AsiaBeijing

China

Last updated: April 2026

MODERATE COSTPLAN VISAGOOD INTERNET

Overview

What remote workers notice first about China.

Visa categories strict — tourism / business / work — no incidental work on wrong visa class

Mobile payments dominate — WeChat Pay / Alipay — local bank + phone number usually required

Firewall — plan compliant remote access — client security policies

Tier-1 cities expensive — air quality seasonal — metro world-class

Visa Spotlight

The Primary Choice

Tourist (L) / Transit

China for remote workers: Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen — visas, mobile payments, VPN reality, cost of living, and practical tips for 2026.

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    Income proof

    Foreign remote income documentation

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    Clean record

    Police certificate where required

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    Local address

    Lease or accommodation agreement

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    Insurance

    Health coverage per application rules

Duration: As stamped — itinerary-linked·Fees: Embassy / CVASC fees

Requirements: Itinerary — hotel bookings — onward travel — no local employment

Your passport matters

Entry and stay rules depend on citizenship and purpose of visit. Always confirm the latest requirements for your nationality with official government sources before you travel.

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Application process

Chinese embassies and CVASC centres publish category checklists — invitation letters must match itinerary — biometrics — rejections happen — allow buffer before flights.

Residence permits — police registration within 24 hours of address changes — employers handle work permit workflow — do not work before permits clear.

Cost of Living

Average Rent
$700–$2,300/month — tier-1 core vs fringe
1BR Apartment (range)
Food & Dining
$250–$500/month — canteen vs imports
Groceries & dining out
Getting Around
$40–$90/month — metro + occasional Didi
Local transport
Coworking
$120–$280/month
Desk / membership

Beijing lifestyle index

Estimated monthly budget for a high-quality nomadic lifestyle including a modern apartment, co-working, and weekend trips—based on the guide's worked example where available.

$1,800
Per Month Total

Example month — Shanghai, Jing'an fringe:

Rent: $1,400 Utilities + fibre: $140 Metro + Didi: $100 Food + Meituan: $400 Coworking: $180 Insurance: $100 Weekend travel: $200 Misc: $120

Indicative total: ~$2,640 — Shenzhen or Beijing similar bands; tier-2 lower.

Top Nomad Hubs

Shanghai

Shanghai

International finance — French Concession lanes — metro dense — humid summers

Avg rent$900–$2,400/month
CoworkingWeWork, naked Hub, Xintiandi cafés with fibre
Explore neighbourhoods
Beijing

Beijing

Government and tech — hutong charm — winter smog — ring-road commutes

Avg rent$800–$2,200/month
CoworkingSOHO towers, Zhongguancun hubs
Explore neighbourhoods
Shenzhen

Shenzhen

Hardware and startups — Hong Kong adjacency — subtropical — fast pace

Avg rent$700–$1,900/month
CoworkingTencent corridor coworking, Sea World cafés
Explore neighbourhoods

Neighbourhood picks

Shanghai

Jing'an / Former French Concession

Walkable — cafés — premium rent — verify landlord registration for police check-in.

Shenzhen

Nanshan / Shekou

International schools — sea breeze — commute to HK border — fibre building certs.

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Banking & cash

Major banks: ICBC, Bank of China — accounts need residence documentation — tourists rely on foreign cards in limited contexts — UnionPay dominant.

WeChat / Alipay — link local bank after KYC — cash rare in tier-1 — small vendors may still be cash-only in alleys.

Expert tip: Compare ATM fees and prefer bank-owned machines in city centres.
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Health & safety

International hospitals in Shanghai (United Family), Beijing — insurance with direct billing — air quality apps — heatstroke in summer.

Emergency: 120 — private ambulance if insured — language barrier outside intl hospitals — carry insurance cards translated.

Note: Private clinics in Beijing are often a practical choice for expats where available.

Culture & lifestyle

Business cards two-handed — hierarchy in meetings — gift-giving etiquette — modest public behaviour — queue forming — national holidays move cities — patience with bureaucracy — avoid sensitive political topics in mixed company.

The real talk

The advantages

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Infrastructure scale

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Food diversity

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High-speed travel

The challenges

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Visa friction

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Firewall / tooling

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Air quality cycles

Join the conversation

Connect with nomads and locals—search these hubs to get started.

Frequently asked questions

Chinese visa categories are strict — incidental remote work exists in a grey zone legally — long bases should align with proper permits — consult immigration counsel.

Tax snapshot

Chinese tax residency and worldwide income rules apply to residents — days tests and domicile — treaty relief depends on home country — any long-stay work arrangement requires licensed tax counsel — do not rely on informal forum advice.

Community tips

Real-name SIM registration — Alipay/WeChat wallet setup early — carry passport for hotel check-ins — VPN legality is nuanced — follow employer IT policy — pollution masks in winter — high-speed rail for city pairs.

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