How to Avoid Common Scams in China? A 2026 Traveler Guide

How to Avoid Common Scams in China? A 2026 Traveler Guide

An Honest Travel Guide by IntoTravelChina

How to avoid common scams in China? The answer is simpler than most travelers expect. I have been guiding visitors through China since 2015, and in that decade I have seen nearly every trick used on tourists. The good news: China is one of the safest large countries I have ever traveled in. Violent crime against visitors is extremely rare. But financial scams targeting tourists are real. Here is what I tell every guest before they arrive.

The Tea House Trap Is the Most Common

The scam I see most often involves a friendly English-speaker near a major attraction. A young person approaches you near Tiananmen Square, the Bund in Shanghai, or the Yu Garden area. They say they are a student who wants to practice English. They chat for a few minutes, then invite you to a traditional tea ceremony. You agree. You sit down, drink ordinary tea, and then receive a bill for 500 to 3,000 RMB. The student vanishes. A large man appears and insists you pay.

I had a guest from Melbourne who fell for this in 2023. He ended up paying 1,200 RMB for a pot of tea that should have cost 50. He was embarrassed and angry. I told him not to blame himself. The rule is simple: never accept an unsolicited invitation to tea, coffee, or a meal from a stranger on the street. If you want a real tea ceremony, go to an established tea house with prices on the menu.

Taxis, Tickets, and Fake Monks

Three other scams appear regularly. First, unofficial taxis at airports and train stations. A driver approaches you, offers a fixed price, and then demands three or four times that amount on arrival. The solution is easy: use the DiDi app, which shows the fare upfront and works in English. Second, fake tickets sold outside major attractions. Buy only from official ticket booths or official WeChat mini-programs.

Third, the fake monk scam. Someone in monk robes hands you a charm or bracelet as a gift. Once you take it, they demand a donation -- often 100 RMB or more. Real Buddhist monks in China do not solicit money from tourists in this way. A polite but firm no and walking away is all it takes.

The Art Student and the Overpriced Cake

Two lesser-known scams are worth watching for. In some cities, young people posing as art students pressure you into buying their paintings at inflated prices. In Xi'an, Xinjiang cake sellers cut a thin slice that weighs far more than expected. One tourist I know was charged 2,400 RMB for a single piece. Always ask the total price before they cut.

Here is what I have learned from watching hundreds of guests travel through China: scammers target distracted, tired, or overly trusting tourists. The best defense is simple awareness. You do not need to be suspicious of everyone. But if a stranger approaches you with an unsolicited offer -- a tea ceremony, a discounted ticket, a free gift -- that is the moment to politely disengage.

The Golden Rule: Use Official Channels

Almost every scam targeting tourists in China can be avoided by following one principle. Use official channels for everything. Book tours through licensed agencies. Pay through verified platforms, not personal WeChat transfers. Buy tickets from the official counter or app. Use DiDi instead of hailing taxis on the street. These small habits eliminate nearly all the risk.

At IntoTravelChina, we handle every booking through proper channels. We provide official receipts, licensed guides, and pre-arranged transport. That is the standard we have held since 2015. Our guests never need to worry about being overcharged or tricked because the entire trip is managed transparently.

expert avatar
Jason

The Advice I Give Every Traveler Before They Arrive

In my years planning routes for overseas travelers, this is the one rule I repeat most: stay inside official systems. Almost every problem I've seen — a guest overpaying for tea, getting pressured by a street vendor, or stuck in an argument with an unlicensed driver — started the moment they stepped away from official channels. The rule is simple, and it works every time.

The Bottom Line for 2026 Travelers

To summarize: how to avoid common scams in China comes down to three habits. Say no to unsolicited street invitations. Use official and digital platforms for payments and bookings. Stay alert but not fearful. China is a safe, welcoming country for travelers. A little awareness is all you need to keep your trip smooth and your wallet intact.

Plan Your Trip with Confidence

At IntoTravelChina, I have been protecting travelers from scams -- and from unnecessary worry -- since 2015. Our private tours come with licensed guides, pre-booked transport, and transparent pricing from day one. No shopping traps. No surprise fees. No shortcuts. Just the real China, experienced safely and honestly.

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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