WeChat Isn't an App. It's China's Operating System.
In most countries, you use 15–20 apps for daily life. In China, you use one: WeChat. It handles messaging, payments, food delivery, ride-hailing, government services, banking, social media, and work communication. Over 1 billion people use it for everything, and if you don't have it installed, you're functionally offline in China.
This guide covers what you need to know to use WeChat (and the broader Chinese app ecosystem) as a digital nomad — from setup to daily workflows.
WeChat: The Non-Negotiable App
What it does (all of it):
- Messaging and voice/video calls (replaces WhatsApp, Telegram, iMessage)
- WeChat Pay (replaces credit cards, cash, and bank transfers)
- Mini-Programs (replaces dozens of standalone apps)
- Moments (social feed, replaces Instagram)
- Official Accounts (news, brands, replaces newsletters)
- Work groups (replaces Slack for many Chinese companies)
- File sharing and document collaboration
Setup before you arrive:
- Download WeChat and register with your international phone number
- Complete identity verification (passport photo may be required)
- Link a Visa or Mastercard for WeChat Pay (foreign cards accepted since 2023)
- Ask a friend already in China to verify your account if prompted
WeChat Pay: Your Daily Payment Method
Daily reality: You'll scan QR codes 10–20 times a day. Coffee shops, restaurants, metro tickets, bike sharing, convenience stores, even some street performers. Cash is technically accepted everywhere but practically unnecessary in cities.
WeChat Pay limits and setup details vary by card type and account status. For the complete breakdown of limits, fees, and setup steps—including when to use Alipay instead—see:
💰 Deep dive: Alipay & WeChat Pay Setup for Foreigners — Complete Guide →
The short version: Both work everywhere. Link your card before arriving, test it on your first day, and you're set.
Mini-Programs: The Hidden Gem
WeChat Mini-Programs are lightweight apps that run inside WeChat — no downloading, no app store, no storage space. You scan a QR code and the program opens instantly. This is how you'll handle most daily tasks.
How it works: Scan QR code → Mini-Program opens → Browse (tap ... → Translate to English) → Order/book → Pay with linked card
Essential Mini-Programs for daily life:
| Category | Mini-Program | What It Does |
|---|---|---|
| Food delivery | Meituan (美团) | ~70% market share. Huge restaurant selection. 34-min average delivery |
| Food delivery | Ele.me (饿了么) | ~30% market share. Alibaba-owned. Competitive pricing |
| Rides | DiDi (滴滴) | ~70% ride-hailing market. Dominant player. English app available. Accepts international cards |
| Bike sharing | Meituan Bike / Hello Bike | Unlock bikes by scanning QR. Pay per ride (1–2 RMB) |
| Train booking | 12306 | Official railway booking. Fee-free (unlike Trip.com at 5–10% markup) |
| Flight/hotel | Trip.com / Ctrip / Fliggy | English interfaces. Book flights, hotels, HSR tickets |
| Reviews | Dianping (大众点评) | China's Yelp. Restaurant reviews, photos, ratings, bookings |
| Government | Various city services | Residence registration, permits, utility payments |
The Full Chinese App Toolkit
Beyond WeChat, these apps round out your daily digital life:
Maps (essential — Google Maps doesn't work without VPN)
- Amap (高德地图): The best. Accurate metro routes, walking navigation, real-time traffic. Chinese interface but intuitive
- Baidu Maps: Backup. Slightly less intuitive but reliable
- Google Maps (offline only): Download maps before arrival for basic reference. No live data without VPN
Food & Reviews
- Dianping (大众点评): Filter by "Foreigner-friendly" and "English menu available" tags. Trust user photos over ratings. 4.5+ stars = safe bet. Skip below 4.0
- Xiaohongshu (小红书): "Instagram of China" — lifestyle, food, and travel reviews. 100M+ users. Great for finding hidden restaurant gems and local recommendations
Shopping
- Taobao: Amazon of China. Everything, including imported goods. International delivery options
- JD.com: Faster shipping, more premium products. Better for electronics
- Pinduoduo: Discount option. Flash deals, group buying
Communication (alternatives to WeChat)
- DingTalk: Alibaba's enterprise chat. Some companies use it instead of WeChat for work
- QQ: Older messaging platform. Still used for business verification and some communities
Quick Translation Tips
WeChat's built-in translation works for casual interactions: long-press any message to translate, or use the "Scan" feature for signs and menus. For serious translation (contracts, medical documents), use Google Translate via VPN or Baidu Translate.
Safety and Scam Awareness
Verified Mini-Programs: Always check for the "Official" tag (blue checkmark) before entering payment information in a Mini-Program. Fake Mini-Programs exist.
Merchant QR codes: Blue merchant QR codes are verified. Be cautious of hand-printed or taped-over QR codes at small vendors — they could redirect to scam accounts.
WeChat friend requests: Don't accept random friend requests. Scammers use WeChat to send phishing links. Only accept requests from people you've met or been introduced to.
Transaction receipts: WeChat Pay keeps a full transaction history in your wallet. Check it weekly to catch unauthorized charges.
This guide is informational only. App features, transaction limits, and payment acceptance change frequently. Verify current information with official WeChat and Alipay documentation. Not legal or financial advice.
Back to the full guide: China: The Ultimate Digital Nomad Guide (2026) →