Backpacking China: The Ultimate Shoestring Route

Backpacking China is easier than most people expect in cities and harder than most expect away from them. The hostel hubs are Dali, Yangshuo, and Chengdu. Here is the route and the reality.

backpacking china

You are on a hard sleeper bunk at 11pm somewhere in Sichuan. Ant Group‘s Alipay works everywhere in cities but some small rural vendors still prefer cash. The lights went out an hour ago. Someone two berths over is eating instant noodles that smell of star anise. The woman above you has been asleep since Chengdu, arms folded across her chest, completely at peace. A man in the berth opposite leans over and offers you sunflower seeds. You take them. This is backpacking China. It is not the beach bars of Thailand. It is better in a different way. For cost context: How Much Does China Cost?.

The Standard Backpacker Route

DestinationDaysWhy It’s On the Route
Beijing3 to 4Start here. Forbidden City, Great Wall, orientation.
Xi’an2 to 3Terracotta Warriors, Muslim Quarter, overnight train connection south.
Chengdu2 to 3Pandas, hostel hub, good food, base for western China.
Dali (Yunnan)2 to 3Backpacker hub. Old town. Erhai Lake cycling. Craft beer. Meet other travelers.
Lijiang (Yunnan)1 to 2Old town (touristy but beautiful). Base for Tiger Leaping Gorge.
Tiger Leaping Gorge2 (overnight trekking)Best hike in Yunnan. Do the upper trail.
Guilin/Yangshuo2 to 3Karst scenery. Cycling. Second main backpacker hub.
Shanghai2 to 3Exit city. The Bund, French Concession. Then go home.

The Train System for Backpackers

G-trains vs overnight sleepers

The G-train (high-speed) is efficient but expensive relative to the overnight sleeper. For backpackers: a ¥150 hard sleeper overnight train that gets you from Xi’an to Chengdu while you sleep saves both the ¥290 G-train cost and a night of accommodation. It also puts you in a carriage with Chinese farmers, students, and families, sharing sunflower seeds and broken English. That 12-hour overnight in a hard berth is often a trip highlight. For train class details: Train Classes in China.

The 12306 app for foreigners

The 12306 app (China’s official rail booking platform) now works with foreign passports. You can book in English, pay with a foreign Visa or Mastercard, and receive e-tickets. For popular overnight routes (Beijing to Xi’an overnight, Xi’an to Chengdu overnight), book as far ahead as the 15-day window allows. Hard sleeper middle berths on these routes sell out first.

The Hostel Hubs

Dali, Yunnan

Dali old town is where you find other backpackers in Yunnan. The main street (Renmin Lu) has guesthouses, Western food cafes, and a handful of good bars. The surrounding Erhai Lake is beautiful on a bicycle. Stay at a guesthouse on the lake for ¥100 to ¥150 per night (private room). The laid-back atmosphere that made Dali famous has faded compared to 10 years ago, but it is still the most social stop in Yunnan.

Yangshuo, Guangxi

Yangshuo is the other major backpacker hub. West Street is full of hostels, cafes, and tour operators renting bicycles and booking bamboo rafting. The countryside around Yangshuo is the point: rent a bicycle and ride through karst valleys and rice paddies for a day. The traveler community here is denser than anywhere else outside Beijing and Shanghai hostels.

What Nobody Tells You About Backpacking China

  • Entrance fees add up faster than you expect. Major sites cost ¥100 to ¥260 each. Factor this into your budget separately.
  • Alipay sometimes fails for street vendors and local taxis. Keep ¥500 in cash. This is not optional.
  • Chinese tour groups follow a herd mentality. They take the cable car, queue at the official viewpoint, and leave. Walk 20 minutes past the viewpoint and you often have the same scenery almost entirely alone.
  • The language barrier is real but navigable. Show Baidu Translate on your screen. Most people respond to it.
  • Hostels have changed. The solo traveler social hostels of 10 years ago are rarer now. Do your research on which hostels are actually social before booking.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, with caveats. The infrastructure is excellent. Trains and metro are cheap. Food is outstanding. But finding other travelers is harder than in Southeast Asia. China is not a backpacker circuit the way Thailand or Vietnam is. The hubs are Dali, Yangshuo, and Chengdu hostels. Outside those, you will mostly be traveling among Chinese domestic tourists. That’s not a problem. It’s just different.

$25 to $45 per day for budget backpackers. More than Southeast Asia but less than Japan. Hostel dorm beds: ¥60 to ¥120 (Shanghai and Beijing are higher). Street food meals: ¥10 to ¥25. Train travel is cheap. The killer is entrance fees. Budget ¥150 to ¥300 per major site. Full cost guide: How Much Does China Cost?.

Beijing to Xi’an to Chengdu to Dali to Lijiang to Tiger Leaping Gorge to Guilin to Yangshuo to Shanghai. This takes 3 to 4 weeks and covers the main sights, the best Yunnan, and the two most social backpacker towns. The slow old overnight trains between some stops are the right choice, not always the G-train.

No, but a handful of phrases and a translation app make the trip significantly better. English is spoken at most hostels and some restaurants. Away from the main tourist trail, especially in Yunnan and western China, pointing at a phrasebook or showing a translation on your phone is how things get done. It is not a barrier. It is just part of the experience.

Yes, but not all hostels can legally register foreign guests. Hostels that accept foreigners will say so on their Booking.com or Hostelworld listing. If you show up at a hostel not registered for foreigners, they will turn you away. Stick to platforms with reviews from other Western travelers.

For cost breakdown: How Much Does China Cost?. For train booking: Train Classes in China. For Yunnan specifically: Yunnan Itinerary.

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