How to Use Alipay and WeChat Pay in China: A 2026 Traveler’s Guide

A Practical Guide to Mobile Payments in China — by IntoTravelChina

China runs on mobile payments. For international visitors, learning how to use Alipay or WeChat Pay is the single most practical skill you can develop before your trip. I have watched travelers struggle with paper tickets, cash shortages, and payment confusion simply because they did not set up these apps in advance. The good news is that both Alipay and WeChat Pay now accept international credit cards, making them fully accessible to foreign travelers in 2026. This guide explains exactly how to set them up and use them.

Alipay vs. WeChat Pay: Which One Should You Use?

Both apps work for the vast majority of daily transactions, but they have different strengths. Alipay is simpler to set up for international travelers. It offers a dedicated “Tour Pass” feature that allows you to preload funds using a foreign credit card, and its interface has a built-in English option. WeChat Pay is integrated into WeChat, China’s primary messaging app, which means you will likely use it anyway for communication. WeChat Pay’s international card support is newer but now equally reliable.

My honest recommendation: install both. Alipay is more forgiving for first-time users, while WeChat Pay gives you the convenience of paying directly through the messaging app you already use to chat with your hotel or guide. Between the two, you will cover over 95 percent of payment situations in any Chinese city.

How to Set Up Alipay as a Foreigner

Download Alipay from your app store before you leave. Open the app and select “Register” using your foreign phone number. You will receive an SMS verification code — this is the step that fails most often, because some carriers block international SMS. If your number cannot receive codes, you can register using your email instead. Once registered, link your international Visa, Mastercard, or Amex by going to “Cards” in the profile menu. The entire setup takes about fifteen minutes.

Enable the “Tour Pass” feature if you prefer to preload a fixed amount rather than have each transaction charged to your card. Tour Pass allows you to deposit between $50 and $2,000 and use it like a local prepaid card. Unused funds are refunded when you leave. I recommend setting this up at home — I once had a guest from Texas who waited until he landed in Beijing, and the SMS verification failed on a Chinese network. He spent his first afternoon at the hotel instead of exploring the Forbidden City.

How to Set Up WeChat Pay

WeChat Pay is built into the WeChat app. Download WeChat and register with your phone number. After registration, go to “Me” > “Services” > “WeChat Pay” and select “Add a Card.” Enter your international card details. WeChat will verify the card with a small temporary charge (usually $1 to $2), which is refunded automatically. The verification takes one to two minutes.

One detail many travelers miss: WeChat Pay relies on Chinese servers for card verification. If your card issuer blocks international transactions, the verification will fail. I always tell guests to notify their bank before traveling. A quick phone call to your bank’s fraud department takes five minutes and saves hours of frustration.

Where Mobile Payments Work and Where They Don’t

Alipay and WeChat Pay are accepted at supermarkets, restaurants, hotels, convenience stores, taxis (via Didi and other apps), street food stalls, museums, and even some rural farmers’ markets. QR codes are everywhere — the merchant displays a code, you scan it, enter the amount, and confirm. In most mid-range and high-end establishments, the merchant will scan your QR code instead, which is even faster.

The exceptions are worth knowing. Some small vendors in remote villages, a few taxi drivers who do not use digital payments, and certain street hawkers still prefer cash. I recommend carrying $50 to $100 worth of Chinese yuan in small bills as backup. I have also seen occasional technical glitches where a merchant’s QR code is not working — usually due to a poor network connection. In those rare moments, cash saves the day. Between your two payment apps and a modest amount of cash, you will never be stuck.

Plan Your China Trip with Confidence

At IntoTravelChina, I help every guest set up their mobile payments before departure. I send step-by-step guides specific to your home country and phone carrier, and I am available to troubleshoot if something goes wrong. I want you to arrive in China with one less thing to worry about — because paying for your meal should be the easiest part of your day, not the most stressful.

IntoTravelChina — Founded 2015. Custom private tours across China. No shopping stops. No shortcuts. Just authentic experiences.

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Shopping on Nanjing Road in Shanghai was just amazing! It's truly the "First Commercial Street of China", where tradition and modernity blend perfectly. You can find awesome souvenirs and experience the trendy vibes in cool stores. The neon lights at night are just spectacular, shining bright like Times Square in New York. The food here is incredible too. I had a feast for my taste buds. Shanghai, I'll definitely be back!
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Our 2-day Zhangjiajie tour was beyond spectacular! As someone who’s visited Beijing and Shanghai for work, this trip revealed China’s wild, magical heart. Day 1 in Zhangjiajie National Forest Park felt like stepping onto Pandora—I’m a huge Avatar fan, and Yuanjiajie’s floating peaks left me breathless. The misty pillars and lush valleys like pure movie magic! Then came Fenghuang Ancient Town, we eat dinner beside the thundering waterfall. It seems Unreal! The night views of stilt houses glowing over the river were straight from a fairy tale. For fellow Avatar lovers and adventure seekers: Don’t miss this bucket-list experience! 10/10 would return. A Well-Traveled Film Buff, May 2025
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