Why Your Travel eSIM Won't Be Enough in China (The +86 Number Problem)
Travel eSIMs for China have gotten very good. Fast data, instant activation, works in dozens of cities. If all you need is internet, they do the job.
The problem is that in China, "all you need is internet" is never really all you need. The moment you try to pay for something, book a train ticket, or call a DiDi — the apps ask for an SMS verification code. To a +86 number. Which your eSIM doesn't have.
This is the gap that catches most travelers off guard, usually at the worst possible moment.
What a data-only eSIM actually gives you
An eSIM sold for China travel connects you to a local carrier's data network — typically good 4G or 5G coverage, usable in major cities and on high-speed trains. You get an IP address that looks domestic, which means Chinese apps load fast and streaming services don't geo-block you.
What you do not get is a Chinese phone number. Your eSIM has no number associated with it at all, or it has a number from the carrier's home country that receives no SMS in China.
For browsing, maps, and messaging on apps where you're already logged in, this is fine. The wall appears the moment any Chinese service needs to verify who you are.
The SMS dependency in Chinese apps
Chinese consumer apps use SMS one-time passwords (OTP) more heavily than almost anywhere else. This isn't legacy infrastructure — it's a deliberate identity-anchoring layer. The logic is: if you have a real +86 number, you're a real, registered person. The number is your identity token.
Here's where that hits travelers:
Alipay and WeChat Pay — both use SMS verification during setup and whenever they detect a new device or unusual login. If you set everything up at home before traveling, you may arrive with working apps. But log in on a different device, get flagged by a risk check, or reinstall after a phone wipe — and you're back to needing that SMS.
DiDi (ride-hailing) — requires a Chinese phone number to register. The app won't let you past the sign-up screen without one. Foreign visitors without a +86 number either depend on someone else to call them a car, or they navigate taxis the old-fashioned way (harder than it sounds when drivers default to app dispatch).
12306 (national train tickets) — China's official rail ticketing system. International card payment has improved, but account registration requires SMS verification. Buying high-speed rail tickets for popular routes, especially around holidays, requires an active account with confirmed identity — meaning a verified phone number.
Hotel and restaurant mini-programs — many Chinese hotels, especially budget and mid-range chains, use WeChat mini-programs for check-in, key card activation, or room service. These inherit WeChat's phone number requirement.
The dual-SIM workaround — and why it's messier than it sounds
The standard advice for technically savvy travelers: keep your home SIM active for SMS, run the eSIM for data. Most modern phones support this. In theory, you get the best of both.
In practice, several things break this down:
Your home number is not a +86 number. Chinese apps don't just want any SMS — they want SMS to a mainland Chinese (+86) number. Alipay's International Edition will accept your foreign number for initial setup, but the mainland Alipay (which many local merchants use) and WeChat Pay registration for Chinese services specifically require +86.
Roaming costs and delays. If your home SIM is receiving SMS while abroad, you're either paying roaming rates or relying on your carrier's internet-based SMS forwarding. Both have reliability problems. A verification window of 60–90 seconds doesn't leave room for a delayed SMS.
App re-verification triggers. Chinese apps regularly force re-verification — after app updates, after a period of inactivity, after logging in from a new location. Each time, you need that +86 number ready and receiving SMS immediately. This is a background tax on your entire trip.
SIM slot conflicts. On phones with a physical SIM + eSIM setup, battery management and signal switching between carriers doesn't always behave predictably in China, where you may be switching between multiple carrier networks depending on city and carrier agreement.
The dual-SIM approach reduces the problem. It doesn't solve it.
What a real Chinese SIM actually solves
A genuine mainland Chinese SIM — a physical card with a registered +86 number — changes the situation substantially:
- You have a real phone number that Chinese apps recognize as a domestic account anchor
- SMS verification works instantly, on any network, with normal domestic SMS rates
- Apps that require registration with a Chinese number can be set up properly
- DiDi registration works
- WeChat Pay can be fully configured, not just the International Edition
- Hotel and transportation mini-programs function normally
This is the difference between being on the right side of China's identity infrastructure and working around it.
The tradeoff historically was that getting a Chinese SIM required being in China, speaking Chinese, showing your passport in a carrier store, and navigating a process that varies by carrier and city. Most travelers didn't have the time or language confidence for that on day one.
What the airport pickup process looks like
Several services now offer pre-registered Chinese SIMs collected at the airport. The key things to understand before booking:
Registration must happen before activation. Chinese law requires all SIM cards to be registered to a real identity. Legitimate airport SIM services pre-register the card on your behalf using your passport details, which you provide when you book. You shouldn't be handed an unregistered card and told to activate it yourself.
Pickup location matters. At Shanghai Pudong (PVG), the international arrivals hall exits into a large public area. At Beijing Capital (PEK), international arrivals are in Terminal 3. A good service will tell you exactly which floor, which counter zone, and what to look for — not just "find us in arrivals."
The difference between handing you a SIM and actually setting you up. A card in an envelope solves half the problem. The apps still need to be installed and configured before payment and transport work. Services that include hands-on setup — Alipay linked, WeChat Pay configured, DiDi registered — save you the hour of friction that typically follows.
Where KORA fits in
KORA's Arrival Pack is built around a real Chinese SIM with a +86 number — not a data-only eSIM. The card comes with a number and a data plan (plan options on koracn.com), and a KORA team member meets you at the Shanghai Pudong (PVG) airport counter to do the full setup: SIM installed, Alipay and WeChat Pay configured and linked to your card, essential apps ready.
You leave the terminal with a working +86 number, working mobile payment, and working transport — instead of discovering the SMS problem at your first taxi queue.
Reserve before you fly at koracn.com. The card is there when you land.
FAQ
Do I need a Chinese phone number for Alipay? The International Edition of Alipay accepts foreign numbers, but with lower caps and limited merchant compatibility. Full Alipay functionality — and WeChat Pay — requires a +86 number for registration and recurring verification.
My eSIM is working fine for data. Why can't I use DiDi? DiDi requires a Chinese phone number to create an account. No +86 number, no account — even if your data connection is perfect. This is a registration requirement, not a technical issue.
Can I buy a Chinese SIM at the airport myself? Yes — China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom all have airport counters. You'll need your passport, the staff may have limited English, and you'll leave with a data SIM but still need to set up payment apps separately. It's doable if you have time and patience. Pre-booking saves the queue.
Is an eSIM ever enough for China travel? If you're a frequent China visitor with apps already set up, a +86 number from a previous trip still active, and all accounts stable — yes, eSIM for data works well as a supplement. For first-time visitors or anyone who needs to set up payment from scratch, a real SIM with a +86 number is the more reliable starting point.
What happens if my Chinese SIM expires partway through my trip? Plan validity covers the SIM. If your data plan ends before you leave, you can top up through the carrier's app (in Chinese) or at a carrier store. KORA's plans are sized for typical trip lengths — check koracn.com for current options.
The short version
eSIMs for China are useful but incomplete. The SMS verification layer that underlies Chinese payment, transport, and ticketing apps specifically requires a real +86 number — not data, not a foreign number, not a VoIP workaround. Either arrive with one already set up, or pick one up the moment you land.
Check what's available at koracn.com before you fly.
Traveling to China soon? Kora is a local friend in your pocket — payments, SIM with a real +86 number, instant translation and honest recommendations, all in one chat.
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