Many foreign APPs either don’t work properly in China or work very differently once you arrive.
If you’re visiting Beijing,
these are the APPs you should download before your flight:
| APP | What It Does | Replaces |
|---|---|---|
| Alipay / WeChat Pay | Pays for almost everything | Your wallet |
| Didi | Ride-hailing | Uber |
| Baidu Maps | Navigation | Google Maps |
| Messaging + mini-APP ecosystem | ||
| Trip.com | Trains, hotels, flights | Expedia |
| Dianping | Restaurant discovery | Yelp |
If you only download two APPs before coming to Beijing, make it these.
China runs on QR codes. Convenience stores, cafés, subway stations, restaurants, fruit shops, street food stalls. Everybody scans.
For most travelers, Alipay is slightly easier to set up because foreign cards tend to connect more smoothly. But ideally, get both.

You type your destination in English, connect payment through Alipay or WeChat, and the APP handles the rest.

Google Maps technically works with a VPN, but the information is often outdated or incomplete in China. Subway directions can be unreliable, and walking routes sometimes make questionable life choices.
Baidu Maps is what locals actually use.
The English version still isn’t perfect, but it’s far more useful than trying to force Google Maps to function properly here.

WeChat is technically a messaging APP. In reality, locals use WeChat for everything — messaging, paying, booking, even scrolling social media. It’s China’s everything-APP. (WeChat Pay is just a function of WeChat, it’s not a seperate APP.)
But here’s the truth for foreigners: WeChat is hard to verify. The ID check often fails for non-Chinese users. And without verification, you can’t access payments or most mini-programs.
So what should you do?

For foreigners, Trip.com is still the simplest way to book things in China. Trains, hotels, flights, attraction tickets. Everything is in English, and international cards work properly.

If Google Reviews feels unreliable in China, it’s because locals barely use it. Dianping is the real restaurant APP here.
This is where people:

Alipay is usually the easiest option for foreign travelers because international cards connect more smoothly. WeChat Pay also works and is widely used by locals.
Technically yes with a VPN, but it’s unreliable. Baidu Maps is much more accurate for navigation, subway routes, and local businesses. Apple Maps can also be good.
Trip.com is currently the most foreigner-friendly option thanks to its English interface, international payment support, and easy booking process.
4️⃣ What if I can’t verify my WeChat account as a foreigner?
Skip it. Use Alipay instead. Alipay is easier to verify with a foreign credit card and covers payments, Didi, bike-share, and most mini-programs you’ll need in Beijing and everywhere in China.
5️⃣ Can I use my home country’s Uber or food delivery APPs in Beijing?
No. Uber doesn’t work in China. You’ll need Didi for rides and Meituan for food delivery. Both can be accessed through Alipay mini-programs — no separate download needed.
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