— An Honest Travel Guide by IntoTravelChina
Do I need a VPN in China and is it legal? The short answer is: you may not need one, and unauthorised VPNs exist in a legal gray area. I have been guiding travellers to China since 2015, and this question comes up on every single trip. The rules around VPNs are confusing for good reason. Here is what I tell my guests, based on real conditions on the ground.
The Best Alternative: International Roaming
Most travellers do not actually need a VPN in 2026. If you activate international roaming on your phone before arriving, you can access WhatsApp, Google, Gmail, Instagram, and other services without any restriction -- and entirely legally. Roaming data routes through your home carrier's international gateway, which bypasses China's firewall. I used T-Mobile roaming on my last trip and accessed Google Maps and WhatsApp throughout without any issue.
International eSIMs from providers like Airalo, Holafly, and Nomad also work this way. They are cheaper than carrier roaming and can be installed before your flight. The one limitation is that roaming data gives you no Chinese phone number, so you cannot register for local apps like DiDi or Meituan. For most short trips, this trade-off is well worth it.

VPNs: What the Law Actually Says
China's regulations prohibit the use of unauthorised VPNs. The law states that individuals must not establish or use unauthorised channels for international internet connections. Only government-approved VPNs are technically legal. In February 2026, a draft Cybercrime Law was published that further addresses VPNs but focuses on providers rather than individual users.
In practice, enforcement against short-term tourists is rare. I know many travellers who use VPNs in China without incident. But rare does not mean zero. The safer and simpler path is to use international roaming or an eSIM, which gives you the same access without any legal ambiguity.

What Most Tourists Actually Miss
If you use international roaming, you do not need a VPN. But here is what many travellers forget: if you connect to hotel Wi-Fi or airport Wi-Fi, you are back on China's domestic network, and blocked sites will not work unless you have a VPN running. The trick is to stay on your roaming data for anything you cannot access through the local network.
Also, Google Maps works on roaming but its location data in China is inaccurate due to local mapping regulations. I recommend downloading Baidu Maps or Amap as a backup for walking directions and public transit. They are more accurate for on-the-ground navigation.
The Bottom Line for 2026 Travelers
To summarize: do you need a VPN in China and is it legal? The safest answer is to skip the VPN and use international roaming or an eSIM instead. This gives you full access to the internet you are used to, with zero legal concerns. If you choose to use a VPN, install it before you arrive and understand that it operates in a gray area. Either way, stay connected and enjoy your trip.
Plan Your Trip with Confidence
At IntoTravelChina, I help every guest stay connected in China. We provide practical guidance on roaming, eSIMs, and essential apps before your trip. Every tour is private, custom-designed, and free of shopping stops. No shortcuts. Just a well-connected journey.
IntoTravelChina -- Founded 2015. Custom private tours across China. No shopping stops. No shortcuts. Just authentic experiences.