Accommodation Guide

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🏠 Welcome to the Great Housing Hunt

So, you’re coming to China. First off – congrats! 🎉 Now, let’s talk about the four walls that will hold your midnight study sessions, your first attempts at cooking mapo tofu, and your jet-lagged 3 AM Netflix binges.

Whether you’re a student hunting for the cheapest dorm, an employee seeking a relocation package, a dependent looking for family-friendly spaces, or a tourist wanting a cozy hostel – this guide is your new best friend.

Interactive Alert: Before we dive deep, take this 10-second quiz to find your housing type in China.
👉 Comment below with your result:
A) I love chaos and low prices → Hostel/Shared dorm.
B) I need quiet & my own key → Studio apartment.
C) I’m bringing kids & a visa → Family compound.
D) I’m here for 3 days → Service apartment/hotel.


1. For Students: Dorm Life vs. Off-Campus Adventure

Most universities in China (Tsinghua, Peking, Fudan, SJTU) offer international student dorms. They’re cheap, safe, and often include a “laundry ayi” who will adopt you.

đŸ›ïž University Dorm Pros:

  • Cost: „500–2,000/month (≈ $70–280 USD). Utilities often included.

  • Social life: Your roommate might become your travel buddy.

  • Location: Usually on campus or a 10-min walk.

⚠ Dorm Cons:

  • Curfews (some close at 11 PM!).

  • Shared bathrooms (bring flip-flops).

  • No guests overnight in conservative unis.

Pro Tip: Ask your university’s International Student Office for the “Foreign Expert Building” – sometimes they let students rent there for a bit more privacy.

đŸ™ïž Renting Off-Campus (Students with higher budgets)

Use apps like Ziroom (è‡Ș橂) or Lianjia (é“Ÿćź¶).
Interactive question: Would you rather walk 2 minutes to class (dorm) or 20 minutes for a private kitchen? Vote in the comments!


2. For Employees & Expats: The Art of Not Getting Scammed

You’ve got a job offer in Shenzhen or Shanghai. Great! Now, never pay a deposit without seeing the apartment in person or via a live video call.

🔑 Step-by-Step for Professionals:

  1. Get a local Chinese phone number (you’ll need it for apps).

  2. Use a legit agent – 50% of the first month’s rent is standard.

  3. Contract checklist:

    • English + Chinese version (both signed).

    • Deposit = max 2 months’ rent (refundable).

    • Utility bill split clearly stated.

🏱 Best Areas for Expats (by city):

  • Beijing: Sanlitun (fun) or Shunyi (family-friendly).

  • Shanghai: Jing’an (hip) or Gubei (Japanese/Korean community).

  • Guangzhou: Zhujiang New Town (modern).

  • Chengdu: Tongzilin (laid-back).

đŸ”„Â Interactive Challenge: Share your “worst housing story in China” in the comments. The funniest one gets a shoutout in our next newsletter.


3. For Dependents (Spouses & Families)

Moving with kids? Don’t rent sight unseen. Schools matter more than subway lines.

🏡 Family-Friendly Checklist:

  • Elevator building (5th floor without lift = no).

  • Near an international school (bus route available).

  • Parks & play areas (check for smog-filtered indoor playgrounds).

  • Foreign-registration at police station (required within 24h of moving).

đŸ›ïž Where to find furnished family apartments:

  • SmartShanghai (for Shanghai).

  • The Beijinger classifieds.

  • WeChat groups – search “Expats in [City Name]”.

Pro Tip for dependents: Get a “Green Card” (Foreign Permanent Resident ID) if eligible – it makes renting much smoother.


4. For Tourists: Hostels, Hotels, and Homestays (Oh My!)

You’re here for 2 weeks of Great Wall selfies and dumplings. Don’t overcomplicate it.

🏹 Quick Picks:

  • Budget („50–150/night): Mingtown Hostels (great for solo travelers).

  • Mid-range („200–500): Hanting Express or Home Inn (Chinese chains, clean).

  • Luxury („800+): W Hotels, Rosewood, or a qiju (airbnb alternative) via Tujia.

⚠ Important: Foreigners cannot stay in unlicensed hostels. Always check that the hotel has a blue “Foreigners Allowed” sign at reception. No sign = no sleep.

🧭 Interactive Map Idea:

Imagine a clickable map of China – Hover over a city and see the best budget-to-luxury stay. (We’ll build this if you ask for it in comments!)


5. Apps & Tools You MUST Download Before Arrival

App Purpose English? Free?
WeChat Communication + paying rent ✅ Yes ✅
Ziroom Long-term rentals (no agent fee) 🟡 Some ✅
Didi Taxi to view apartments ✅ Yes ✅
Mafengwo Tourist homestays 🟡 Basic ✅
SmartShanghai Expats listings ✅ Yes ✅

Pro Tip: Learn to say “Duƍ shǎo qiĂĄn yÄ« gĂš yuĂš?” (How much per month?) – locals will respect you.


6. Red Flags to Avoid (Read This Twice)

đŸš©Â “Pay first, see later” – Scam.
đŸš©Â No contract in English – Walk away.
đŸš©Â “Foreigner price” – If it’s 30% higher than local listings, negotiate.
đŸš©Â “We don’t register with police” – Illegal. You need a Temporary Residence Form for your visa.

📱 Share this section with a friend coming to China. You might save them „10,000.


7. Your Action Plan (Copy-Paste Checklist)

✅ 2 months before: Join city-specific Facebook/WeChat groups.
✅ 1 month before: Shortlist 5-10 apartments on Ziroom/Lianjia.
✅ 2 weeks before: Ask your employer/university for a local contact.
✅ Arrival week: Stay in a hotel for 3 days while apartment hunting.
✅ Day of signing: Take photos of every scratch on the wall (timestamped).


💬 Final Interactive Prompt

You made it to the end – high five! ✋

Now, I need your help to make this guide even better.
👉 Comment below:

  1. Which city in China are you moving to (or dreaming of)?

  2. What’s one question about housing that we didn’t answer?

Love this guide? Share it on WeChat Moments or with your study abroad group. The more we help each other, the fewer housing horror stories we’ll have.

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