How to use Alipay in China as a foreigner
A step-by-step tourist setup guide covering cards, identity checks, metro use, and common payment failures.
Foreign visitors can usually set up Alipay by installing the international app, registering with a reachable phone number, adding passport details when prompted, linking an overseas bank card, and testing a small QR payment before relying on it for taxis, metro rides, and restaurants.
Use it during the trip
Practical China trip kit
Common apps and official downloads
Set up and test the two payment apps first. Keep the other downloads as independent transport and communication fallbacks. Install only from the official store listing.
Works without signal
Save before you go
Keep enough information outside the wallet that may fail.
- Save issuer support numbers and wallet help routes.
- Carry a separate payment card and some usable RMB cash.
- Keep accommodation and onward-journey details available offline.
Printing this page also keeps the guide answer and visible source links with this checklist.
Emergency numbers in China
Call only for a real emergency. Say the exact location first; ask nearby staff to help communicate when safe.
Set it up before your flight
Do the account setup while you still have stable access to your home SIM, email, banking app, and card verification messages. Payment failures are much easier to fix before you are standing at an airport taxi queue or metro gate.
- Install Alipay from the official app store for your phone region.
- Register with the phone number you can actually receive codes on during the trip.
- Use the same passport name format you expect to use for hotels, trains, and airline records.
- Link at least one overseas Visa, Mastercard, or other supported card, then keep a backup card available.
Run a small test in China
After arrival, use a low-stakes purchase to confirm the app, card issuer, network connection, and merchant QR flow all work together. A convenience store, coffee shop, or hotel front desk is a better test than your first taxi ride.
- Try both scanning a merchant QR code and showing your payment code if the merchant supports it.
- Keep transaction notifications enabled so you can tell whether a failure came from Alipay, the card issuer, or the merchant terminal.
- Carry some cash or a second wallet option for small vendors, older machines, and temporary account reviews.
Know what may still fail
A linked foreign card does not make every Alipay feature behave like a local account. Some services may require extra identity checks, a mainland China phone number, a supported merchant category, or a Chinese bank account.
- Peer-to-peer transfers, red packets, and balance-style features may be limited for tourist accounts.
- Banks can block unfamiliar overseas mobile-wallet transactions until you approve them.
- Transport mini programs and city services may have separate registration or real-name checks.
Practical backup plan
Treat Alipay as your primary day-to-day payment tool, but do not make it your only way to pay. China has become highly mobile-payment oriented, yet official visitor guidance still presents bank cards and cash as valid backup options.
- Tell your card issuer you will be in China if your bank still uses travel notices.
- Keep a small amount of RMB cash for emergencies and merchants that can process it.
- Install WeChat as a backup payment and messaging app if your itinerary depends on taxis, hotels, or local contacts.
Before you rely on this answer
China travel rules and app behavior can change by city, route, account, passport, airline, and local inspection practice. Treat this page as a traveler-friendly starting point, then verify official or provider details before booking or packing anything important.
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Frequently asked questions
Can foreigners use Alipay in China?
Yes, many foreign visitors can use Alipay with an overseas bank card, but card support and identity checks can vary by issuer and account.
Should tourists set up Alipay before arriving?
Yes. Install the app, link your card, and confirm login access before your flight so you are not troubleshooting on arrival.
Is Alipay enough as the only payment method for China?
No. It can be the main wallet for many daily purchases, but visitors should still keep a backup card, some RMB cash, and ideally a second mobile payment option.