How to Use Alipay and WeChat Pay in China as a Foreigner (2025–2026 Guide)
You land in Shanghai, try to pay for a taxi, and the driver holds up his phone screen. No card terminal. No cash slot. Just a QR code. Welcome to China's cashless reality — where two apps handle almost every transaction, and neither was designed with foreign visitors in mind.
The good news: foreigners can use both apps now. The bad news: "can" and "works smoothly" are different things.
Why cash barely works anymore
China didn't go cashless gradually — it went fast, then went almost total. In most Chinese cities today, street food vendors, convenience stores, taxis, restaurants, and even hospitals default to WeChat Pay or Alipay. Merchants are legally required to accept cash, but in practice many staff genuinely don't know how to process it, and some small stalls don't keep change.
Budget for 95% of your daily spending to run through one of these two apps. Plan for maybe 500–1,000 RMB in physical cash as backup — enough for genuine emergencies, not enough to live on.
What changed for foreign visitors
Before 2023, foreigners were largely locked out without a Chinese bank card. That changed. Both Alipay and WeChat Pay now allow international Visa, Mastercard, and some other cards to be linked directly to a Chinese-market account. The policy shift was real and significant.
What that means in practice: you no longer need a Chinese bank account to pay. Your own debit or credit card works as the funding source.
What that doesn't fix: the setup process. Both apps are primarily built for the Chinese domestic market. Menu flows are in Chinese by default, verification steps can time out, and if anything goes wrong during setup, error messages assume you read Mandarin and have a mainland support number to call.
Setting up Alipay as a foreigner
Alipay has an International version (支付宝国际版) and a mainland Chinese version (支付宝). They are different apps. The International Edition is designed for tourists but has a lower spending cap — usually around 50,000 RMB cumulative, which is fine for a holiday but can hit limits on longer stays.
To link your card:
- Download the International version from your home App Store
- Register with your email or phone number (international numbers accepted)
- Complete identity verification — you'll need your passport number
- Add your international card under "Payment Methods"
Where it breaks: identity verification occasionally fails for passports from certain countries, or times out and leaves the account in a pending state. If this happens, the in-app support flow is almost entirely in Chinese.
Spending limit per transaction with an international card is typically capped lower than for accounts linked to Chinese bank cards. Most day-to-day spending falls comfortably under this, but check before a larger purchase.
Setting up WeChat Pay as a foreigner
WeChat Pay lives inside the WeChat app — there's no separate payment app to download. If you don't already have WeChat, you need to create an account, which requires a phone number for verification and a confirmation from an existing WeChat user with a certain number of contacts (the "invite" step). For travelers who don't know WeChat users, this is a genuine obstacle.
Once your account exists:
- Open WeChat → Me → Pay → Wallet → Cards → Add Bank Card
- Enter your international card details
- Verify with an SMS code sent to your registered number
The SMS step is where it can break — more on that below.
The phone number problem neither app tells you about
Both apps use SMS verification. Not just at setup — repeatedly, whenever you log in on a new device, change settings, or hit a risk trigger. This is where many foreign visitors hit a wall they didn't see coming.
If the number you registered with is your home SIM, and your home SIM is sitting in airplane mode or roaming at ¥50 per SMS, that verification code may never arrive. Or it arrives thirty seconds after the one-minute window expired.
If you have a data-only eSIM (more on this in a moment), you have no number at all — which means the verification step is simply impossible.
The practical fix: have a working +86 Chinese phone number before you complete app setup. That number becomes your account anchor, and everything that follows is more stable.
What the airport setup experience actually looks like
If you arrive at Pudong (PVG) or Beijing Capital (PEK) needing to sort payment from zero, the reality is: you're doing it on your feet, probably jet-lagged, with your luggage, in a crowded arrivals hall with patchy WiFi.
That's genuinely hard. The apps assume a calm environment, stable internet, and fluency in the verification UX. Most travelers who struggle don't struggle because the apps are broken — they struggle because setup under airport conditions is just friction-heavy.
One option is to sort everything before you fly, using your home WiFi and your home SIM for the initial verification. That works reasonably well if your passport verification clears cleanly and your card links without errors.
The other option is to have a real person do it with you on arrival.
Where KORA fits in
KORA's Arrival Pack is specifically built for this moment — the 30-minute window between landing and leaving the terminal. A real person from the KORA team meets you at the Shanghai Pudong airport counter, installs and configures Alipay and WeChat Pay on your phone, links your own card, and makes sure everything is working before you step outside.
The pack also includes a real Chinese SIM with a +86 number (not a data-only eSIM — see below), which solves the SMS verification problem at the root. Plans and pricing are on koracn.com — options run from short-trip through long-stay.
This isn't a upsell. If you're comfortable doing the setup yourself with a stable connection and some patience, do it yourself. But if you want it done and confirmed before you leave the terminal, that's what the service is for.
FAQ
Do I need a Chinese bank account to use Alipay or WeChat Pay? No — since the 2023 policy update, both apps accept international Visa and Mastercard directly. You don't need a Chinese bank account. You do need to complete identity verification with your passport.
Can I just use my contactless card everywhere in China? Occasionally, in international hotels and some larger chains. In daily life — street food, local restaurants, taxis, convenience stores — QR code payment is the norm and card terminals are rare. Contactless alone is not enough.
What's the spending limit on Alipay with a foreign card? The International Edition has a cumulative limit (typically around 50,000 RMB for identity-verified accounts) and lower per-transaction caps than domestic accounts. For a typical holiday it's not a problem. For extended stays, upgrading verification or linking a Chinese bank card later raises the ceiling.
WeChat is asking me to get a friend to verify my account. What do I do? The "friend verification" step is WeChat's anti-spam gate for new accounts — you need an existing user with 6+ months of activity and a certain contact count to confirm you. Ask a friend who uses WeChat, or contact KORA before you fly — sorting this before you land is easier than in the arrivals hall.
Is it safe to link my real card to these apps? Both platforms use standard card tokenization and are used by hundreds of millions of people daily. The security architecture is comparable to Apple Pay or Google Pay. The practical risk isn't security — it's that if your account gets flagged or locked for any reason, support is in Chinese.
Before you fly
China's cashless system is genuinely good once you're inside it. The friction is almost entirely at setup. Getting both apps installed, verified, and funded before you land — or having someone sort it when you land — means the rest of your trip runs smoothly.
Check koracn.com if you want a look at the Arrival Pack. It's one counter stop, and you leave connected.
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