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China SIM Card & eSIM Guide 2026: How to Stay Connected as a Traveler
Tech & Tools

China SIM Card & eSIM Guide 2026: How to Stay Connected as a Traveler

June 26, 20268 min

China Mobile, China Unicom, or eSIM? Where to buy, what to pay, and how to set up your phone before you land. A complete guide to staying online in China.

ประเด็นสำคัญ

  • | Travel Type | Best Option | Cost | |-------------|------------|------| | Short trip (1–7 days) | eSIM (Airalo, Holafly) | ¥30–100 | | Medium trip (1–3 weeks) | China Unicom tourist SIM | ¥50–150 | | Long trip (1+ months) | China Mobile prepaid S...
  • Buy online, scan a QR code, connected before your plane lands.
  • Every major airport in China has carrier kiosks in the arrival hall.
  • If you miss the airport kiosk (it happens — jetlag is real), carrier stores in the city sell the same plans, often slightly cheaper.

"Can I just use my regular SIM card in China?"

This is the second most common question I get, right after the VPN question. The short answer: probably not, unless you enjoy $20/MB roaming charges.

A client from Texas once told me he'd "deal with it when he landed." His first phone bill after two weeks in China was $340. He didn't even use that much data — just maps and WhatsApp messages. That's what standard roaming looks like here.

The good news: getting online in China in 2026 is cheaper and easier than ever. Multiple options, no hidden fees, setup in minutes.

Let me walk you through every option.

Quick Answer: What Should You Do?

Travel TypeBest OptionCost
Short trip (1–7 days)eSIM (Airalo, Holafly)¥30–100
Medium trip (1–3 weeks)China Unicom tourist SIM¥50–150
Long trip (1+ months)China Mobile prepaid SIM¥30–100/month
Group/family tripPocket WiFi rental¥15–30/day
Business travellerInternational roaming add-onVaries

My recommendation for most travellers: Get an eSIM before you arrive for instant connectivity, then buy a physical SIM at the airport if you need a Chinese phone number (for DiDi, Meituan, food delivery, etc.).

Option 1: eSIM — Best for Short Trips

eSIM is the easiest option. Buy online, scan a QR code, connected before your plane lands. No store visit, no passport photocopy, no queuing.

Best providers:

ProviderDataPriceNotes
Airalo1GB–20GB¥20–150Most reliable, easy app
Holafly"Unlimited"¥100–200Unlimited but capped speed
Nomad1GB–10GB¥30–120Good for light users
Maya Mobile3GB–20GB¥60–180Premium support

Important catch: Most eSIMs are data only — no Chinese phone number. You can use maps, translate, WeChat, and browsing, but you CANNOT:

  • Register for DiDi (needs SMS verification)
  • Order food delivery on Meituan
  • Book museum tickets that require WeChat mini-programs
  • Make regular phone calls
  • Setup: Download the app, buy the plan, scan the QR code in your phone settings. Do this before you leave — you need internet to activate.

    Option 2: Physical SIM at the Airport — The Safe Bet

    Every major airport in China has carrier kiosks in the arrival hall. Bring your passport (mandatory for all SIM cards in China — real-name registration is law), an unlocked phone, and some cash or a card.

    The three carriers:

    CarrierBest ForTourist SIMNotes
    China MobileBest rural coverage¥100–200/15 daysLargest network
    China UnicomBest for foreign websites¥50–150/15 daysLess firewall restriction
    China TelecomBest in cities¥80–180/15 daysGood urban coverage

    My pick: China Unicom. Less restrictive on certain blocked sites, cheapest tourist SIMs, most foreigner-friendly airport kiosks. I've sent dozens of clients to their counters and never heard a complaint.

    Option 3: City Store SIM

    If you miss the airport kiosk (it happens — jetlag is real), carrier stores in the city sell the same plans, often slightly cheaper. Same process, passport required.

    Useful phrases:

    — 我想办一张旅行SIM卡 (I want a travel SIM)

    — 我要30天的套餐 (I want the 30-day plan)

    — 这是我的护照 (Here's my passport)

    Option 4: Pocket WiFi

    Good for groups or if you want to keep your home SIM active. Rent on Klook or Trip.com, pick up at the airport. Connects 5–10 devices, battery lasts 6–8 hours. ¥15–30/day.

    Option 5: International Roaming

    Google Fi works in China (¥50–80/GB). T-Mobile has free 2G (basically unusable — don't rely on it). Vodafone has China passes. Check with your provider and read the fine print — "unlimited" roaming plans often throttle to 256kbps, which is too slow for maps.

    The VPN Piece

    If you use a Chinese SIM or pocket WiFi, the Great Firewall applies. You'll need a VPN for Google, Instagram, WhatsApp, etc. See my VPN guide for what works in 2026.

    Some eSIM data-only plans route through Hong Kong (China) and bypass the firewall — this is unreliable and can change without notice. Don't count on it.

    My Recommended Setup

    1. Before you leave: Install Airalo eSIM with 5GB (¥70) — instant connectivity on arrival

    2. At the airport: Buy China Unicom tourist SIM (¥100) — gives you a Chinese phone number

    3. Daily use: Unicom for data, eSIM as backup

    Total: about ¥170 for two weeks of solid connectivity. Cheaper than the roaming bill that Texan client got, and you won't have any awkward messages asking for favours.

    Related: Must-Have Apps for China Travel · How to Use WeChat Pay & Alipay

    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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