Booking & paperwork?
Booking China travel from abroad has two friction points: the visa application (for nationalities still requiring one — most of Africa, the Middle East, much of Latin America and several Asian markets; check the visa-checker in Stage 1 for your specific passport) and train ticket purchase via the foreigner-confusing 12306 app (the official Chinese rail booking system).
The 4 articles below address both. The visa photo cropper is a client-side tool — drag/zoom inside the 33×48mm L-visa aspect frame and download a 354×472px export with white background fill, no upload, no signup. The US-citizen-specific visa guide walks through the Houston/SF/NYC/Chicago/LA consulate application flow — the United States is one of the four nationalities still outside the 30-day visa-free list, so this article gets the most traffic in this stage. The 12306 English guide is a 14-screenshot walkthrough of the official app (register, verify passport, search, book, pay) — once you've done it once it's straightforward, but the first time is non-obvious. The 12306-vs-Trip.com comparison is for travelers debating whether the ¥10-30 service fee on Trip.com is worth the cleaner English UX (often yes for first-timers).
The ~38 nationalities now on 30-day visa-free entry can skip the visa steps entirely and go straight to the 12306 articles. The four nationalities still on 240-hour transit (Czech Republic, Lithuania, Mexico, United States) also skip the visa application but should pre-read the transit guide in Stage 4 first for the third-country onward ticket requirement and port restrictions.
Read in order(4 in this stage)
Frequently asked
Should I book trains on 12306 or Trip.com?
12306 is the source of truth — every train ticket sold in China originates from the 12306 system. Trip.com resells the same inventory in cleaner English UX for a ¥10-30 service fee per ticket. Try 12306 first (the English mode is now usable + accepts foreign passports + foreign credit cards). Switch to Trip.com only if 12306 frustrates you, or for time-pressured first-time bookings.
Why does the China visa photo need to be exactly 33×48mm?
The Chinese government's L-visa photo spec is 33mm wide × 48mm tall, with specific face-size and background-color requirements (full white, no shadows). Photos that fail spec at the consulate cost time and money to redo. Our client-side cropper handles the aspect ratio + white-background composite for you — no upload or signup needed.
How early can I apply for a Chinese visa?
Most Chinese consulates accept L-visa applications up to 3 months before your planned entry date. Lead times vary by consulate and time of year — 4-6 weeks is normal in 2026 for US applicants (the US is one of only four nationalities still outside the 30-day visa-free list, so US consulate workloads stay heavy). Plan to submit at least 4 weeks before departure to be safe.
Are visa-free travelers exempt from train ticket real-name booking?
No — real-name booking applies regardless of visa status. You enter your passport number when buying any China train ticket, and the gate agent at the station scans your passport to verify it matches the ticket. Visa-free entry (the ~38 nationalities on 30-day visa-free, plus the four nationalities using 240-hour transit) just removes the consulate step from your trip planning; the booking workflow inside China is identical.
All 8 decision stages
From “Should I go?” through “Heading home?” — the full 8-stage decision journey for foreign visitors planning a China trip.
Back to homepage stage mapOr jump straight to booking
For decision-stage research we own the editorial layer; for booking, we recommend Trip.com — China's largest English-language travel platform.
Stage hubs at China for Travelers aggregate the editorial articles, tools, and planned future content for each phase of a 2-month China trip-planning arc. Items marked “Planned” have no link yet and will unlock once the underlying article ships. Last reviewed: 2026-06-21.