
How to Use DiDi in China: A Complete Guide for Foreigners (2026)
China's Uber — how to download, set up payment, book a ride, and communicate with your driver.
الوجبات الرئيسية
- ✦China's Uber, except bigger — DiDi is the largest ride-hailing platform in the world by rides per day.
- ✦Download the app before you arrive in China (app stores are slow behind the firewall).
- ✦This is where most people get stuck.
- ✦It shows your current location — drag the pin to adjust.
I remember when DiDi was called "嘀嘀打车" and you had to negotiate the fare with the driver in Chinese before getting in. No English interface, no international cards — just you, your broken Mandarin, and a driver who definitely knew you were a foreigner and priced accordingly.
Now? Full English app, international cards, fixed prices, auto-translate. Times have changed.
But here's the thing — I still see travellers wasting money on taxis or walking miles because they're intimidated by setting up DiDi. Don't be. Once it's on your phone, getting around China becomes almost boringly easy. I've used it at 5am to catch trains, at midnight after hotpot dinners, and every hour in between.
Here's everything you need to know.
What Is DiDi?
China's Uber, except bigger — DiDi is the largest ride-hailing platform in the world by rides per day. You book from your phone, the fare is fixed before you ride, payment is automatic.
Best part for travellers: full English interface, international phone numbers and credit cards work. It's never been easier.
Step 1: Download & Register
Download the app before you arrive in China (app stores are slow behind the firewall). Search for "DiDi: Ride Hailing in China" on App Store or Google Play.
Register with your international number. No Chinese SIM needed. Just make sure your home number has international roaming on so you can receive the SMS code.
Switch to English: Settings → Language → English. Done.
Step 2: Set Up Payment (The Tricky Part)
This is where most people get stuck. Let me save you the trouble.
Easiest method: Use the DiDi mini-program inside Alipay.
Standalone app method:
Go to Me → Wallet → Payment Methods → add your Visa/Mastercard/JCB/Diners Club. Toggle Auto-Deduct on. Hop out when the ride ends — payment is automatic.
My advice from years of doing this: Set up Alipay with your international card first, then use DiDi through Alipay. Every traveller who ignores this ends up messaging me at midnight because their card won't bind.
Step 3: Book Your First Ride
1. Open DiDi with GPS on. It shows your current location — drag the pin to adjust.
2. Enter your destination in English. Works for most landmarks and hotels.
3. Choose your ride type:
| Type | Price (20-min ride) | When |
|---|---|---|
| Express (快车) | ¥25–40 | Best value, everyday use |
| Premier (专车) | ¥50–80 | Nicer cars, free water |
| Luxe (豪华车) | ¥80–150 | Business meetings, special occasions |
| Express Pool (拼车) | ¥15–25 | Budget option, share the ride |
4. Tap "Confirm." A driver accepts within seconds.
5. Check the licence plate matches the app before getting in. Non-negotiable.
Step 4: Communicating with Your Driver
This is simpler than you think.
Licence plate check. Walk to the front of the car. Does the plate match the app? Good, get in. No? Don't.
Last four digits. When the driver arrives, they'll ask for the last four digits of your registered phone number. I type mine into my notes app beforehand so I'm not fumbling.
In-app translation. Chat with your driver — type in English, they see Chinese. You can also send a photo of your exact location if you're having trouble finding each other.
If the driver calls you. Don't panic. Say "Hello?" and they'll usually figure it out. If you're stuck, hand the phone to a hotel staff member or a passing local — they'll sort it in ten seconds.
What You'll Actually Pay
| Route | Distance | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Beijing Airport → City Centre | 30km | ¥70–100 |
| Shanghai Bund → Pudong Airport | 40km | ¥100–140 |
| Xi'an City Wall → Terracotta Warriors | 35km | ¥60–90 |
| Short trip within city | 5km | ¥15–25 |
Express is 30–50% cheaper than a regular taxi. Premier is comparable to Uber Black.
Common Problems (And How to Fix Them)
"I can't receive the SMS code"
Enable international roaming before you leave. Or use Alipay's built-in DiDi, which doesn't need SMS verification.
"My card was declined"
Your bank flagged it as fraud. Call them before your trip and tell them you'll be making payments in China. Or use the Alipay workaround.
"The driver can't find me"
Use the "Send Photo" feature in chat. I once spent 15 minutes trying to meet a driver in Chongqing Jiangbei Airport's parking garage — level B2 and B3 connect in ways that make no sense to anyone who hasn't lived here for years. Now I always choose "Departures" as my pickup point at airports. Less crowded, drivers can pull over, haven't missed a ride since.
"Surge pricing"
Avoid 7–9am and 5–7pm in big cities. Or try Premier — sometimes it's cheaper than Express during surge due to different pricing algorithms.
When NOT to Use DiDi
The Chongqing Special
If you're visiting Chongqing, this deserves its own note. This city is built on mountains — steep inclines, hairpin turns, bridges stacked on bridges, and a tunnel that goes right through a skyscraper.
The local taxis — bright yellow cars you'll see everywhere — have a nickname: "重庆法拉利" (Chongqing Ferrari).
Why? Because Chongqing taxi drivers navigate this chaos with a speed that has to be experienced. Forty-five-degree slopes in traffic? Standard. A turn that makes your stomach drop? Tuesday morning.
If you're brave, flag down a yellow taxi for a short ride instead of using DiDi. Don't look at the speedometer. Every local will grin when you say "重庆法拉利."
Fair warning: If you get motion sickness, stick with DiDi Premier. The drivers are calmer. Your stomach will thank me.
Bottom Line
DiDi has eliminated every transport anxiety I used to have about travelling in China — no more flagging down taxis, no more being overcharged, no more failing to explain where I'm going. Every traveller I've set up with it says the same thing: "Why didn't I do this sooner?"
Set it up before you arrive. Link it through Alipay. Done.
Related: Must-Have Apps for China Travel · How to Use WeChat Pay & Alipay
Hi, I'm Peng — Your China Travel Insider
I've been helping travelers explore China for 15 years. Every inquiry I receive gets a personal reply from me — no chatbots, no automated responses.
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