China ranks among the safest countries in Asia for violent crime. Interpol data and traveler surveys consistently put it below most Western European cities for mugging, assault, and robbery. That is the good news. The rest of this guide covers the real risks honestly, because they are real — they are just different from what most people expect.
Key Takeaways
- Violent crime against tourists is very rare — lower risk than most comparable destinations.
- The actual risks: scams, air quality, food safety, tap water, and digital surveillance.
- Scams are the most likely way you will lose money — tea ceremony and fake taxi are the two to know.
- Air quality varies enormously by city and season — check AQI before you go.
- Never drink tap water — bottled water is cheap and available everywhere.
- Travel insurance is not optional in China — medical costs without it can be significant.
Physical Safety: What the Data Shows
China’s low violent crime rate is partly cultural, partly structural. The country has one of the world’s densest CCTV networks — over 600 million cameras as of recent estimates — and penalties for crimes against foreigners are severe. The practical result for tourists is that you can walk most city streets at night without significant risk, leave your phone on a restaurant table without anxiety, and use public transport without fear of being robbed.
Pickpocketing does exist, particularly in crowded tourist sites like the Forbidden City, the Bund in Shanghai, and busy markets. Keep your phone in a front pocket or bag with a zipper. Laptop bags on the back in dense crowds are the main vulnerability.
[Insert Image 1 Here: A wide pedestrian shopping street in a Chinese city in the evening. The street is lit by shop signs, with people walking in both directions. Shops are open on both sides.]
The Real Risk: Scams
Scams are far more likely to cost you money than crime. The most sophisticated ones involve friendly strangers, apparent coincidence, and gradual trust-building before the sting. A full breakdown is in our tourist scams guide, but the two to know immediately are:
- The tea ceremony scam: A friendly local invites you to a ‘traditional tea ceremony.’ The tea is real; the bill at the end is ¥500–¥2,000. Never accept drink or food invitations from strangers who approach you near tourist sites.
- The art student scam: Students approach in English, invite you to their ‘gallery show,’ and pressure you to buy heavily overpriced artwork. The ‘students’ are professionals who run this daily.
Air Quality
Air quality in China’s industrial cities — particularly Beijing, Zhengzhou, and Chengdu — can reach hazardous AQI levels in winter and early spring. Coastal cities like Shanghai, Xiamen, and Shenzhen are generally better. Kunming and coastal areas have consistently good air.
Check the AQI for your destination before you travel and pack an N95 mask if you are visiting northern cities between October and March. The full guide is at Air Quality in China: How to Check AQI.
Food and Water Safety
Cooked food at busy stalls and restaurants is generally safe. Raw foods, cold proteins, and tap water are not. Tap water in China is not safe to drink directly — it is treated but contains levels of heavy metals and chlorine that cause stomach issues. Bottled water is available everywhere for under ¥3. Full details: Can You Drink the Tap Water in China?
[Insert Image 2 Here: A row of small plastic water bottles on a convenience store shelf with Chinese labeling. Price tags are visible on the shelf below them.]
Digital Safety
China’s internet is filtered — Google, WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, the New York Times, and most Western news sites are blocked. Use a VPN (installed before you arrive) to access them. Your hotel Wi-Fi is not private and should be treated as monitored. Use a VPN for anything sensitive. Avoid discussing politically sensitive topics — Tiananmen Square, Tibet, Taiwan, Xinjiang — publicly or on Chinese messaging platforms.
Your hotel registers your passport details with local police automatically on check-in. This is standard and applies to all foreign visitors. It is routine administration, not targeting.
Areas Requiring Extra Caution
| Region | Risk Level | Notes |
| Major cities (Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou) | Low | Standard tourist precautions |
| Xi’an, Chengdu, Hangzhou | Low | Standard tourist precautions |
| Tibet (TAR) | Moderate | Altitude sickness risk; permit required; restricted travel |
| Xinjiang | Elevated | Heightened surveillance; permit required for some areas; check government advisory |
| Hong Kong & Macau | Low | Different legal system; separate entry requirements |
Health Essentials
- Vaccinations: No mandatory vaccines for China entry (check with your doctor for Hepatitis A/B, typhoid)
- Traveler’s diarrhea: Pack loperamide and oral rehydration salts
- Altitude: Relevant if visiting Tibet (3,600m+) or Yunnan highlands — see altitude sickness guide
- Air quality: N95 mask for northern cities in winter
- Tap water: Drink bottled only — see tap water guide
- Travel insurance: Not optional — see travel insurance guide
Frequently Asked Questions
For a full breakdown of every scam you might encounter, see The Most Common Tourist Scams in China. For solo female travelers, see our solo female travel guide.
