
China Tax Refund 2026 — Complete Guide for International Travelers
China's departure tax refund just got a major upgrade in 2026: lower minimum spend, instant refund at the store, paperless processing, and expanded coverage. Here's everything you need to know to claim up to 11% back on your purchases.
Key Takeaways
- ✦If you've shopped in China before 2025, you probably remember the hassle: minimum ¥500 per store, paper forms, long queues at the customs counter, and a refund that took weeks to arrive.
- ✦The standard refund rate is 11% of the purchase price for most goods (based on China's 13% VAT rate).
- ✦- Foreign passport holders (any nationality) - Residents of Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan who stay in mainland China for no more than 183 consecutive days - You must be departing from mainland China to a destination outside the mainland (including...
- ✦| Change | Old Rule | New Rule | |--------|----------|----------| | Minimum spend per store | ¥500 | ¥200 | | Customs inspection | Full inspection of all goods | Random spot checks for claims under ¥10,000 | | Paperwork | Paper forms required | Fu...
The Biggest Change to China Tax Refund in Years
If you've shopped in China before 2025, you probably remember the hassle: minimum ¥500 per store, paper forms, long queues at the customs counter, and a refund that took weeks to arrive.
All of that changed.
In April 2025, China launched "Refund Upon Purchase" (即買即退) — allowing tourists to get their tax refund immediately at the checkout counter. In July 2026, the system upgraded again: paperless processing, a lower minimum spend of ¥200 (down from ¥500), and random spot checks instead of full inspections for smaller claims.
The result: China's departure tax refund system is now one of the most traveler-friendly in the world. And in 2025, the number of people processing refunds tripled to 27,000, with total refunded amounts up 97.4% year-on-year.
Here's everything you need to know.
How Much Can You Get Back?
The standard refund rate is 11% of the purchase price for most goods (based on China's 13% VAT rate). A lower rate of 8% applies to goods with a 9% VAT rate (certain food items and books).
There's a 2% service fee deducted by the refund agency. So your actual refund is:
Example: You buy ¥2,000 worth of silk. The refund calculation is ¥2,000 × 11% = ¥220, minus ¥40 service fee = ¥180 net refund.
Who Is Eligible?
The refund is for you — not for goods you bought on behalf of someone else. Customs may ask to verify this.
The New Rules (2026 "2.0" Upgrade, Effective July 1, 2026)
| Change | Old Rule | New Rule |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum spend per store | ¥500 | ¥200 |
| Customs inspection | Full inspection of all goods | Random spot checks for claims under ¥10,000 |
| Paperwork | Paper forms required | Fully paperless |
| Refund Upon Purchase | Limited to a few cities | Expanded nationwide, cross-region mutual recognition |
| Departure window for instant refunds | Varied by city | Unified 28 days |
| Cash refund cap | ¥10,000 | ¥20,000 |
Two Ways to Get Your Refund
Option 1: Refund Upon Purchase (即買即退) — Recommended
This is the easiest option. At participating stores:
1. Shop at a store displaying the "Tax Free" logo
2. Spend at least ¥200 at that store on the same day
3. At checkout, tell the cashier you want "Refund Upon Purchase" (即買即退)
4. Show your passport. The store processes the refund immediately — in cash (up to ¥20,000) or directly to Alipay/WeChat
5. Sign a consent form and provide a credit card pre-authorization as a guarantee
6. Keep the goods and the refund form. When you leave China, take them to Customs for verification. The pre-authorization is released after Customs confirms
If you don't present the goods to Customs before departure, the store charges your credit card for the refund amount plus a penalty.
Option 2: Traditional Refund Upon Departure
1. Shop at a Tax Free store, spend ¥200+, and request the Tax Refund Application Form + official invoice (fapiao) at checkout
2. Keep goods unused in original packaging
3. Before check-in at the airport, go to the Customs counter with your passport, goods, forms, and invoices
4. Customs inspects (random spot check for claims under ¥10,000) and stamps your form
5. After security, take the stamped form to the refund agency counter in the departure lounge
6. Choose your refund method: cash (up to ¥20,000, available at most major airports), Alipay/WeChat (instant at some counters, 10–15 days otherwise), or bank transfer (7–21 working days)
Where to Find Tax Free Stores
Look for the "Tax Free" logo in store windows or at the checkout counter. Over 12,930 stores across China are registered, including:
In major cities:
What CAN You Get a Refund On?
What CAN'T You Get a Refund On?
Airport-by-Airport Guide
| Airport | Customs Counter Location | Refund Counter Location | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beijing Capital (PEK) | T3 departure hall, before security | After security, T3 departure lounge | T3 handles most international flights. Daxing Airport also has counters. |
| Beijing Daxing (PKX) | Departure hall, after check-in | Departure lounge, after security | Newer facility, faster processing |
| Shanghai Pudong (PVG) | T1 and T2 departure halls, before check-in | T1 and T2 departure lounges | Most international flights. Can be busy — budget 30 min extra. |
| Shanghai Hongqiao (SHA) | International departure hall | Departure lounge | Fewer international flights, faster processing |
| Guangzhou Baiyun (CAN) | T1 and T2 departure halls | T1 and T2 departure lounges | Busy for SE Asian routes |
| Chengdu Tianfu (TFU) | Departure hall | Departure lounge | New airport, excellent facilities |
| Chongqing Jiangbei (CKG) | T3 departure hall | T3 departure lounge | Most flights from T3 |
| Xi'an Xianyang (XIY) | T2 and T3 departure halls | T2 and T3 departure lounges | Smaller counters, less crowded |
| Kunming Changshui (KMG) | Departure hall | Departure lounge | Busy for SE Asian routes |
| Shenzhen Bao'an (SZX) | Departure hall | Departure lounge | Popular for Hong Kong connecting travelers |
Step-by-Step: At the Airport
1. Don't check in your luggage yet. If your refund goods are in checked luggage, you need to show them to Customs first.
2. Go to the Customs counter in the departure hall (before security). Bring:
- Your passport
- The goods (unused, in original packaging)
- Tax Refund Application Form and invoices (fapiao)
3. Customs inspects (random spot check for claims under ¥10,000) and stamps your form. For claims under ¥10,000, they may wave you through without inspection.
4. Check in your luggage normally.
5. Go through security and immigration as usual.
6. Find the refund agency counter in the departure lounge. Present the stamped form and your passport.
7. Choose your refund method:
- Cash: Get RMB on the spot. Cap: ¥20,000. Available at most major airport counters.
- Alipay: Transferred to your Alipay account. Some counters offer instant transfer; otherwise 10–15 working days.
- WeChat Pay: Same as Alipay.
- Bank transfer: 7–21 working days. You'll need your bank details (IBAN/SWIFT for international transfers).
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Mistake #1: Checking in before Customs. If your refund items are in your checked luggage, you can't show them to Customs. Always go to Customs before check-in.
Mistake #2: Throwing away the packaging. Goods must be unused and in original packaging. If you've opened the box or removed tags, Customs may deny the refund.
Mistake #3: Using the goods before departure. A silk scarf wrapped around your neck at the airport is technically "used." Customs can refuse the refund.
Mistake #4: Losing the forms. The Tax Refund Application Form and invoice are required. Keep them in your passport case.
Mistake #5: Arriving too late. Budget 1 hour for the refund process at busy airports (Pudong, Capital). Customs counters can have queues.
Mistake #6: Not combining chain store receipts. Same-chain purchases (e.g., two different Uniqlo branches) can be combined. Ask the store to issue a single consolidated invoice.
Mistake #7: Not using Refund Upon Purchase. This is the simplest option — instant money, no airport queue. If the store supports it, use it.
Recent Statistics
| Metric | 2025 Data | Change |
|---|---|---|
| Inbound foreign tourists | 35.17 million | +30.5% YoY |
| Inbound tourist consumption | $94.2 billion | +77.8% YoY |
| Tax refund applicants | 27,000 people | 3× increase from 2024 |
| Total refunded amount | — | +97.4% YoY (first 9 months) |
| Beijing airport Q1 refunds | 4,801 applications | +122% YoY |
| Beijing airport Q1 refund amount | ¥240 million | +82% YoY |
| Tax refund stores nationwide | 12,930+ | Growing with 2026 upgrades |
The Bottom Line
China's 2026 tax refund upgrade is a genuine improvement. The minimum spend drop from ¥500 to ¥200 means almost any purchase qualifies. The paperless system means no more lost forms. And the Refund Upon Purchase option — getting money back at the register — is as simple as it gets.
If you're visiting China under the 240-hour visa-free transit, use this to your advantage. Buy silk in Suzhou, tea in Hangzhou, panda-themed souvenirs in Chengdu, and claim your ~9% back before you fly home.
Explore our city-specific tax refund guides:
Related: 240 Hours in China — Complete Column · Chongqing 10-Day Guide
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