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HomeBlogAustralia to China: The Ultimate 3-Week Custom Tour Guide (2026)
Australia to China: The Ultimate 3-Week Custom Tour Guide (2026)
Itineraries

Australia to China: The Ultimate 3-Week Custom Tour Guide (2026)

June 16, 202614 min

A family from Melbourne called me last year. They'd never been to Asia. Their kids were 10 and 13 — old enough to remember the trip, young enough to still think their parents were cool. The mother said: "We're doing one big trip before the teenagers stop talking to us." I loved her instantly.

They flew into Beijing, spent five days, then took the train to Xi'an, then Chengdu, then my hometown Chongqing, then Shanghai. Three weeks, five cities. The father sent me a voice message on day 17: "I thought the kids would be over it by now. This morning my daughter asked if we can move here."

That's the thing about Australian travellers in China. You've already made the long-haul journey — 10 hours from Sydney, 13 from Melbourne or Brisbane. You're not popping over for a weekend. You're committing. And if you're going to commit to the 10-hour flight, you might as well make it worth it.

This guide is for Australians planning their first (or second) China trip. I'll use AUD because that's what you think in. And I'll be honest about what's worth your time and what's not — because you didn't fly 8,000km to waste a single day.

Why China Works for Australian Travellers

**The time zone is workable.** China is on Beijing time (CST, UTC+8). Sydney/Melbourne is UTC+11 in summer, so you're only 3 hours ahead. No jet lag nightmare. You'll feel it for a day, max. Compare that to flying to London (11 hours time difference) and you'll realise China is actually closer than Europe in every practical sense.

**The value is unmatched.** A mid-range custom tour in China costs about A$160–320 per person per day — private guide, driver, 4-star hotels, all activities. That's cheaper than staying at a Rydges in Sydney.

**The food will ruin you for everything else.** I've had Australian clients tell me they couldn't eat Thai food for three months after getting back from Chengdu. Sorry about that. Not really sorry.

3-Week Custom Tour Itinerary: The Ultimate Route

This is the route I recommend for Australian first-timers who want the full experience without feeling rushed.

Week 1: Beijing (5 nights)

Fly into Beijing Capital Airport. Direct flights from Sydney (Qantas, Air China) and Melbourne (China Southern via Guangzhou, or direct with Beijing Air).

**Day 1:** Arrive, check in, walk around your neighbourhood. Don't nap. Stay awake until 9pm. You'll thank me tomorrow.

**Day 2:** Forbidden City in the morning (book ahead — I use the official WeChat mini-program), Jingshan Park for the rooftop view at sunset.

**Day 3:** Great Wall at Mutianyu. Leave by 7am. Cable car up, toboggan down. Lunch at a farmhouse restaurant run by a family whose grandfather helped build the wall's tourist facilities in the 80s.

**Day 4:** Temple of Heaven in the morning — go at 7am to see the tai chi masters and the old men writing calligraphy on the ground with water brushes. Hutong walk in the afternoon.

**Day 5:** Summer Palace or the National Museum. Peking duck dinner (I book Siji Minfu — a whole duck is about A$45 and feeds three people easily).

Week 2: Xi'an (3 nights) + Chengdu (3 nights)

High-speed train from Beijing to Xi'an: 3.5 hours, A$85 second class.

**Xi'an Days (3 nights):**

  • Terracotta Warriors (go at 3pm to avoid crowds)
  • City Wall bike ride at sunset (14km loop, A$7 for a bike)
  • Muslim Quarter food crawl (yangrou paomo, biang biang noodles, persimmon cakes — about A$15 for a feast)
  • Train Xi'an to Chengdu: 3.5 hours, A$42.

    **Chengdu Days (3 nights):**

  • Panda Base at 7:30am opening
  • Hotpot dinner (I take clients to a place outside the tourist zone where a meal for two costs about A$25)
  • People's Park for afternoon tea
  • A Queensland couple I guided spent their last Chengdu evening at a tea house in People's Park. The husband said: "Back home, we'd be at a pub. This is better." I didn't say I told you so. But I was thinking it.

    Week 3: Chongqing (2 nights) + Shanghai (4 nights)

    Train Chengdu to Chongqing: 1.5 hours, A$25. My hometown.

    **Chongqing (2 nights):**

  • Hongyadong at night (free, mind-blowing)
  • Yangtze River cable car (A$3)
  • Hotpot. Not the chain kind. The kind where the owner remembers your face after one visit.
  • Train Chongqing to Shanghai: 6.5 hours by high-speed, A$92. Or 2.5 hours by flight (about A$120).

    **Shanghai (4 nights):**

  • The Bund at sunset
  • Wukang Road area walking tour
  • Yu Garden (weekday only)
  • Huangpu River night cruise
  • One day trip to Suzhou or Hangzhou by train (30–45 minutes)
  • This family from Melbourne I mentioned earlier? Their total for three weeks: about A$12,000 for a family of four — including private guides, 4-star hotels, internal trains, attraction tickets, and most meals. They told me their last family trip to the Gold Coast cost more.

    Flight and Visa Info for Australians

    **Flights:**

  • Sydney → Beijing: 10.5 hours direct (Air China, Qantas)
  • Melbourne → Beijing: 11 hours direct (Air China) or via Guangzhou (China Southern)
  • Brisbane → Beijing: 11.5 hours via Shanghai or Guangzhou
  • Return from Shanghai: 11 hours to Sydney, 12 to Melbourne
  • Typical price: A$600–1,200 round trip if you book 2–3 months ahead. I've seen deals as low as A$450.

    **Visa: Australia is on China's visa-free list as of 2025.** You can enter without a visa for up to 30 days. No application needed. Just show up with your passport. This changed everything for Australian travellers.

    Before 2025, the visa process took weeks and cost A$150–200. Now you literally just get on the plane. I've had clients book flights on a Tuesday and land in Beijing on Thursday. It's that simple now.

    What Things Cost (in AUD)

    Based on what my Australian clients actually spent in 2026:

    ItemBudgetMid-RangeComfortable
    Daily custom tour (guide + driver + activities)A$110–160A$160–300A$300–500
    Hotel per nightA$30–60A$60–140A$140–300
    Meal per personA$3–8A$10–25A$25–70
    High-speed train (Beijing-Shanghai)A$85A$140 (first class)A$270 (business)
    Metro rideA$0.50–1.50——
    DiDi (15 min ride)A$3–6——

    **Typical total for a 3-week custom tour:** A$4,000–8,000 per person including everything except international flights.

    What Australian Travellers Love (and Struggle With)

    **Love:**

  • The food — especially Sichuan and Chongqing hotpot. Australians have a high spice tolerance and the flavours hit differently
  • The scale — everything is bigger, older, more intense
  • The safety — I've had solo female Australian travellers walk around Beijing at midnight without a second thought
  • The value — A$50 goes a long, long way
  • **Struggle with:**

  • The language barrier. Less English signage than you'd expect compared to Thailand or Japan. This is where a custom tour guide transforms your experience.
  • The heat. Summer in Beijing and Chongqing is brutal. Australians handle heat well, but Chongqing humidity is a different beast. Pack for it.
  • Internet restrictions. Your WhatsApp won't work. Your Instagram won't work. Your Facebook won't work. Set up a VPN before you leave. I recommend Astrill or Mullvad — about A$15/month. Test it on the ground before you need it.
  • Why a Custom Tour Makes Sense for Australians

    You've already spent A$800–1,200 on the flight. You're committing 3 weeks of your annual leave. The marginal cost of a custom tour — A$160–300/day — is small compared to the investment you've already made.

    And what you get is someone who:

  • Books everything so you don't waste holiday time on logistics
  • Takes you to places you'd never find on your own
  • Handles problems (sold-out trains, wrong hotel bookings, lost luggage)
  • Gives you cultural context that turns "looking at old buildings" into understanding a civilization
  • An Adelaide couple told me after their trip: "We've done self-guided trips in Europe, Southeast Asia, Japan. This was the first time we felt like we actually understood where we were."

    That's what you're paying for.

    **Ready to plan your Australia-to-China trip?** [Tell me your dates and interests](/plan-your-trip). I've planned this route for dozens of Australian families — I know what works and what doesn't at your pace.

    **Related:** [China Custom Tour Cost Comparison: 35 Cities](/blog/china-custom-tour-cost-comparison-35-cities) · [China 3-Week Itinerary: The Ultimate Route](/blog/china-3-week-itinerary-ultimate-route) · [China Visa Guide 2026](/blog/china-visa-guide-2026)

    #itinerary#australia#custom-tour#planning#long-haul
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