— An Honest Travel Guide by IntoTravelChina
The best time to visit China depends on where you want to go. I have been sending travelers across this country since 2015, and I have learned that there is no single perfect month. China is too large and too diverse for that. What works for Beijing in spring will not work for Guilin in summer. Here is what I tell my guests based on real experience across dozens of trips each year.
Spring and Autumn Are the Sweet Spots
If I had to recommend one window for first-time visitors, it would be late April to mid-May or September to just before National Day. In these months, Beijing and Xi'an sit at a comfortable 15 to 25 degrees Celsius. Shanghai is pleasant and not yet trapped in its humid summer. Guilin's karst mountains are either misty in spring or brilliantly clear in autumn. I took a group through Beijing, Xi'an, and Guilin in mid-September last year. The Great Wall was visible from kilometers away — no haze, no crowds on the weekday sections we visited.
Autumn has a slight edge over spring in my opinion. The skies are crisper, the humidity is gone, and the fall colors on the Great Wall and in Jiuzhaigou are unforgettable. But spring has its own magic — cherry blossoms in Wuhan and Hangzhou, peonies in Luoyang, and the lush green rice terraces in Guangxi. You cannot go wrong with either.

Summer: Hot Cities, Cool Highlands
Summer in China's eastern cities is tough. Beijing hits 35 degrees. Shanghai and Chongqing are hotter and oppressively humid. June brings the plum rain season to Shanghai and the east coast, with weeks of drizzly grey skies. I once spent a July afternoon walking a guest through the Forbidden City. We drank three bottles of water each and still felt dehydrated.
But summer is the best time for China's highlands. Tibet, Yunnan, Qinghai, western Sichuan, and Inner Mongolia are at their finest from June through August. The grasslands are green, the skies are wide, and the temperature sits at a perfect 18 to 25 degrees. I sent a family to the grasslands of Hulunbuir last July. They spent four days horseback riding and staying in Mongolian yurts. They came back saying it was the highlight of their entire China trip.
Winter: Fewer Crowds, Better Value
Winter is an underrated season for budget-conscious travelers. From November through January, flights and hotels drop significantly in price. Major attractions are empty. I took my own family to Beijing in early January. We had sections of the Great Wall nearly to ourselves. The air was cold but dry and clear. The Forbidden City had none of the shoulder-to-shoulder crowds you see in October.
The exception is Chinese New Year. In 2026, Chinese New Year falls on February 17, with a nine-day public holiday from February 15 to 23. This is the world's largest annual migration. Trains sell out weeks in advance. Hotels near popular destinations triple their rates. If you want to experience the festival atmosphere, it is extraordinary. But if you value quiet sightseeing, pick another time.

The Three Golden Weeks You Should Know
China has three major holiday periods that affect travel nationwide. The first is Chinese New Year in February. The second is Labor Day Golden Week from May 1 to 5. The third is National Day Golden Week from October 1 to 7. During these weeks, domestic tourism explodes. Attractions are packed, trains are full, and prices are high. If your schedule is flexible, avoid these periods entirely.

The Bottom Line for 2026 Travelers
To summarize: the best time to visit China is April to May or September to October for most travelers. Choose June through August if you plan to explore the western highlands. Pick November through January for budget travel and empty sights. And avoid Chinese New Year, Labor Day week, and National Day week unless you thrive in crowds. China is a year-round destination — your best season depends entirely on where you want to go and what you want to experience.

Plan Your Trip with Confidence
At IntoTravelChina, I have been helping travelers choose the perfect season for their China trip since 2015. Every tour we build is private, flexible, and designed around your interests. We take the season, the weather, and the crowds into account so you never end up in the wrong place at the wrong time. No shopping stops. No shortcuts. Just the right trip at the right time.
IntoTravelChina — Founded 2015. Custom private tours across China. No shopping stops. No shortcuts. Just authentic experiences.