
China Money Guide 2026: Cash, Cards, and Payment Apps
I had a British couple show up in Beijing last year with nothing but a suitcase and a Revolut card. They assumed they could withdraw yuan from any ATM like they do in Europe. After the third failed ATM attempt, they messaged me: "What are we doing wrong?"
Nothing, actually — they just didn't know the quirks of Chinese banking. Once I showed them the right ATMs and got them on Alipay, they were fine for the rest of the trip. But that first day was stressful, and it didn't need to be.
Money in China works differently. The rules changed fast in the past 12 months. Here's what you actually need to know in 2026.
The Short Answer
Bring your phone with Alipay or WeChat Pay set up. Bring a Visa/Mastercard as backup. Bring ¥500–1000 in cash for emergencies. That's it. Three things, and you're covered.
Cash: Yes, Still Useful
China is famously cashless, but I tell every client to carry some cash. Here's why:
**Where to get cash:**
**ATM fees:** Most Chinese ATMs charge ¥12–30 per withdrawal on international cards. Your home bank may charge another fee. I usually tell clients to withdraw ¥2000–3000 at a time to minimise fees.
**Exchange desks:** Hotels exchange at poor rates. Banks are better but require your passport and can take 20 minutes. Honestly just use the ATM.
Cards: What Works
**Visa and Mastercard** work in most ATMs now. But in-store acceptance is still patchy. You can't swipe a Visa card at 70% of Chinese shops — they simply don't have the terminals. Your card is for ATMs and big international hotels, not for daily spending.
**UnionPay** is the local network and works everywhere. If your home bank issues UnionPay cards, bring that one.
**American Express** acceptance is growing but still limited to upscale hotels and tourist shops.
Digital Payments: Alipay and WeChat Pay
This is how China actually works. Street vendors, metro tickets, grocery stores, restaurant bills — everything is a QR code scan.
I won't repeat the full setup guide here (I wrote one [here](/blog/how-to-use-wechat-pay-alipay-foreigner)), but here's the 2026 update:
**New in 2026:** Alipay connected over 10 million inbound users last year through their foreign card binding system. It's smoother than ever. I helped a 68-year-old American retiree set it up in about 4 minutes last month.
Currency Exchange: The Smart Way
**Don't exchange at the airport.** The rates are 5–8% worse than market rate. Just withdraw from an ATM when you arrive.
**Best option:** Withdraw from a Bank of China ATM using your debit card. The rate is close to the market rate, plus your bank's forex fee (usually 1–3%).
**Second best:** Bring some USD or EUR cash and exchange at a Bank of China branch. You'll need your passport and the process takes 15–20 minutes.
**Avoid:** Airport exchange desks, hotel exchange, and those little shops near tourist spots that offer "good rates." They're all ripping you off.
Budget: What Things Actually Cost
I track what my clients spend. Here are real numbers from 2026:
| Item | Budget | Mid-range | Splurge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Street meal (noodles/dumplings) | ¥10-20 | — | — |
| Restaurant dinner (2 people) | — | ¥80-150 | ¥300-600 |
| Metro ride | ¥3-7 | — | — |
| Taxi (15 min city ride) | — | ¥20-40 | — |
| High-speed train (Beijing-Shanghai) | ¥550 (2nd class) | ¥930 (1st class) | ¥1,750 (business) |
| Budget hotel | — | ¥150-300 | — |
| 4-star hotel | — | — | ¥400-800 |
| Museum/temple entry | ¥20-60 | — | — |
| Great Wall tour (shared) | ¥200-350 | — | — |
A solo traveller can comfortably do China on **¥400-600/day** (all in: accommodation, food, transport, entry fees). A couple on mid-range is **¥800-1,200/day combined**.
Common Problems I Fix for Clients
**"My card got eaten by the ATM."**
This happens. Usually the machine just timed out. Go inside the bank during business hours with your passport and they'll retrieve it. Don't panic — I've never had a client lose a card permanently.
**"Alipay won't let me add my card."**
The name on the card must match your passport exactly. Middle names, hyphens, everything. I had a client stuck for a day because her passport had her full middle name but her card only had the initial.
**"The QR code at the shop isn't working."**
Some small shops use personal Alipay codes that don't accept international cards. Try WeChat Pay instead, or offer cash. If both fail, the shopkeeper usually helps you figure it out — Chinese people are incredibly helpful with payment issues.
**DiDi (China's Uber) keeps declining my card.**
Set up Alipay and link it to DiDi. DiDi accepts Alipay seamlessly. I use this combination every single day.
My Rule of Thumb
Set up Alipay with your international card before you leave. Withdraw ¥2000 from a Bank of China ATM when you arrive. Keep ¥500 in your pocket. You're now ready for anything China throws at you.
I've taken clients through 35 Chinese cities with this exact setup. It works every time.
**Have a specific money question about your trip?** [Message me](/contact). I deal with this daily and can give you a straight answer.
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