Cheap China the Expat Way
Carrie Kirby RepostWhen I returned to China with my husband and friends in 2001 (after living there for a couple years in the 90s), I almost forgot the lessons I had learned about travel on the cheap in China. I picked up the phone and called a state-run tourism company, looking to rent a minibus to take a group of us to the Great Wall for an overnight campout. When given the price, I translated it into dollars and split it among my friends. I think it came to about $50-$100 a person, and at first we thought it would be worthwhile for a once-in-a-lifetime experience.
No, no, no.

Fortunately, before we booked it we chatted with a friend who was living there, who set us up with an independent driver with a van. We ended up paying the guy the same amount total as we were going to pay the travel company per person. And the driver was happy to get the job.
When we were living in China, nothing made us laugh harder than hearing what American tourists paid for guided trips and Western hotels. OK, not everyone is ready to live the way even middle class Chinese do, which is far below the standard of living we are accustomed to. And it can be scary to venture alone into a country where a very small percentage of the population can understand English. But if you are adventurous enough to travel indepently and live just a little like the locals do, you can have a lot of fun in China for very few renminbi (Chinese bucks).
Here are a ten ways to travel for less in China, in ascending order of courage required:
1) Avoid Western restaurants. Since eating foreign food in China can be a status symbol akin to eating French cuisine in the US, it's pricey. And often not very good. You'll pay less in many excellent Chinese restaurants than you will in below average Western ones.
2) Forgo a guide in major cities. Even if you speak no Chinese, you should have no trouble getting to and enjoying the Forbidden City and Great Wall in Beijing, the Shanghai Museum, and other major sites. They have English language audio tours, and you can get there by taxi. Hotel concierges can write out the Chinese characters for where you're going so the drivers will know where to go.
3) Start thinking in local currency as soon as possible. The sooner you realize that 50 renminbi is a lot more money than the $6 it exchanges for, the better. Six bucks is nothing, but 50RMB can be many things -- a pretty nice restaurant meal, a night in a hotel, a medium-to-long taxi ride. OK, my prices are a few years out of date but you get the idea.
4) Try to avoid being charged extra for being foreign, but understand that sometimes it's unavoidable. The average urban Chinese worker earns a few thousand dollars a year; migrant workers selling food in big cities make a fraction of that. So it's understandable that many people there see Americans as walking ATM machines. Also, at official sites such as the Forbidden City, paying the foreigner price is non-negotiable. But in other situations, you can bargain or just say no if someone tries to charge you more than the local rate. Dressing low-key without a lot of labels helps; if you feel comfortable claiming to be a student or a teacher it definitely helps, but that schtick isn't very believable if you don't speak any Chinese.
5) Take the train. China has an impressive rail network, especially compared to its highway network. As long as you avoid getting on an overcrowded train (no national holidays!), it's not a terribly uncomfortable way to travel, and it's ultra-affordable. Personally I love watching the countryside roll by through an open train window -- I've seen water buffaloes in the rice paddies, stopped in small villages and seen the most breathtaking scenery of my life. Another nice thing about riding Chinese trains is that you have hours and hours to hang out with ordinary locals and for them to warm up to you. Once someone who speaks some English turns up, you're bound to have some very interesting Q&A sessions.
6) Use accommodations and services that are not specifically for foreigners. The train is one of them. Another money saver is taking a Yangtze River cruise on a "Chinese" boat. You won't get English-language commentary and the cabins won't be as nice (OK, ours had roaches), but the price difference will be huge. The cheapest hotels are often not open to foreigners, but plenty of midrange and pretty darn cheap ones are.
7) Eat street food. The longer time you have to spend in China, the better idea this is. If you only have a few days, you probably want to be pretty careful about what you eat to avoid spending the whole trip in the bathroom. I have a handy rule for staying safe eating food sold on the street: If it came right off an open flame or out of a bot of boiling water or a very hot cloud of steam, it's good. Barbecued lamb skewers, dumplings and bowls of noodles can be enjoyed at ad-hoc roadside restaurants for a few pennies -- and the experience is priceless. For more cheap and tasty, hit a night market.
8) Take the public bus or one of the private minibuses running the same lines. OK, you really need the help of someone local in this endeavor because last time I was in Beijing you were not going to find an English language bus schedule posted. Maybe no schedule whatsoever. And the crowds can be intense. Once I almost got punched when a couple of passengers engaged in a fist fight although they could barely lift their arms due to the crowd.
9) Join up with a guided Chinese tour. You can get a very cheap trip to some sights outside of Beijing by signing up for a Chinese bus tour. This can be good for laughs -- both on your part on on the part of the Chinese folks on the bus. But there is a downside besides not being able to understand the tour: A lot of these trips stop at "the jade jewelry factory" or "the perfume factory" for some sales pushy presentations.
10) Rent or buy a bike. Many foreigners living in Chinese cities get around on bicycles, thereby avoiding some of the traffic congestion and possibly saving money (the high bike theft rate in Beijing might negate any savings). Biking in Chinese cities is quite dangerous, and you're not likely to find helmets for sale. Still, you have more freedom this way -- you can explore without having to negotiate ticket buying or worry about being cheated by an unscrupulous cab driver. And you will be seeing the cities the way the residents do.
Source: www.wisebread.com
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Need hotel tips booking via internet, districts to stay. Need list of stores to shop. Looking for silk beding.
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That's very good advice. To add one thing, if you know where to search for rates on Chinese airlines, you can travel from city to city for only a little more than the train. Check prices early. Not as pretty as the train, but if you care about time it helps.
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Thanks Carrie for showing me how to survive in China when you speak no Mandarin. I have been consistently fascinated as I've watched westerners, especially those on their own seemingly knowing where they are going [?]
I have the absolute luxury of a Chinese wife, so it's instructive to examine your suggestions for survival of a westerner in China and to have a relativley stress free time.
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All this so called "advice" is just basic common sense. If you can't work these things out for yourself then I suggest you stay at home in front of the television. Although, the article was kind of directed at Americans, and based on my travel experience they are pretty useless.
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I totally agree. Most of this information seems to be applicable to travel anywhere in the world if you want to save money, and really is common sense. I'm also surprised hostels didn't get a mention - many, especially in China if they are part of a hostelling group are amazing. I've stayed in ones that are better than some Chinese 4* hotels i've stayed in. They're not what they used to be when i first stayed in one as a 14 year old on a school trip to Spain!
People who can't think of this kind of stuff on their own really shouldn't be allowed a passport.
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Good advice, but then when you get the local rates, the foreigners complain about how dirty things are and how it compares to the west. A foreigner always wants it cheap cheap and then complain why it sucks. Pay peanuts get monkeys, if you can't afford it don't go.
Oh as for the food, Chinese food is oily, it's not that's it not clean, your body is not use to that much oil, that's why you end up in the bathroom. www.ddsclub.com,
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I have lived in China over 4 years and everything above is true,they still try to rip off because im a foreigner ,screw those greedy Chinese,but the majority welcome us and not all are greedy shope around for everything you can buy things for the same price as a Chinese national......No I dont speak Chinese but you can alwasy use body talk its works, feel safer here than in the UK or USA even at night.........
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You're joking, right? A bike? In that traffic? I won't even drive a car in China! (and yes, I have driven Paris and Zurich in the rush hour) :-D
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About joining up with a Chinese guided tour (9), it's not just on the Chinese tours that the "stop at 'the jade jewelry factory' or 'the perfume factory' for some sales pushy presentations". Same thing goes for the ones catered to foreign tourists. Except, possibly, as a foreign tourists you're more likely to pay more while getting a lower quality product.
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Having traveled China North to south and east to west over my `16 years or so in and out of China, as a teenager traveling by myself, a student traveling alone, or an old man now 86, I can say I have traveled by man pulled rickshaw, sedan chair, horse carriage sampan,bicycles bus, ambulance, train (all classes) and plane (in 1980 the planes were old Russian Bombers with the seats designed for orientals.
I enjoyed the article very much AND MY COMMENT IS: THE MODE OF TRAVEL DEPENDS ON THE COMFORT YOU WANT. Even into my sixties I enjoyed traveling with the Chinese in the hard seat class. A little Chinese goes a long way but it is fun. A lot of Chinese makes it enjoyable.
I now have a Chinese wife and let her do my buying, travel arrangements etc. She always gets the local price. If you have a close Chinese friend take him (her) with you. It will probably pay for his or her trip in savings and will let you in places you can not get in otherwise.
John Trimmer(Jonnie Che)




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