Haggling in China: How to Negotiate Without Overpaying

The first price at a tourist market is a starting point, not a real price. If a vendor asks ¥300, you can probably settle for ¥80 to ¥100. Here is exactly how to do it.

haggling in china

You pick up a silk scarf at the Silk Market in Beijing. The vendor says ¥280. You know the scarf costs about ¥60 wholesale. You type ¥70 on your phone and show it to them. They look offended. They counter with ¥220. You type ¥80. They counter ¥180. You put the scarf down and start walking toward the next stall. They call you back: ¥120. You settle at ¥100. That is how haggling at a Chinese tourist market works. For the full money context: Money and Costs in China.

Key Takeaways

  • Haggling is expected at tourist markets, clothing markets, and antique stalls.
  • Fixed prices apply at restaurants, supermarkets, and chain shops. Never haggle there.
  • Opening counter: 20 to 30% of the asking price. Final fair price is 30 to 50% of opening.
  • Walk away slowly when stuck. It is your most effective move.
  • Use a phone calculator to show prices. No Mandarin required.
  • Inspect items at wrap time. Product switching happens. Scams guide.

Where Haggling Works and Where It Does Not

VenueHaggling?Notes
Tourist souvenir markets (Silk Market, Panjiayuan)Yes, expectedOpening prices are 5 to 10 times what you should pay.
Clothing and fabric marketsYesAt stalls without price tags.
Antique marketsYesResearch value first. Most ‘antiques’ are reproduction.
Night markets (unlabeled stalls)SometimesTry. They can say no.
RestaurantsNeverFixed menu prices. Non-negotiable.
SupermarketsNeverFixed prices. Self-checkout.
Chain clothing shops (Zara, Uniqlo, H&M)NeverStandard retail. Fixed prices.
Department storesRarelyMay match a price from a competitor. No open haggling.

The Best Markets for Haggling

Beijing: Silk Market and Panjiayuan

The Ministry of Commerce oversees market trading in China. The Silk Market (秀水市场, Xiushui) on Jianguomenwai Avenue has five floors of clothing, silk, electronics, and souvenirs. Opening prices are extremely high. Everything here is negotiable. Panjiayuan Antique Market (潘家园) is for antiques, calligraphy, jade, and cultural items. Most of what looks antique is reproduction. The market is interesting regardless.

Shanghai: South Bund Fabric Market

The fabric market on Lujiabang Road near the South Bund is the best place in Asia to have clothing made to measure. Tailors and fabric vendors fill multiple floors. Prices are negotiable, especially if you are ordering multiple items. Allow 3 to 5 days for made-to-measure garments if you want fittings.

The Haggling Process, Step by Step

  1. Look interested but not enthusiastic. Pick the item up. Look at it. Put it down. Look at nearby items.
  2. Ask the price (duoshao qian? / 多少钱?). Vendor gives their opening number.
  3. Stay calm. Raise an eyebrow if the price seems high. No gasping.
  4. Counter at 20 to 30% of asking. Type the number on your phone and show it.
  5. Negotiate slowly. Move in small increments. ¥10 at a time, not ¥50.
  6. When near your target, hold firm. Show ‘final price’ and do not move.
  7. If stuck, walk away slowly. Turn. Walk toward the exit or the next stall. Pause at about 5 metres.
  8. If they call you back: walk back slowly. Pause before agreeing. Counter slightly lower.
  9. At wrap time: inspect the item. Confirm it is the same one you agreed on before paying.

Paying After Haggling

After agreeing on a price, pay immediately. The deal is done. Do not try to negotiate further at the point of payment. Alipay and WeChat Pay are accepted at most tourist markets. Cash always works. For Alipay setup: Alipay guide. For what to buy: Best Souvenirs from China.

Frequently Asked Questions

At tourist souvenir markets, clothing markets, antique markets, and street stalls without price tags. Never at restaurants, supermarkets, chain shops, pharmacies, or any shop with fixed price labels. The Silk Market (Beijing), Panjiayuan antique market (Beijing), and fabric markets (Shanghai) are classic haggling environments. If you see locals paying without negotiation, you should too.

Open at 20 to 30% of the vendor’s first price. Expect to settle at 30 to 50% of their opening. If a vendor asks ¥300 for a silk scarf, offer ¥70 to ¥90. You will probably land at ¥100 to ¥150. If they accept your first counter immediately, you went too high. If they appear genuinely insulted, you went too low. The vendor’s margin is large. Do not feel bad about negotiating.

Use a calculator or type numbers on your phone screen. Show it to the vendor. This is standard practice at all tourist markets in China. Many vendors keep a calculator on the counter specifically for this. You do not need to speak any Chinese to haggle effectively. For basic number phrases in Mandarin: Essential Mandarin Phrases.

Product switching: the item you agreed on is replaced with a lower-quality version at wrap time. Inspect the actual item before handing over money. Fake branded goods (Nike, Gucci, Apple) are counterfeit and carry customs risk when you go home. The ‘friend price’ tactic (claiming to give you a special deal) is a sales technique, not a real discount. Full scam picture: Tourist Scams in China.

Walk away slowly. Turning and walking is the most powerful move available. Vendors will frequently call you back with a better price as you leave. If they do not call you back, the price was already at their floor. If they do call you back, you have the leverage. Do not run back eagerly. Walk back slowly. Pause again before agreeing.

For the full money guide, see Money and Costs in China. For what is worth buying, see Best Souvenirs from China.

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