Hotels

How to book a hotel that can receive foreign guests

This is not a hotel database and it does not show live rates or inventory. It explains how transit travelers can reduce check-in risk by booking accommodation that can handle foreign passports and registration.

1. Why the hotel choice matters

Foreign guests in China need accommodation registration. Larger international hotels usually know the process, while some small hotels, guesthouses, or apartment-style stays may not be able or willing to register a foreign passport holder.

A weak hotel booking can create two problems: your first-night address may be hard to enter on the arrival card, and the front desk may delay or refuse check-in after you have already left the airport.

  • Do not assume every cheap listing can handle foreign passports.
  • Avoid first-night stays with unclear addresses, no front desk, or no late check-in policy.
  • For short transit stays, a predictable first night is more valuable than saving a small amount.

2. How to confirm foreign-guest handling

Use an international booking platform interface when possible, because listings aimed at inbound travelers are more likely to show English support, passport check-in notes, and customer service escalation paths.

Before booking a small or low-cost property, message the hotel or front desk directly. Ask whether they accept foreign passport holders, can register foreign guests with local police, and have 24-hour reception if your flight arrives late.

  • Search with filters for hotels that serve international travelers.
  • Ask: Can your hotel check in and register guests with foreign passports?
  • Ask: Can you provide the full Chinese address and front-desk phone number?

3. Prepare the first-night address in Chinese

Your first-night address is useful before and after arrival: it can appear in arrival-card preparation, taxi or DiDi navigation, hotel check-in, and emergency contact notes.

Save the hotel name, district, street address, and phone number in Chinese characters. English hotel names can be ambiguous in taxi apps or at airport taxi queues.

  • Keep the booking confirmation offline.
  • Save the Chinese hotel name and address as text, not only as a screenshot.
  • Use the same first-night address in the arrival-card workflow.

4. Price-range planning without live prices

Static guides should not quote live hotel prices because rates change by city, season, event dates, room type, cancellation policy, and platform inventory.

As a planning rule, airport hotels and central international-chain hotels usually cost more but reduce late-arrival risk; budget local hotels can be cheaper but need more confirmation before a foreign traveler relies on them for the first night.

  • Compare refundable and non-refundable rates before committing.
  • Pay attention to taxes, deposits, check-in time, and cancellation deadline.
  • For late arrivals, prioritize 24-hour reception and simple transport over the lowest listed price.

5. Cross-check with arrival-card and essentials

Once the hotel is chosen, reuse the same first-night details in the arrival-card tool and keep them ready for the arrival flow.

If the hotel changes after you submit or prepare arrival-card information, update the address and check whether your transport plan from the airport still works.

  • Arrival Card: first-night stay details.
  • Essentials: eSIM, payment, VPN, insurance, and transport backups.
  • Arrival guide: late-night airport-to-hotel sequence.