China Requires More Pre-Arrival Prep Than Any Other Country
China is the only major digital nomad destination where your entire digital life changes on landing. Google, WhatsApp, Slack, Instagram — all blocked. Your payment apps don't work until you set them up. Even Maps needs a different app. The key to a smooth China arrival is doing 80% of the setup before you board the plane.
This checklist is built specifically for that reality.
2–3 Months Before
- [ ] Visa research: China has NO digital nomad visa. Most nomads use M (Business) visa for short stays, or Z (Work) visa if employed. Tourist (L) visa allows 30–60 days. Research your specific situation
- [ ] Apply for visa: Chinese visa applications require an invitation letter (business) or itinerary (tourist). Processing: 1–2 weeks via Chinese embassy/consulate
- [ ] Arrange health insurance: International coverage that includes China. No public healthcare access for short-term visitors — private insurance is essential
- [ ] Book flights: Best times to arrive: March–May or September–October. Avoid Chinese New Year (late Jan/Feb), Golden Week (Oct 1–7), and summer heat (July–Aug)
- [ ] Book first accommodation: 1–2 weeks via Booking.com, Agoda, or Trip.com. Hotels are easiest for foreigners initially (they handle police registration)
1 Month Before
- [ ] Install 2 VPN providers: This is non-negotiable. Download and configure on ALL devices before arriving. You cannot download VPNs inside China. See Great Firewall & VPN Guide for which providers work and setup steps.
- [ ] Test both VPNs extensively: Connect, browse, video call. Confirm they work. Keep login credentials written down as backup
- [ ] Download and verify WeChat + Alipay: Register both with your international phone number, complete identity verification, and link Visa/Mastercard. See Alipay & WeChat Pay Setup for Foreigners for detailed instructions.
- [ ] Join online communities: WeChat groups for expats in your target city, Reddit r/chinalife, Facebook groups (won't be accessible in China without VPN)
2 Weeks Before
- [ ] Activate international eSIM: Jetpac, SimOptions, or Holafly. International eSIM routes through non-Chinese networks, bypassing the firewall — meaning Google, Gmail, and WhatsApp work without VPN on eSIM data
- [ ] Buy backup local SIM plan: Plan to buy a China Mobile or China Unicom SIM at the airport. You need a local number for WeChat Pay, Alipay, and many Chinese apps
- [ ] Download offline Google Maps: Save maps for your target city. Google Maps won't update live without VPN, but offline maps work for basic reference
- [ ] Download Amap (高德地图): This is your real navigation app in China. Install it now so you're familiar with the interface
- [ ] Prepare cash: Plan to withdraw RMB on arrival (ATMs at airports accept international cards). ¥2,000–3,000 ($280–415) for first few days as backup
- [ ] VPN backup plan: Write down VPN credentials on paper. If the app crashes, you need manual connection instructions. Some VPN providers offer manual setup guides for Shadowsocks/V2Ray
1 Week Before
- [ ] Pack work essentials: Laptop, chargers, power bank, universal adapter (China uses Type A/C/I — bring universal adapter)
- [ ] Final VPN test: Connect via VPN, access Google, Gmail, Slack, and your work tools. Confirm everything works
- [ ] Download essential apps: DiDi (rides), Meituan (food delivery), Dianping (reviews), 12306 or Trip.com (trains)
- [ ] Save offline content: Download work documents, entertainment, and reference material locally. Streaming services (Netflix, YouTube, Spotify) are all blocked
- [ ] Prepare document folder: Passport, visa, insurance, accommodation confirmation, invitation letter (if business visa), 2 passport photos
Day of Travel
- [ ] Passport + visa: Double-check visa validity and entry dates
- [ ] Insurance proof: Digital and printed copies
- [ ] Activate eSIM: Turn on international eSIM before boarding. Test internet access during layover if possible
- [ ] Accommodation address in Chinese: Written in Chinese characters for taxi driver. Hotels usually provide this; for Airbnb, get it from your host
- [ ] VPN connected: Connect VPN on your phone before landing so it's ready when you need it
- [ ] Cash: ¥1,000–2,000 for immediate expenses (taxi, food, SIM card)
Day 1: At the Airport
- [ ] Immigration: Have passport, visa, accommodation address, and return/onward ticket information ready
- [ ] Buy local SIM card: China Mobile or China Unicom counter in arrivals (100–200 RMB for a basic plan with data). You need this for Chinese app verification
- [ ] Test eSIM + local SIM dual setup: eSIM for international access (Google, WhatsApp), local SIM for Chinese apps and payments
- [ ] Withdraw cash: Airport ATM (ICBC or Bank of China ATMs are most reliable for international cards). ¥2,000–3,000
- [ ] Get to your accommodation: DiDi (if app is working) or airport taxi (use official taxi queue, not touts). Metro available at most major airports
First Week: The Critical Setup
Day 1–2: Digital Foundation
- [ ] Confirm both VPNs work from your accommodation WiFi
- [ ] Test WeChat Pay at a convenience store (scan QR, pay small amount)
- [ ] Test Alipay at a different store
- [ ] Set up Amap with your home address and favorite locations
- [ ] Order food delivery via Meituan Mini-Program in WeChat — test the full workflow
📱 Deep dive: WeChat Ecosystem Guide — Your Everything-App in China →
Day 2–3: Practical Setup
- [ ] Register with local police if not staying at a hotel (bring passport + lease/booking confirmation)
- [ ] Find your nearest supermarket, pharmacy, and convenience store
- [ ] Test DiDi for a short ride — confirm your international card works
- [ ] Locate nearest coworking space or test cafe WiFi speeds
Day 3–5: Work Setup
- [ ] Test all work tools via VPN (Slack, Notion, Google Workspace, Zoom)
- [ ] Identify VPN peak-slow times (evening hours often slower)
- [ ] Set up your coworking routine — WeWork, People Squared, XNode, or Luckin Coffee as backup
- [ ] Test video call quality at your workspace during your team's meeting hours
Day 5–7: Local Integration
- [ ] Get a Dianping account — start finding restaurants with English menus and good ratings
- [ ] Explore your neighborhood on foot — learn the block, find your regular food spots
- [ ] Join a local expat WeChat group (ask at coworking space or your accommodation)
- [ ] Open a Chinese bank account if staying 3+ months (Bank of China or ICBC; bring passport + residence registration receipt)
This guide is informational only. China's visa regulations, digital policies, and app ecosystems change frequently. Verify current requirements with the Chinese embassy/consulate in your country before applying. VPN usage by foreigners is tolerated for personal use but exists in a legal gray area. Not legal, immigration, or financial advice.
Back to the full guide: China: The Ultimate Digital Nomad Guide (2026) →