Why You Shouldn't Try to See 5 Cities in 10 Days
Key Takeaways
- ✦I once had a family from South Africa who insisted on doing Shanghai → Beijing → Xi'an → Guilin in 9 days..
- ✦I know why you want to see 5 cities..
Let me show you a message I received last Tuesday:
"Hi Peng! We have 10 days in China. We want to do Beijing, Xi'an, Chengdu, Guilin, and Shanghai. Is that doable?"
I get some version of this message every single day. Sometimes it's 6 cities. Sometimes 7. One time someone asked me if they could do Beijing, Tibet, Zhangjiajie, Hong Kong, and Shanghai in 8 days. (I said no.)
Here's the honest answer: you CAN visit 5 cities in 10 days. The trains and flights exist. You can book them. You will physically move from place to place. You will "see" all five cities.
You just won't experience any of them.
The Math Doesn't Work
Let's do the math on a "Beijing → Xi'an → Chengdu → Guilin → Shanghai" itinerary:
| Day | Activity | Time Spent |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Arrive Beijing, check in | Half day lost |
| 2 | Great Wall (half day trip) | Full day |
| 3 | Forbidden City AM, train to Xi'an PM | 5 hrs sightseeing + 4 hrs train |
| 4 | Terracotta Warriors AM, fly to Chengdu PM | 3 hrs sightseeing + 3 hrs airport |
| 5 | Pandas AM, fly to Guilin PM | 3 hrs sightseeing + 3 hrs airport |
| 6 | Li River cruise, sleep Guilin | Full day |
| 7 | Train to Shanghai (10 hrs!) | Wasted day |
| 8 | The Bund + old town | Full day |
| 9 | Shanghai museums | Full day |
| 10 | Fly home | Gone |
**10 days. 5 cities. Realistically: 3-4 half-days of actual sightseeing.**
The rest is check-in/check-out, train stations, airport security, luggage, and "where are we again?" Every city change costs you half a day minimum — packing up, traveling, checking into the next hotel, orienting yourself.
What Actually Happens
I once had a family from South Africa who insisted on doing Shanghai → Beijing → Xi'an → Guilin in 9 days. I warned them. They went anyway. The mother sent me a message on Day 5: "We're exhausted. We've seen train stations and airports more than we've seen China."
The dad fell asleep during the Terracotta Warriors. Fell asleep. You know you've overplanned when someone sleeps through 2,000-year-old clay soldiers.
Another client — a couple from Germany — did Beijing + Xi'an in 8 days. Just two cities. They spent three full days in Beijing: Great Wall, Forbidden City, and a day just wandering hutongs and eating. Then they took the train to Xi'an, spent two days on the Terracotta Warriors and the Muslim Quarter, and had a day to just sit in a tea house and process everything.
Their message to me: "This was the best trip we've ever taken. We feel like we actually saw China."
Same trip length. Different philosophy. One family saw train stations. One couple saw China.
The Real Cost of Moving Fast
It's not just time. Moving between cities in China has hidden costs:
**Physical exhaustion.** China is intense. The noise, the crowds, the language barrier, the food — everything requires more energy than a trip to Europe. By Day 4 of a 5-city trip, you're running on fumes.
**Cognitive load.** Every new city means learning a new metro system, new layout, new rhythm. Your brain never settles into "I know where I am" mode. You're perpetually disoriented.
**Missed serendipity.** The best travel moments in China are unplanned: a random conversation in a tea house, a street food discovery, a local festival you stumble into. If your schedule is packed, there's no room for magic.
**The packing tax.** I know it sounds trivial, but unpacking and repacking every 2 days is miserable. You forget things in hotel rooms. You wear the same three outfits because everything else is buried in your suitcase.
What I Recommend Instead
**10 days → 2 cities max.** Pick two of these combinations:
**14 days → 3 cities.** Add a third stop, but build in travel days with nothing scheduled. A "free day" isn't wasted — it's where the best memories happen.
**21+ days → 4-5 cities.** Now you have time. You can do Beijing → Xi'an → Chengdu → Guilin → Shanghai with actual breathing room. Add a few days in Yangshuo. Take the slow train through the countryside. Sit in a park and watch locals play mahjong.
The Honest Trade-Off
I know why you want to see 5 cities. FOMO is real. China is far from home and you might not come back. I understand that.
But here's the trade-off:
| Approach | Cities | Memories | Photos | Stories | Exhaustion |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 cities in 10 days | 5 | Blurry | 500 | "We saw everything" | Extreme |
| 2 cities in 10 days | 2 | Vivid | 200 | "We really got to know..." | Moderate |
| 1 city in 10 days | 1 | Deep | 100 | "I felt like I lived there" | Minimal |
The photos you'll show your friends from a 2-city trip will be better. The stories will be richer. The exhaustion will be less. And you'll actually want to come back — not because you missed things, but because you fell in love with the things you saw.
**Planning your China trip?** I'll help you pick the right number of cities for your timeline. No pressure to see everything — I'll design a route that leaves room for the moments you can't plan. [Tell me how long you have](/plan-your-trip) and I'll build a realistic, memorable itinerary.
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.
Ready to plan your China trip?
Every trip is different. Tell me what you're looking for and I'll build a custom itinerary that fits your style, budget, and schedule.
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