
How to Book Hotels in China 2026: A Complete Guide for Foreigners
A client from London messaged me in January: "I booked a hotel in Beijing on my favorite booking site. It looked great — good reviews, nice photos, reasonable price. But when I arrived, the front desk said they couldn't check me in. They said they don't have a license for foreign guests. I had to find a new hotel at 10 PM in -5°C weather."
I have heard this story at least a dozen times over the years. It happens because booking a hotel in China has rules that most international travelers don't know about.
I book hotels for clients every single week. Sometimes five in a single day for a multi-city itinerary. I know which platforms work, which hotels accept foreigners, and how to avoid the 10 PM scramble. Here is everything I have learned.
First: The Most Important Rule
Not all hotels in China can host foreign guests. To accept international travelers, a hotel needs a special license from the public security bureau. Budget hotels, hostels, and some smaller guesthouses might not have this license.
This is not discrimination — it is a legal requirement. Hotels without this license can face heavy fines for checking in foreign guests.
**How to check before you book:** On Trip.com (which I recommend below), look for hotels that say "Accepts foreign guests" or similar. On local platforms like Meituan or Ctrip, filter by "涉外" (foreign-related). When in doubt, message the hotel before booking and ask: "Do you accept foreign guests with passports?"
I have learned this the hard way. A few years ago I booked a lovely boutique hotel in a Chengdu alley for a client. The photos were perfect. The reviews were great. When my client arrived, the hotel politely explained they only served Chinese nationals. I spent the next hour on my phone finding backup accommodation while my client waited in the lobby.
Which Booking Platforms Work in China?
Here is the truth about each platform:
**Trip.com — The Best for International Travelers**
Trip.com (formerly Ctrip's international site) is my go-to recommendation for every client. It works in English, accepts international credit cards, and clearly labels which hotels accept foreign guests. The customer service is responsive and they handle cancellations well.
Prices on Trip.com are about 10-15% higher than local platforms. That premium is peace of mind — you know the hotel accepts foreigners, you can pay with your card, and if something goes wrong they have English support.
**Booking.com / Agoda — Works But Limited**
These work in China but the inventory is smaller. Many Chinese hotels don't list on these platforms. If you find a hotel here, cross-check on Trip.com to see if the price is better or if there are more options.
**Hotels.com / Expedia — Hit or Miss**
These have limited coverage in China. I don't recommend them as your primary tool.
**Meituan / Ctrip (Chinese) — Best Prices But Requires Chinese**
These are what locals use. The prices are lower — sometimes 20-30% cheaper than Trip.com — but the interface is in Chinese and international cards often don't work. If you have a Chinese friend or a local contact (hi, that is where I come in), they can book for you at local prices.
**Short-Term Rentals (途家 / Tujia) — Alternative to Hotels**
If you want an apartment-style stay (more space, kitchen, laundry), Airbnb is no longer an option in China — it exited the domestic market in 2022. The local alternative is Tujia (途家), which works like Airbnb but in Chinese. The selection is good, prices are competitive, and many listings are managed by professional hosts.
The catch: the app is in Chinese and most hosts don't speak English. If you go this route, have your hotel booking info in Chinese ready, and confirm with the host that they accept foreign guests before paying.
For most travelers, I recommend sticking with hotels. The price difference is small and the convenience is much higher — English-speaking front desk, breakfast included, no need to coordinate key pickup.
Hotel Types in China: What Meaning of Each
**Star-rated hotels (三星级以上)** — These are the safest bet for international travelers. Four and five-star hotels in major cities universally accept foreign guests. Three-star hotels are usually fine but it is worth checking.
**International chains (Hilton, Marriott, IHG, etc.)** — Zero issues. These are designed for business travelers and always accept foreigners. They are also usually in good locations near metro stations.
**Boutique hotels (精品酒店)** — Hit or miss. Some are excellent and cater to international travelers. Others only serve domestic guests. Always check before booking.
**Local guesthouses and hostels (客栈/青年旅舍)** — Most backpacker hostels in major cities accept foreigners and are used to dealing with passports. Smaller guesthouses in rural areas may not — call ahead.
**A quick tip:** When a client asks me for budget accommodation, I usually point them to the Chinese chains like Hanting (汉庭), Home Inn (如家), or Jinjiang Inn (锦江之星). These are clean, reliable, and most branches accept foreign guests. A private room costs around 150-300 yuan per night — about the same as a hostel bed in London.
How to Book: Step by Step
Here is the exact process I use for my clients:
1. Open Trip.com (app or website)
2. Enter your dates and city
3. Filter by "Accepts foreign guests" and your budget
4. Sort by "Guest rating" (not price — I have learned this matters more)
5. Look at the location on a map — check metro station proximity
6. Read the 3-star and below reviews. If the complaints are about cleanliness or noise, skip it. If they are about slow WiFi, it is probably fine.
7. Book with free cancellation when possible
8. Email the hotel after booking to confirm they have your reservation and passport details
Step 8 is optional but I do it for all my VIP clients. 95% of the time it is unnecessary. That 5% where there is a mistake? It saves hours of stress.
How Much Should You Pay?
Here are realistic price ranges for a decent hotel room in major Chinese cities in 2026:
**Budget (150-300 yuan / $20-40):** Clean private room at a chain hotel or guesthouse. Basic amenities, no frills, but perfectly comfortable. Good enough for travelers who just need a bed and a shower.
**Mid-range (300-800 yuan / $40-110):** Three or four-star hotel with good location, breakfast included, English-speaking staff at reception. This is what most of my clients choose and where the best value is.
**Luxury (800-2,000+ yuan / $110-280+):** Five-star international chain. Full amenities, excellent service, great locations. Worth it for special occasions or if you want guaranteed comfort.
**A real example:** Last month I booked a four-star hotel near the East Nanjing Road shopping area in Shanghai — 2-minute walk to the metro, breakfast included, great reviews, 480 yuan per night on Trip.com. My client loved it and extended their stay.
Location Tips by City
**Beijing:** Stay near a subway line 2 or line 10 station. The area around Dongzhimen or Gulou is central and convenient. Avoid places too far from the subway — Beijing traffic is brutal.
**Shanghai:** The area around People's Square or East Nanjing Road puts you in the middle of everything. Alternatively, the Jing'an area is quieter but still central.
**Chengdu:** Stay within the Second Ring Road. The area near Chunxi Road or Taikoo Li is perfect for food and sightseeing.
**Xi'an:** The area around the South Gate of the City Wall gives you walking access to the Muslim Quarter and Bell Tower.
**Chongqing:** Stay near Jiefangbei or Guanyinqiao, both connected to metro lines. And please — I beg you — check that your hotel has an elevator. Chongqing is built on mountains and some "ground floor" rooms are actually on the 8th floor of a building.
Things I Have Learned From Booking Hundreds of Hotel Rooms
The Bottom Line
Booking a hotel in China is not hard once you know the rules. Use Trip.com. Check "Accepts foreign guests." Book with free cancellation. Confirm after booking for peace of mind.
I have booked hundreds of rooms across dozens of Chinese cities. The process is smooth 95% of the time if you follow these steps. The 5% where something goes wrong, it is usually because of the foreign guest license issue — which is entirely avoidable if you check beforehand.
If you are planning a multi-city China trip and do not want to deal with the hotel booking hassle, [message me](/contact). I can book the whole itinerary on the local platforms at local prices, and you will not have to worry about the foreign guest license issue at all.
**Related:** [China Travel Checklist 2026](/blog/china-travel-checklist) · [China Travel Cost Budget Breakdown](/blog/china-travel-cost-budget-breakdown) · [Best Time to Visit China](/blog/best-time-visit-china-month-guide)
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