Should I Tip in China? The 2026 Reality for Travelers

Should I Tip in China? The 2026 Reality for Travelers

— An Honest Guide by IntoTravelChina

Should I tip in China? That depends. The short answer is: mostly no, with one clear exception. I have been guiding international travelers through China since 2015, and this question comes up on every single trip. The confusion is understandable. In many Western countries, tipping is a social obligation. In China, it works differently. Here is what I tell my guests, based on years of real experience on the ground.

China Is Not a Tipping Culture — Here Is What That Means

Mainland China has no tipping tradition. In local restaurants, taxis, hotels, cafés, and barbershops, nobody expects a tip. In fact, if you leave cash on the table at a restaurant, the staff may chase you down thinking you forgot your money. I have seen this happen to guests more than once. Chinese service workers earn a stable wage, and good service is considered a professional standard, not something that requires a bonus.

This is one of the things I personally love about traveling in China. What you see on the menu or the meter is what you pay. There is no awkward mental math at the end of a meal, no guilt about whether 15 percent or 18 percent is appropriate. For the vast majority of your trip, you can simply enjoy the service and say "xiè xiè" — which means thank you — without reaching for your wallet.

expert avatar
Yanna

No Tip Does Not Mean No Appreciation

I often tell my guests that in China, good service is the baseline, not a bonus. If you leave cash on a restaurant table, the staff may chase you down. A warm smile and a sincere 'xiè xiè' — that is how locals show appreciation, and it is always well received.

The One Exception: Your Tour Guide and Driver

Here is where the answer changes. If you are on a private or small-group tour in China, tipping your guide and driver is standard practice. This is the single most common tipping scenario for foreign travelers, and it is the one area where a gratuity is genuinely expected. I have worked with dozens of guides across Beijing, Xi'an, Chengdu, Guilin, and Shanghai. They do an extraordinary job — navigating language barriers, managing logistics, and sharing deep local knowledge — and a tip at the end of the tour is a meaningful way to acknowledge that effort.

How much? For a private tour, I recommend 100 to 200 RMB per day for your guide and 50 to 100 RMB per day for your driver. These amounts are per group, not per person. Hand the tip directly to your guide and driver in cash at the end of the tour, ideally in a red envelope, which is a traditional Chinese gesture of respect. I remember one guest from Sydney who handed his guide a small tip in a red envelope with a handwritten thank-you note. The guide later told me that note meant more to him than the money.

 

Should I Tip in China

 

Restaurants, Hotels, and Taxis — Just Say No

Let me be direct: you do not need to tip at restaurants in China. Not at local noodle shops, not at mid-range hotpot places, and not even at most high-end establishments. Some upscale restaurants in Beijing and Shanghai add a 10 to 15 percent service charge to the bill. Check before you pay. If that charge is already there, your work is done. If it is not, you are still under no obligation to add anything.

For hotels, the same rule applies. In standard and mid-range hotels, tipping is not expected. In five-star international hotels, a 10 to 20 RMB tip for a bellhop who carries your bags is a kind gesture but never required. For taxis and ride-hailing services like DiDi, just pay the fare shown on the meter or the app. Rounding up to the nearest yuan is fine but entirely optional.

 

Should I Tip in China

 

If You Do Tip, Do It the Right Way

If you decide to tip your guide or driver, a few small courtesies go a long way. Always use cash — preferably 10, 20, or 50 RMB notes. Hand the envelope with both hands as a sign of respect. Tip at the very end of your tour, not during. And if someone politely refuses your tip, do not insist. In some circumstances, particularly at government-run sites or state-owned hotels, staff are genuinely not allowed to accept gratuities.

Here is another thing I have learned after years in this industry: a heartfelt online review mentioning your guide by name is often more valuable to them than cash. Many Chinese tour guides build their careers on word-of-mouth and online recommendations. If your guide made your trip special, tell the world. That helps them far beyond a single tip.

 

Should I Tip in China

 

A Note on Hong Kong and Macau

Hong Kong and Macau follow a different etiquette. Because of their British and Portuguese colonial histories, tipping is more common. In restaurants, 5 to 10 percent is appreciated if no service charge is already added. Hotel bellhops expect 20 to 50 HKD or MOP per bag. Taxi drivers appreciate rounding up. If your China itinerary includes these cities, adjust accordingly.

 

Should I Tip in China

 

The Bottom Line for 2026 Travelers

To summarize: tip your private tour guide and driver. Skip the tip everywhere else. Enjoy the fact that China is one of the few travel destinations where the listed price is almost always the final price. That clarity is a gift, and it makes traveling here simpler and more relaxing.

Plan Your Trip with Confidence

At IntoTravelChina, I have been helping travelers navigate China's customs, culture, and logistics since 2015. Every tour we design is private, fully customizable, and free of forced shopping stops. We handle your guide, driver, accommodation, transport, and itinerary so you can focus on the experience. Whether you are visiting the Great Wall, exploring Chengdu's panda base, or cruising the Li River, we make sure you travel with confidence.

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

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Daniel Dorothea
Canada
Reviewed on April 29,2025
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!
Destination(s): Shanghai
Date of Experience: May 08,2024
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Elvis Eva
Canada
Reviewed on June 20,2025
As a solo traveler from Canada, I was nervous about navigating China alone—but this 11-day tour was PERFECT! From hiking the Great Wall at sunrise (Day 3) to gasping at the Terracotta Army (Day 5), every day delivered ‘pinch-me’ moments. The real showstopper? Zhangjiajie’s Avatar Mountains (Day 7)! Our guide made the stone pillars come alive with stories. Massive thanks for handling all logistics—bullet train tickets, entry passes, car! And the 4-star hotels surprised me.
Destination(s): Beijing Xian Zhangjiajie Shanghai
Date of Experience: June 02,2025
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Simon
America
Reviewed on May 29,2025
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
Destination(s): Zhangjiajie
Date of Experience: May 08,2025
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