You book a guesthouse online. You arrive at 10pm after a long flight. The receptionist looks at your passport and shakes their head. They cannot register foreigners. You have a confirmed paid booking and nowhere to sleep. This happens to hundreds of travelers every year in China. It happens because nobody told them about the foreign guest registration rule. This guide starts with that rule, then tells you where to actually stay in each major city.
Key Takeaways
- Not every hotel can legally host foreign guests. Book via Booking.com, Agoda, or Trip.com international to filter for compliant properties. Full guide: Foreigner-Friendly Hotels.
- Trip.com has the widest Chinese hotel inventory. Comparison with Agoda here.
- Beijing hutong hotels are the most atmospheric stays in China. Hutong Hotels guide.
- Star ratings differ from international standards. Use review scores instead. Star ratings explained.
- Hostel picks by city, all foreign-guest confirmed: Best Hostels in China.
- Prices spike 50 to 100% during Golden Week (Oct 1-7) and Chinese New Year. Book well ahead. Timing guide.
The Foreign Guest Registration Rule
Chinese law requires every accommodation provider to register foreign guests with the local public security bureau within 24 hours of arrival. This is not optional and not negotiable. The Ministry of Public Security mandates it. When you stay at a registered hotel, they handle the paperwork electronically at check-in. It takes seconds. You hand over your passport, they scan it, and it is done.
The problem: not every hotel has the license to do this. Budget guesthouses, family-run inns, and some smaller independents never obtained the license. They cannot legally register you. Some turn you away at the door. Some let you stay illegally. Neither is a good outcome. The solution is to book through a platform that filters for compliant properties. For the full detail on identifying and avoiding this problem, see What is a Foreigner-Friendly Hotel in China?.
If you are staying with a Chinese friend or in an unregistered rental: you are legally required to register yourself at the nearest police station within 24 hours. Bring your passport. In major cities this is straightforward. In smaller cities the process can take longer and require English assistance from your host.
Accommodation Types: What They Actually Cost
| Type | Price Range (Per Night) | Foreign Guest Risk | Best For |
| International chain (Marriott, Hilton, IHG) | ¥600 to ¥3,000+ | Zero. Always registered. | Consistency, loyalty points, 24/7 English service |
| Premium domestic chain (Atour, Ji Hotel, Hanting) | ¥200 to ¥500 | Low. Most major chains are licensed. | Budget private rooms with reliable standard |
| Boutique or design hotel | ¥400 to ¥1,500 | Check reviews for foreign-guest mentions. | Style, local character, Instagram moments |
| Hutong courtyard hotel (Beijing) | ¥350 to ¥2,000 | Most accept foreigners. Verify via Booking.com. | Atmosphere, historic neighborhoods |
| Hostel (dorm or private) | ¥80 to ¥280 | Book via Hostelworld. They self-filter. | Budget, social, meeting other travelers |
| Private Airbnb rental | ¥150 to ¥800 | Gray area. Many hosts do not register foreigners. | Longer stays if you understand the situation |
How to Book Hotels in China
The platforms that work for foreigners
- Trip.com: widest inventory, best prices for Chinese domestic hotels. English interface. Foreign cards accepted. Full comparison here.
- Booking.com: strongest free-cancellation options, excellent English customer service. Good for international brands.
- Agoda: competitive prices, strong for Southeast Asia origins. Thinner China-specific inventory.
- Hotels.com / Expedia: workable but thinner coverage than Trip.com for Chinese properties.
How to read reviews for foreign-guest signals
When assessing an unfamiliar Chinese hotel, filter reviews by English language. Look for any mention of ‘passport,’ ‘registration,’ or ‘foreign guests.’ A hotel with 2,000 reviews all in Chinese has likely not hosted many international visitors. A hotel with 200 reviews including 50 in English is almost certainly fine. If the property has no English-language reviews at all, email them directly before booking: ‘Do you accept international guests and register with the public security bureau?’ A clear yes is good. Evasion is not.
Where to Stay in Each Major City
Beijing
Beijing’s best accommodation areas split into two types. The hutong areas (Drum Tower, Nanluoguxiang, Shichahai) give you atmospheric traditional Beijing within walking distance of great restaurants and bars. The central business districts (Wangfujing, Dongcheng) give you convenience and proximity to the major sites. My recommendation: stay in the hutong area. You can walk to the Forbidden City in 20 to 30 minutes. The neighborhood at 7am, when locals are doing tai chi and buying breakfast, is one of the great travel experiences in China.
| Area | Best For | Metro Access | Typical 3-Star Price |
| Drum Tower / Gulou | Atmosphere, local restaurants, hutong feel | Line 2 or 8: Gulou Dajie | ¥350 to ¥550 |
| Nanluoguxiang | First-time visitors, central hutong, cafes | Line 6: Nanluoguxiang | ¥380 to ¥600 |
| Wangfujing | Shopping, close to Forbidden City, convenient | Line 1: Wangfujing | ¥450 to ¥700 |
| Dongcheng / Chaoyang | Business hotels, international brands | Multiple lines | ¥400 to ¥650 |
Shanghai
The Former French Concession (Xuhui district) is the right area to stay in Shanghai. Tree-lined streets, good restaurants, independent coffee shops, manageable pace. It is 15 to 20 minutes by metro from the Bund but the neighborhood itself is more pleasant to walk than the Bund area. Avoid Pudong unless you have a specific reason to be there. The towers are impressive. The streets are empty. It is not where you want to spend your evenings.
| Area | Best For | Metro Access | Typical 3-Star Price |
| Former French Concession (Xuhui) | Best neighborhood feel, restaurants, coffee | Lines 1, 7, 9, 10, 11 | ¥380 to ¥580 |
| The Bund / Huangpu | Location, river views, proximity to Old Town | Lines 2, 10 | ¥500 to ¥800 |
| Jing’an | Central, good transport hub, modern | Lines 2, 7 | ¥420 to ¥650 |
| Pudong (Lujiazui) | Views, luxury hotels, business | Lines 2, 6, 9 | ¥500 to ¥900 |
Xi’an
Stay inside or just outside the city wall. The historic center is compact and all the major sites are within walking distance or a short bus ride. The Muslim Quarter (Huimin Jie) is the best area for evening food. Stay within 15 minutes walk of it if possible. Hotels immediately next to the Bell Tower tend to be overpriced relative to quality. Walk one block in any direction and the prices drop significantly.
Chengdu
Chengdu is relaxed and easy to navigate. The Jinli and Wuhou areas are close to the major sights and have the best street food. The Tianfu Square area is more central but more business-oriented. For backpackers, Chengdu has the best hostel scene in China. Traffic Hostel near Renmin Nan Lu is legendary in the budget travel community. Full hostel recommendations: Best Hostels in China.
Seasonal Pricing: When to Book
Hotel prices in China follow a predictable pattern. Two periods spike dramatically: Golden Week (October 1 to 7) and Chinese New Year (late January to mid-February). During these weeks, hotels near major tourist sites double to triple their prices. Book 2 to 3 months ahead for these periods or accept paying significantly more. Outside these windows, prices are very manageable. January (outside Chinese New Year week) has the lowest hotel prices of the year in most Chinese cities.
| Period | Typical Price vs Normal | Booking Lead Time Needed |
| Golden Week (Oct 1-7) | +100 to +200% near tourist sites | 2 to 3 months |
| Chinese New Year (Feb) | +50 to +150% | 2 to 3 months |
| Labour Day (May 1-5) | +30 to +80% | 6 to 8 weeks |
| Spring travel (April-May) | +10 to +30% | 2 to 4 weeks |
| Autumn (mid-Oct to Nov) | +10 to +20% | 1 to 3 weeks |
| January (outside CNY week) | -10 to -20% (annual low) | Can book same week |
| Summer (July-Aug) | Variable. Lower in non-tourist areas. | 1 to 2 weeks |
What to Check Before Confirming
- Foreign guest registration. Book via international platform or email the hotel directly.
- Free cancellation. China travel plans change. Always book refundable unless the price difference is significant.
- Location relative to metro. 15 minutes by metro from the main sites costs 30 to 50% less than being directly next to them.
- Recent English reviews. Filter by English language and look at reviews from the past 6 months.
- Noise level. Chinese hotels in commercial areas can be noisy until midnight. Check reviews for noise mentions.
- Breakfast included. Usually overpriced when added. Ask if you can opt out.
The Airbnb Question
Airbnb works in China and has some genuinely good listings. The issue is registration. Every host is legally required to register foreign guests with the local police bureau. Most private Airbnb hosts do not know this rule or do not do it. For most stays, nothing happens. But if you are in an area where police conduct residence checks (this does happen in some cities during sensitive periods), you could be asked to show registration. The safest approach: use Airbnb for stays of 3 nights or more after your first night (when you are settled and have a registered base), and in cities you know well.
Frequently Asked Questions
For the foreign registration question in detail, see Foreigner-Friendly Hotels in China. For platform comparison, see Trip.com vs Agoda. For Beijing courtyard stays, see Beijing Hutong Hotels. For hostel picks, see Best Hostels in China.
