Save these now, before you read anything else. Police: 110. Ambulance: 120. Fire: 119. Traffic accidents: 122. China does not have a single all-in-one emergency number like 911 or 999. If you are used to dialling one number for any crisis, you need to know this before you arrive. You will almost certainly never need any of these numbers. But having them saved costs nothing and could matter enormously.
Key Takeaways
- 110: Police. Crime, theft, disputes, anything requiring law enforcement.
- 120: Medical ambulance. The number to call if someone needs urgent medical help.
- 119: Fire brigade.
- 122: Traffic accidents.
- No single emergency number. Call the right service directly.
- Tourist police (旅游警察) at major sites. Faster than 110 for scam disputes.
Emergency Numbers: Quick Reference
| Emergency | Number | Notes |
| Police (警察) | 110 | Crime, theft, disputes, arrest, anything requiring police |
| Medical Ambulance (急救) | 120 | Medical emergencies, accidents, serious illness |
| Fire Brigade (消防) | 119 | Fire and fire rescue |
| Traffic Accident (交通事故) | 122 | Road accidents |
| Beijing English tourist line | 010-12301 | English-speaking. Tourist assistance. |
| Shanghai English tourist line | 021-12301 | English-speaking. Tourist assistance. |
| National tourist complaint line | 12301 | Scam reports, tourist disputes |
Screenshot this table and keep it accessible on your phone offline.
Embassy Emergency Contacts
Consular emergency lines are for genuine emergencies: lost passport, arrest, hospitalisation, or death of a companion. Visa questions and general queries go through the daytime number, not the emergency line.
| Country | Emergency Line | Website |
| USA | Beijing: +86-10-8531-4000 | china.usembassy-china.org.cn |
| UK | Beijing: +86-10-5192-4000 | gov.uk/world/china |
| Australia | Beijing: +86-10-5140-4111 | china.embassy.gov.au |
| Canada | Beijing: +86-10-5139-4000 | china.gc.ca |
| Ireland | Beijing: +86-10-6532-2691 | dfa.ie/irish-embassy/china |
| New Zealand | Beijing: +86-10-8531-2700 | mfat.govt.nz/china |
| Germany | Beijing: +86-10-8532-9000 | china.diplo.de |
| France | Beijing: +86-10-8531-2000 | cn.ambafrance.org |
| Singapore | Beijing: +86-10-6532-1115 | mfa.gov.sg/beijing |
If your country is not listed, search your country name plus ’embassy Beijing emergency number’ before you travel. Save it. The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs lists all foreign embassies in China.
What Your Embassy Can and Cannot Do
They can:
- Issue an Emergency Travel Document or replacement passport
- Provide a list of local English-speaking lawyers (but not pay for one)
- Contact your family if you cannot
- Visit you if you are hospitalised or arrested
- Provide a list of English-speaking doctors and hospitals
They cannot:
- Pay your medical bills, legal fees, or hotel bills
- Get you out of jail or override Chinese legal proceedings
- Force Chinese authorities to release you
- Provide money in most circumstances
Medical Emergencies: The Practical Steps
Call 120 for an ambulance. In some smaller cities, an ambulance may not have advanced paramedic equipment. Getting yourself to hospital by DiDi can sometimes be faster than waiting for an ambulance. In parallel, call your travel insurer’s emergency line. They can direct you to an approved hospital and potentially arrange direct billing. Full hospital guide: Getting Medical Help in China.
If You Are Arrested
You have the right to notify your embassy. Say: ‘I want to contact my embassy’ (我想联系我的大使馆, Wǒ xiǎng liánxì wǒ de dàshǐguǎn). Chinese police are not required to proactively notify your embassy, but they cannot legally prevent you from requesting contact. Do not sign documents you cannot read. Ask for a translator.
If You Are Scammed
- For amounts under ¥500 at a tourist site: go to the tourist police (旅游警察) near the attraction.
- For larger amounts: call 110.
- Document everything: photos of the venue, people involved, any bill or receipt. See tourist scams guide.
- Report to your travel insurer for possible reimbursement.
Frequently Asked Questions
For the full safety guide, see Is China Safe for Tourists?. For solo female travel safety specifically, see Solo Female Travel in China. For medical help, see Getting Medical Help in China.
