery apps
Meituan & Ele.me dominate. No English support — navigate by screenshot translation
DiDi language
Full English interface — most foreigner-friendly transport app
The Great Firewall
VPN, internet access & the firewall in 2026

Almost all Western digital infrastructure is blocked outright or severely throttled in China: Google, YouTube, Instagram, WhatsApp, X (Twitter), Reddit, and Western news media are inaccessible without a VPN. This creates a hermetically separate digital reality that requires active management.

The amended Cybersecurity Law effective January 1, 2026 explicitly outlaws the use of unauthorized channels to access the international internet. Fines for individuals can reach ¥5,000; organizations face fines up to ¥15,000. In practice, enforcement primarily targets domestic citizens, political dissidents, and commercial VPN resellers — individual expats quietly using personal VPNs for routine tasks (Gmail, Instagram) exist in a tolerated grey area, provided they avoid politically sensitive content.

Technically, standard VPN protocols (OpenVPN) are immediately blocked by the Great Firewall. Expats must use obfuscated protocols such as WireGuard with obfuscation, Shadowsocks, or V2Ray-based solutions that disguise VPN traffic as regular HTTPS. The critical rule: because all VPN provider websites are blocked inside China, you must purchase, download, and install your VPN clients on all devices before boarding your flight.

Critical: Install your VPN before your flight. Every major VPN provider’s website is blocked inside China — you cannot download or purchase one after arrival. Cost: ¥150–400/month for a reliable obfuscated service.
Corporate VPNs are legal
Multinational corporations operating legally in China use government-licensed “leased line” VPN solutions — officially sanctioned, monitored, and entirely legal for business data transfer. If you work for an MNC, your employer’s IT team will provide access. Personal consumer VPNs operate in a different — technically illegal but tolerated — grey area.
Blocked services
Google, YouTube, Instagram, WhatsApp, X, Reddit, most Western news sites
VPN monthly cost
¥150–400/month for reliable obfuscated service
VPN protocol needed
Obfuscated only — WireGuard+obfs, Shadowsocks, V2Ray. Standard OpenVPN is blocked
Legal status (2026)
Technically illegal · tolerated grey area for expats using privately for routine tasks
Individual fine (if prosecuted)
Up to ¥5,000
Finding an apartment
Housing in China — what you need to know before signing

The apartment search in China moves at lightspeed compared to Western markets. Most expats find housing through local real estate agents (中介) or digital platforms like Ziroom (自如), Lianjia (链家), and Anjuke. Ziroom is particularly popular among young professionals — it offers standardized furnished apartments with built-in cleaning services, Wi-Fi, and app-based English support, eliminating the need to negotiate directly with local landlords in Mandarin.

The standard lease structure is “pay three, deposit one” (付三누一) — three months of rent upfront plus one month security deposit. For a mid-range Shanghai apartment this means up to ¥35,000 in cash before your first paycheck arrives. Agent fees add a further 35–50% of one month’s rent (non-refundable). The monthly price is always negotiable; the quarterly payment structure is culturally entrenched and almost never negotiable.

Before signing any lease, verify three critical items: first, that the building’s ISP does not aggressively throttle VPN protocols. Second, whether the apartment has central heating — cities north of the Yangtze River (Beijing, Xi’an) have government-mandated district heating; southern cities (Shanghai, Chengdu) do not, making indoor winters cold and electricity bills high. Third, confirm the landlord holds the official property deed and will accompany you to the local police station for foreigner registration — landlords who refuse are illegally subletting and their apartments cannot be legally registered as your residence.

Ziroom (自如) — recommended
Standardized furnished apartments, English app support, built-in cleaning. Best for foreigners who want transparency without Mandarin negotiation.
Lianjia (链家)
Largest real estate platform. Wide selection but requires Chinese language or a bilingual friend to navigate agent interactions effectively.
Registration rule: Upon arriving at any apartment or hotel, you must register your residence at the local police station (派出所) within 24 hours. Failure to register causes Residence Permit complications. If your landlord refuses to accompany you for registration, find a different apartment.
Deposit structure
3 months rent + 1 month deposit upfront — up to ¥35,000 in Shanghai
Agent fee
35–50% of one month’s rent, non-refundable
Police registration deadline
Within 24 hours of arriving at your address (72h in rural areas)
Heating: north vs south
Beijing/Xi’an: central heating included. Shanghai/Chengdu: no central heating — cold winters, high electricity bills
What to check before signing
VPN access · heating situation · landlord willing to do police registration
Money & banking
Opening a Chinese bank account as a foreigner

Operating without a Chinese bank account is feasible for 2–3 weeks upon arrival using a foreign-linked Alipay or WeChat wallet. After that, it becomes financially ruinous due to 3% transaction fees on larger purchases and the inability to receive a local RMB salary or transfer rent to a landlord via bank transfer.

The most expat-friendly banks in 2026 are China Merchants Bank (CMB) and the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC), as larger branches frequently have English-speaking staff and their mobile apps better accommodate foreign passport formats. Opening an account requires: valid passport, registered local Chinese phone number, valid long-stay Residence Permit (tourist L visas and short-term M visas are universally rejected), stamped labor contract, and home country tax identification information. The entire process must be done in person, takes several hours, and involves significant physical paperwork.

Once your account is open, link it immediately to WeChat Pay and Alipay. These two apps are the primary payment infrastructure for virtually every daily transaction — from street food to utility bills to splitting restaurant tabs. Cash is becoming increasingly obsolete in major cities; some smaller vendors and markets no longer accept it at all.

No Residence Permit = no bank account
Banks universally reject tourist and business visa holders. You cannot open a bank account until your Residence Permit is issued, which typically takes 3–4 weeks after arrival. Plan your cash and foreign card liquidity accordingly for the first month — foreign cards work in ATMs at a 1.5–3% fee, and WeChat/Alipay with foreign cards bridge the gap for daily spending.
Best banks for expats
China Merchants Bank (CMB) and ICBC — English staff, foreigner-friendly apps
Documents required
Passport · Residence Permit (not tourist visa) · Local phone number · Employment contract · Home tax ID
Foreign card ATM fee
1.5–3% per withdrawal — viable short-term, ruinous long-term
When you can open an account
Only after Residence Permit issued — typically 3–4 weeks post-arrival
Health & wellbeing
Healthcare in China — public hospitals vs private clinics

The Chinese public hospital system is highly efficient and technologically advanced, but exceptionally crowded, lacks privacy, and operates almost entirely in rapid Mandarin. Many top-tier public hospitals feature “VIP Wards” (国际部) with shorter wait times and partial English support for a premium out-of-pocket fee.

Most expats with employer packages rely entirely on premium international private clinics: United Family Healthcare (operating in Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou) and Parkway Health. These facilities mirror Western clinical environments with English-speaking doctors and direct insurance billing. A standard GP consultation at a private clinic exceeds ¥1,200. If your employer does not provide premium international health coverage, self-purchasing a robust expat health plan costs ¥10,000–20,000 annually (~¥800–1,500/month).

Mental health is a critical, often ignored factor. The psychological strain of cultural isolation and 996 work culture is profound. Expatriate-focused mental health clinics like SIMHA and Mindfront cater specifically to foreign psychological needs, though these services are rarely covered by basic domestic insurance plans. If you are struggling with the adjustment, seeking professional support early is significantly more effective than waiting.

United Family Healthcare
Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou. English-speaking doctors, direct insurance billing, Western clinical standards. Most recommended for acute care.
Parkway Health
Strong presence in Shanghai. International standards, wide range of specialties, English-language diagnostic reports.
SIMHA / Mindfront
Expatriate-focused mental health clinics. English-language therapy and counselling. Not typically covered by basic domestic insurance.
Public hospitals (国际部 VIP ward)
Cheaper option with partial English support. Best for routine or non-urgent care with a bilingual colleague or friend to assist.
Private clinic GP consultation
Exceeds ¥1,200 without insurance
Self-paid health insurance
¥10,000–20,000/year (~¥800–1,500/month) for robust expat coverage
Arrival medical check (Z Visa)
Mandatory at designated government clinic within first week · ¥400–800 · Blood work, ECG, chest X-ray
Mental health support
SIMHA & Mindfront for expats · Rarely covered by basic domestic insurance
Arrival checklist
First 30 days — what to do and when

Within 24 hours of arrival: register at your local police station (派出所) with your passport, visa, and address. This is legally mandatory and failure causes Residence Permit complications. If staying in a hotel, the hotel handles this automatically.

Within the first week: complete your mandatory medical examination at the designated government health clinic (blood tests, ECG, chest X-ray — cost ¥400–800). Get a local SIM card if you didn’t at the airport. Begin the WeChat and Alipay setup if not already done.

Within 10 days of your employer completing the application: your Join in Card (the unified work authorization + social security credential, launched December 2024) will be issued. This replaces the previous Foreigner’s Work Permit and grants access to 264 public services.

Once Residence Permit is issued (3–4 weeks): open your Chinese bank account at CMB or ICBC. Link it to WeChat Pay and Alipay. Set up automatic salary deposit. The Exit-Entry Bureau will retain your passport for 1–2 weeks during processing — keep a color photocopy with you at all times during this period.

Passport retention: The Exit-Entry Bureau retains your passport for 1–2 weeks while processing your Residence Permit. Carry a certified color photocopy as ID during this period. This is normal procedure and should not cause alarm.
Day 1: police registration
Within 24 hours — mandatory, at local 派出所
Week 1: medical check
Government clinic · ¥400–800 · Blood, ECG, X-ray
Day 10: Join in Card
Issued 10 days after employer applies · Replaces FWP · 264 public services access
Week 3–4: Residence Permit
Bureau retains passport 1–2 weeks during processing — carry photocopy
After Residence Permit: bank account
CMB or ICBC · In person · 2–4 hours
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How do I set up WeChat as a foreigner in China?+
Setting up WeChat from scratch inside China in 2026 is difficult. New accounts require an existing Chinese WeChat user — with an account in good standing for over six months — to physically scan a QR code to authorize your new account. This verification step can take days to arrange if you don’t know anyone locally. The solution: create your WeChat account before your flight. Once in China with a local SIM card, bind your phone number to WeChat and set up WeChat Pay by linking a foreign credit card (Visa, Mastercard, Amex accepted). Transactions under ¥200 incur no fees; larger amounts attract a 3% charge.
Do I need a VPN in China and is it legal?+
You need a VPN to access Google, Gmail, Instagram, WhatsApp, YouTube, and most Western news sites — all blocked by the Great Firewall. The amended Cybersecurity Law (effective January 1, 2026) technically prohibits unauthorized VPN use, with individual fines up to ¥5,000. In practice, enforcement targets domestic citizens and commercial VPN resellers, not individual expats using VPNs for routine private use. The key rules: use an obfuscated protocol (standard OpenVPN is immediately fingerprinted and blocked); never post politically sensitive content; and — critically — download and install your VPN on all devices before boarding your flight, as all VPN provider websites are blocked inside China. Monthly cost: ¥150–400.
How do I open a bank account in China as a foreigner?+
You cannot open a bank account until your Residence Permit is issued (typically 3–4 weeks after arrival). Once you have it, visit a branch of China Merchants Bank (CMB) or ICBC in person with: passport, Residence Permit, local Chinese phone number, stamped employment contract, and home-country tax ID. The process takes 2–4 hours and involves significant physical paperwork. Tourist and business visa holders are universally rejected — do not attempt without a valid Residence Permit. Once your account is open, immediately link it to WeChat Pay and Alipay, which handle the vast majority of daily transactions.
What is the foreigner police registration requirement in China?+
All foreign nationals must register their residence at the local police station (派出所) within 24 hours of arriving at any permanent address (72 hours in rural areas). Failure to register results in administrative warnings, fines, and complications with Residence Permit processing. If you are staying in a hotel, the hotel handles registration automatically. When renting a private apartment, the landlord must accompany you to the police station — any landlord who refuses is illegally subletting and their property cannot serve as your registered address, which will invalidate your Residence Permit.
What apps do I need to live in China as a foreigner?+
The core apps for daily life in China: WeChat (messaging, payments, mini-programs — the OS of Chinese daily life), Alipay (payments, Taobao shopping, rail booking — English-language international version available), DiDi (ride-hailing, full English interface), Amap or Apple Maps (navigation — Google Maps is blocked and unreliable), and a VPN (for accessing all blocked Western services). Secondary essentials: Meituan or Ele.me for food delivery (Chinese interface only), JD.com or Taobao for shopping, and your bank’s app once your account is open. Install all Chinese apps before arrival as the App Store version you have access to depends on your account region.
How does healthcare work for foreigners in China?+
Most foreigners use international private clinics — primarily United Family Healthcare and Parkway Health — for English-language care at Western clinical standards. A GP consultation exceeds ¥1,200 without insurance. If your employer provides international health coverage, this is largely covered. Without employer coverage, self-purchasing a robust expat plan costs ¥10,000–20,000/year. Public hospitals are cheaper but operate in Mandarin and are extremely crowded — many large public hospitals have a “VIP International Ward” with partial English support and faster service for a premium fee. A mandatory medical check (blood work, ECG, chest X-ray) costing ¥400–800 is required at a government clinic within your first week of arrival.
What is Alipay and can foreigners use it in China?+
Alipay is one of China’s two dominant digital payment systems (alongside WeChat Pay). Foreigners can use it immediately upon arrival by downloading the international version of the app and linking a foreign Visa, Mastercard, or Amex card — no Chinese bank account required. The international Alipay app features an English-language interface and works at virtually every vendor, restaurant, and shop that accepts digital payment in China. It can also be used to book high-speed rail, order on Taobao, and pay utility bills. It is the most foreigner-accessible payment app in China and should be set up before or immediately upon arrival.
What is the Join in Card for foreigners in China?+
The Join in Card was launched by China’s Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security in December 2024. It replaces the previous Foreigner’s Work Permit (FWP) with a unified credential that merges work authorization and social security registration into a single card. It grants access to 264 public services including hospital registration, public transit, banking services, and government administration. Employers apply for it online on your behalf; both physical and digital versions are issued within 10 days. It is now the primary proof of legal work status for all foreign nationals in mainland China.
What is the Great Firewall and how does it affect daily life in China?+
The Great Firewall (GFW) is China’s internet censorship infrastructure that blocks or throttles access to the majority of Western digital services. In practical terms, this means: no Google (use Baidu), no YouTube (use Bilibili or iQiyi), no Instagram or Facebook (use WeChat Moments), no WhatsApp (use WeChat), no Gmail (use QQ Mail or Netease), no X/Twitter, and most Western news sites significantly throttled. This creates a hermetically separate digital life that requires active management and a reliable VPN. The adjustment is significant — most expats report the digital isolation as one of the most psychologically challenging aspects of living in China, particularly in the first 2–3 months before local app habits are fully established.
How do I find an apartment in China as a foreigner?+
The most foreigner-friendly route is Ziroom (自如) — a platform offering standardized furnished apartments with an English-language app, built-in cleaning services, and transparent pricing that eliminates direct landlord negotiation. For wider selection, use Lianjia or Anjuke (Chinese-language platforms; bring a bilingual friend or colleague). Key financial facts: leases require 3 months rent + 1 month deposit upfront (up to ¥35,000 in Shanghai), plus a non-refundable agent fee of 35–50% of one month’s rent. Always verify: the building ISP doesn’t block VPNs, the heating situation (critical in northern cities), and that the landlord will accompany you to the police station for mandatory foreigner registration within 24 hours of moving in.
How does mobile banking and online banking work in China for foreigners?+
Once you open a Chinese bank account, you get full access to mobile banking and online banking through your bank’s app. China Merchants Bank (CMB) has the most foreigner-friendly mobile app with partial English support, allowing you to check your account balance, view account information, make transfers, pay bills, and manage your savings account directly from your phone. To log in to your account online you will need your account number and registered Chinese phone number for OTP verification. Direct deposit of your monthly salary is set up with your employer once your account is open — provide your account number, bank name, and branch code. Transfer money to your landlord or other payees via bank transfer using their account number — most domestic transfers settle within the same business days. Withdrawals at ATMs work with your Chinese debit card nationwide; foreign cards also work at major bank ATMs for a 1.5–3% fee.
What type of bank account should I open in China — checking or savings?+
Chinese banks don’t use the US checking account / savings account distinction in the same way. The standard account opened for foreigners is a current account (活期存款) that functions as both — it accepts direct deposit of your salary, supports transfers, pays bills, and comes with a debit card (Union Pay) for ATM withdrawals and purchases. A separate time deposit account (定期存款) functions as a savings account with higher interest rates for fixed periods. Most foreigners only need the standard current account to start. There are no overdraft facilities on standard foreign accounts — you can only spend what you have. Some banks offer a Visa debit card instead of or alongside the Union Pay card, which is useful for international transactions and online purchases on non-Chinese platforms.
How do I transfer money out of China and manage international finances?+
Transferring funds out of China is subject to capital controls. Individual foreigners can remit up to USD 50,000 per year abroad without special approval — sufficient for most expats sending money home or managing home-country finances. International wire transfers from a Chinese bank account require your passport, proof of income source (payslip or employment contract), and are processed within 1–3 business days. For regular international transfers, services like Wise (TransferWise) are widely used by expats as a lower-cost alternative to bank wire fees. To pay bills abroad — including student loan repayments, credit card bills, or rent in your home country — set up automatic payments from your home-country bank account using savings kept there, rather than relying on repeated international transfers from your Chinese account. A common expat setup: Chinese bank account for local salary and spending, home-country account for international obligations and emergency fund.
Can I use my foreign debit card or credit card in China?+
Foreign Visa debit card, Mastercard, and Amex cards work at major bank ATMs for cash withdrawals (1.5–3% fee per transaction). However, card payments at most Chinese shops, restaurants, and markets are predominantly handled through WeChat Pay or Alipay QR code scanning — physical card terminals are rare in daily life. The practical solution: link your foreign debit card or credit card directly to WeChat Pay and Alipay. WeChat Pay accepts Visa, Mastercard, Amex, Discover, and JCB — transactions under ¥200 are fee-free; a 3% fee applies above that. Alipay similarly accepts major foreign cards through its international version. This setup means you can function in China’s cashless payment ecosystem without a local bank account for the first few weeks, though the transaction fees make it uneconomical long-term. Cash-back and rewards programmes from home-country credit cards generally still accrue on these foreign card transactions.
How do I pay bills and manage recurring payments in China?+
Almost all recurring bills in China are paid digitally. Utilities (electricity, water, gas) can be paid through WeChat Pay or Alipay mini-programs by scanning the bill QR code or entering your meter number — the apps send reminders when balances are low. Rent is typically paid via direct bank transfer to your landlord’s account — your Chinese bank’s mobile app handles this. Internet and phone bills are auto-deducted from your Alipay or WeChat wallet once set up. For enrolling in automatic payments, most services require a verified Alipay or WeChat Pay account linked to a Chinese bank account or foreign card. Pay bills for international services (streaming, software subscriptions) using a foreign card — many international services block Chinese IP addresses, requiring your VPN to be active when managing these account online. There is no equivalent of a Western financial institution “bill pay” service — each payment category has its own app or mini-program within WeChat.
Is China a cashless society and do I need cash?+
China is effectively cashless in all major cities. WeChat Pay and Alipay QR code scanning handle the vast majority of transactions — from street food vendors and wet markets to large retail stores. Many smaller vendors no longer accept cash at all. However, some situations still require it: taxis (older drivers occasionally), rural or traditional markets, small village businesses outside major cities, and some government offices. A practical approach: keep ¥200–500 in cash for emergencies, but rely entirely on WeChat Pay and Alipay for daily spending. Foreign visitors can also use the “Tourist Card” version of Alipay — a prepaid card-like function loaded with RMB from a foreign card — which works like a local wallet without requiring a Chinese bank account.