
China Travel Cost 2026: Complete Budget Breakdown with Real Prices
The question I get more than any other: "How much does a China trip actually cost?"
I worked with a couple from Melbourne last year. They wanted 12 days: Beijing, Xi'an, and my hometown Chongqing (I convinced them to add it). Their budget was "as cheap as possible without staying in dorms." I planned the whole thing for ¥18,000 for two people — that's about A$3,700 for everything including internal trains, 3-star hotels, key attractions, and food. They spent the most they'd ever spent on a single meal at a hotpot place in Chongqing: ¥280 for two people. They told me it was the best meal of their lives and asked if they could tip the chef. I told them China doesn't do tipping — they'd already paid the right price.
This guide answers that question with real numbers from trips I've planned recently. No fluff, no generic estimates — these are actual prices my clients paid.
The Big Picture: What You'll Spend Per Day
Here are the real per-person daily costs from trips I've planned in the past 12 months:
| Tier | Daily Budget (per person) | Who It's For |
|---|---|---|
| **Budget** | ¥600–1,000 ($85–140) | Backpackers, students, solo travelers |
| **Mid-Range** | ¥1,200–2,000 ($170–285) | Couples, most travelers |
| **Comfortable** | ¥2,200–3,500 ($315–500) | Families, 40+ hotels, private guides |
| **Luxury** | ¥4,000+ ($570+) | 5-star, private everything |
What Each Tier Gets You
**Budget (¥600–1,000/day)**
**Mid-Range (¥1,200–2,000/day)**
**Comfortable (¥2,200–3,500/day)**
**Luxury (¥4,000+/day)**
Real Cost Breakdown by Category
Accommodation
| Type | Budget | Mid-Range | Comfortable | Luxury |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beijing | ¥100–200 | ¥350–600 | ¥600–1,200 | ¥1,200–2,500 |
| Shanghai | ¥100–200 | ¥350–600 | ¥600–1,200 | ¥1,200–2,500 |
| Xi'an | ¥80–150 | ¥250–450 | ¥450–800 | ¥800–1,500 |
| Chengdu | ¥80–150 | ¥250–450 | ¥450–800 | ¥800–1,500 |
| Chongqing | ¥70–120 | ¥200–400 | ¥400–700 | ¥700–1,200 |
| Guilin/Yangshuo | ¥70–120 | ¥200–400 | ¥400–700 | ¥700–1,200 |
| Smaller cities | ¥50–100 | ¥150–300 | ¥300–600 | ¥600–1,000 |
**Pro tip:** International hotel chains (Hilton, Marriott, Hyatt) are consistently excellent in China and often 40–60% cheaper than their Western equivalents. A JW Marriott in Beijing costs about ¥900–1,200/night — half of what you'd pay in London or New York.
Food
| Meal | Street Food | Local Restaurant | Nice Restaurant | Fine Dining |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breakfast | ¥5–15 (baozi, jianbing) | ¥15–30 (noodle shop) | ¥30–50 (hotel buffet) | ¥80–150 |
| Lunch | ¥10–20 (skewers, xiaochi) | ¥20–50 (set meal) | ¥50–100 (sit-down) | ¥100–200 |
| Dinner | ¥15–30 (street market) | ¥30–80 (3 dishes) | ¥80–200 (full meal) | ¥200–500+ |
| **Daily total** | **¥30–65** | **¥65–160** | **¥160–350** | **¥380–850+** |
**Real examples from my clients:**
Transport
**High-speed trains (second class):**
| Route | Time | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Beijing → Shanghai | 4.5h | ¥626 |
| Beijing → Xi'an | 3.5h | ¥540 |
| Xi'an → Chengdu | 3.5h | ¥263 |
| Chengdu → Chongqing | 1.5h | ¥154 |
| Shanghai → Hangzhou | 45min | ¥73 |
| Guangzhou → Shenzhen | 29min | ¥75 |
**DiDi (ride-hailing):**
**Metro:**
Attractions
| Attraction | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Forbidden City | ¥60 | Book in advance |
| Great Wall (Mutianyu) | ¥45 + ¥100 cable car | +¥100 for toboggan down |
| Terracotta Warriors | ¥120 | 2–3 hours needed |
| Temple of Heaven | ¥15 | Beautiful park grounds |
| Li River cruise (Guilin) | ¥320–450 | 4–5 hours |
| Panda Base (Chengdu) | ¥55 | Go at 7:30am opening |
| Yangtze cable car (Chongqing) | ¥20 | 4-minute ride |
| Most museums | Free–¥50 | Many free with passport |
| Most temples | ¥10–40 | Cash sometimes needed |
**Heads-up:** Some famous attractions now have tiered pricing — ¥60 in low season, ¥80 in high season. Always check the official website or your hotel concierge. And keep your passport on you — many ticketing systems require it for foreigner pricing.
Sample Trip Budgets
10-Day Budget Trip: ¥12,000 (per person)
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Hostels/budget hotels (9 nights × ¥100) | ¥900 |
| Food (10 days × ¥80) | ¥800 |
| Metro/DiDi (10 days × ¥30) | ¥300 |
| Attractions (5 × ¥60 average) | ¥300 |
| Intercity trains (3 routes × ¥300) | ¥900 |
| Subtotal: ¥3,200 | |
| Flights + visa: ~¥8,000–10,000 (varies hugely) |
12-Day Mid-Range Trip: ¥20,000 (per person)
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| 3-star hotels (11 nights × ¥400) | ¥4,400 |
| Food (12 days × ¥180) | ¥2,160 |
| Metro/DiDi (12 days × ¥60) | ¥720 |
| Attractions (8 × ¥80) | ¥640 |
| Intercity transport (4 routes × ¥400) | ¥1,600 |
| Private guide (2 days × ¥1,000) | ¥2,000 |
| Subtotal: ¥11,520 | |
| Flights: ~¥8,000–12,000 |
10-Day Comfort Trip: ¥35,000 (per person)
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| 4-star hotels (9 nights × ¥700) | ¥6,300 |
| Food (10 days × ¥350) | ¥3,500 |
| DiDi Premier/private driver (10 days × ¥200) | ¥2,000 |
| Attractions + experiences (10 × ¥150) | ¥1,500 |
| First-class trains (3 routes × ¥600) | ¥1,800 |
| Private guide (4 days × ¥1,200) | ¥4,800 |
| Subtotal: ¥19,900 + flights | ¥19,900 |
14-Day Luxury Trip: ¥80,000 (per person)
Private driver every day. 5-star hotels in every city. Business class on all trains. Private guides for every major attraction. Fine dining every evening. This is where you stop looking at the price and just enjoy China at its best.
Hidden Costs Most Travelers Don't Expect
I've been doing this for 15 years, and I still see the same surprises:
**Visa fees** — ¥800–1,200 if your country isn't visa-free. Factor this in.
**VPN subscription** — ¥50–100/month. Not expensive but easy to forget.
**Tips for guides/drivers** — Not mandatory, but if your guide goes above and beyond, ¥100–200 for a full day is appreciated.
**Temple entrance fees** — They add up. ¥20–100 each. If you're visiting 5 temples, that's ¥500.
**Internal flights during peak season** — Can be 3× normal price. Chinese New Year and Golden Week are brutal.
**Shopping** — This is the biggest hidden cost. China has incredible shopping. Silk, tea, ceramics, jade, electronics, traditional medicine. Budget extra because you will buy things you didn't plan to. I always tell my clients to add 20% to their estimated budget for shopping and unexpected expenses.
**Luggage fees on internal flights** — If you fly domestically, budget airlines (Spring Airlines, Lucky Air) charge for checked luggage. On trains there's no weight limit.
How to Save Money Without Sacrificing Experience
**1. Travel in shoulder season.** April–May and September–October are perfect weather, lower prices, fewer crowds. Actually I'll be honest: October 1-7 is Golden Week and you should avoid it like the plague — prices triple and everything is packed. But the two weeks after Golden Week? Beautiful.
**2. Use high-speed trains instead of flying for routes under 1,000km.** You save on airport transfers and baggage fees. The train station is usually in the city centre.
**3. Eat where locals eat.** A bowl of noodles at a street shop costs ¥15. The same noodles in a tourist-oriented restaurant cost ¥50. Look for places with plastic stools and a queue of locals.
**4. Book attractions in advance.** Some attractions (Great Wall, Forbidden City) offer discounts for online booking. And you skip the ticket line.
**5. Use DiDi Premier for airport transfers.** It's ¥70–100 from most city centres. A taxi might be similar. But booking through DiDi means no haggling and no overcharging.
**6. Choose cities wisely.** Beijing and Shanghai are the most expensive. Chengdu, Chongqing, Xi'an, and Guilin are significantly cheaper — and in my opinion, just as rewarding.
My Honest Take
China is not an expensive destination. For the quality of infrastructure, food, and experiences you get, it's arguably the best value in global travel right now.
A mid-range trip to China costs about the same as a budget trip to Japan or Europe. A luxury trip to China costs less than a mid-range trip to the US or UK.
But the real value isn't in the price comparison. It's that every single day in China gives you something you can't get anywhere else — a 2,000-year-old temple in the morning, a futuristic skyline in the afternoon, and a meal that costs ¥50 and tastes like it should cost ¥500.
**Want a personalised budget estimate for your dream China trip?** [Tell me what you're looking for](/plan-your-trip) and I'll plan something that fits your budget — from shoestring to luxury.
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