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Must-Have Apps for China Travel (2026): Your Digital Survival Kit
Tech & Tools

Must-Have Apps for China Travel (2026): Your Digital Survival Kit

May 30, 20268 min

Which apps you actually need in China, which ones to skip, and how to set everything up before you arrive. From a 15-year local.

Key Takeaways

  • These four cover 90% of what you'll need.
  • Even with a VPN, the data is outdated, many locations are wrong or missing entirely.
  • You probably know this, but it's worth repeating: China blocks Google, Gmail, WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, and most Western sites.
  • Once the essentials are set up: | App | What It Does | Why You Want It | |-----|-------------|-----------------| | Pleco | Chinese-English dictionary | Works offline.

An Australian family I worked with landed in Beijing last year, confident and prepared. The father had announced at the airport in Sydney: "I'll sort out the apps when I get there."

Three hours later, I got a WeChat message — the only thing he'd managed to set up before leaving. He was sitting in his hotel room, phone in hand, with zero apps and a slowly dawning panic. He couldn't pay for anything, couldn't call a car, couldn't even check a map. He'd discovered the hard way what I tell every single client:

China doesn't run on cash or cards. It runs on apps. Street vendors, subway gates, restaurant bills, temple donations, even the guy roasting chestnuts on the corner — everything goes through a QR code. Arrive without the right setup and you'll spend your first two days just trying to buy a bottle of water.

Here's the exact list I give to every traveller. Download these before you leave, or you'll be that family.

The Essential 4 (Everything Else Is Bonus)

These four cover 90% of what you'll need. Set them up before your plane lands.

1. Alipay — Your Wallet

Alipay is the single most important app you'll have in China. It's not just payments — it's ride-hailing, restaurant reviews, public transport, hotel bookings, and more, all inside one app.

Why Alipay before WeChat: Alipay's foreigner onboarding is smooth. Register with an international number, link your Visa or Mastercard, and you're paying in five minutes. WeChat's verification process can be hit or miss for non-Chinese users.

Setup (before you leave):

  • Download the app, register with email and passport
  • Link an international card in Me → Wallet
  • Done. Walk into any shop and scan the QR code.
  • 2026 updates: Seven international card networks supported. Transactions under ¥200 are fee-free. New users get 90 days waived fees up to ¥1,000/day.

    2. WeChat — More Than Just Messaging

    Everyone in China uses WeChat for everything — messaging, calling, paying, booking, reading news, ordering food. You can't avoid it.

    What you'll use it for:

  • Messaging — Staying in touch with hotels, guides, new friends
  • WeChat Pay — Link your international card or PayPal (yes, PayPal works now)
  • Mini Programs — In-app tools for DiDi, restaurant menus, train tickets
  • Real talk: Getting verified can be annoying. Ask a Chinese friend or your hotel to help. Once it's set up, it's the most versatile tool you'll carry.

    3. DiDi — Ride-Hailing

    China's Uber. Book a car, price is fixed before you ride, auto-translate with drivers. Full English interface, international cards accepted. I've used it at 5am for trains and at midnight after late-night hotpot. Never once had an issue. I have a full guide here, so I'll keep it short: download it, set it up, use it.

    4. Trip.com — The Booking Engine

    Formerly Ctrip. English-friendly platform for high-speed trains, flights, hotels, attraction tickets.

    Why you need it: China's domestic booking systems (12306 for trains, for example) are notoriously unfriendly to foreigners. Trip.com charges a small fee and saves you hours of frustration.

    The Navigation Problem

    Here's something most guides won't tell you: Google Maps barely works in China. Even with a VPN, the data is outdated, many locations are wrong or missing entirely.

    What actually works:

  • Amap (高德地图) — This is what locals use. Accurate subway routes, real-time traffic, walking directions, surprisingly good English support. I use it daily across cities all over China.
  • Apple Maps — Actually decent in China because it uses local map data. Good backup.
  • Baidu Maps — Very detailed but Chinese-only. Skip unless you read Chinese.
  • My setup: Amap for navigation. Apple Maps as backup. Don't bother with Google Maps here.

    The VPN Rule (Don't Skip This)

    You probably know this, but it's worth repeating: China blocks Google, Gmail, WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, and most Western sites.

    Critical rule: download, install, and test your VPN BEFORE you enter China. Once you're inside the firewall, VPN websites and app stores are blocked. You won't be able to download anything.

    VPNs that work as of 2026:

  • Astrill — most consistently reliable
  • ExpressVPN — widely recommended
  • NordVPN — good but test before you go
  • eSIM backup: Some travellers use a China-specific eSIM (Airalo, Nomad) that sidesteps the firewall for basic internet. Worth having as backup.

    The Australian family I mentioned? I sent them a working VPN config in five minutes over WeChat. The father messaged back: "I should have listened to you." Don't be that family.

    The "Nice to Have" Apps

    Once the essentials are set up:

    AppWhat It DoesWhy You Want It
    PlecoChinese-English dictionaryWorks offline. Point camera at a menu and it translates. Essential for food explorers.
    Google TranslateCamera/text translationDownload the Chinese language pack offline before you arrive.
    Dianping (大众点评)Restaurant discoveryThe Chinese Yelp. Find the best restaurants near you. Access through Alipay mini-programs.
    MeituanFood deliveryGreat for rainy hotel nights when you don't want to go out.

    My Download Checklist

    What I tell every traveller to do before the plane lands:

    ☐ Alipay — with international card linked ✓

    ☐ WeChat — account verified, payment set up ✓

    ☐ DiDi — registered and ready ✓

    ☐ Trip.com — for train and hotel bookings ✓

    ☐ Amap — for navigation ✓

    ☐ VPN — installed and tested ✓

    ☐ Pleco — offline dictionary downloaded ✓

    Takes 20 minutes. Saves you two days of frustration. Do it while you're packing.

    One more thing: When you arrive and the QR code at the street stall actually works on your first try — and it will, if you've set this up right — you'll feel like you've cracked a secret code. That's a good feeling. Enjoy it.

    Related: How to Use DiDi in China · How to Use WeChat Pay & Alipay · China SIM Card & eSIM Guide

    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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    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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