
I learned this on a transfer night, standing at a hotel front desk with a confirmed booking on my phone and my passport in my hand. The room existed, the booking existed, but the check-in still slowed down because the passport process was not as automatic as I had imagined.
That changed how I book hotels in China. I no longer start with the cheapest room. I first check whether the hotel looks used to foreign passport check-in.
The first night is not the place to test uncertainty
The first night, a late arrival, or a city-transfer night is when small hotel problems feel bigger. You are carrying luggage, your phone matters for maps and payment, and you usually have less patience left.
For those nights, choose stability: tourist districts, business areas, chain business hotels, international brands, or places with recent foreign-traveler reviews. Smaller local hotels can still be useful later in the trip, especially when you arrive in daylight and have backup options.
What to check before booking
Look for reviews mentioning passport, foreigner, check-in, or front desk. Then look at the hotel type and area. Finally, send one short message through the platform: can a foreign passport be used for check-in, and what time will you arrive?
If the answer is clear, continue. If it is vague or pushes you to a phone call you cannot handle in Chinese, choose another hotel.
If the front desk gets stuck
Do not spend all your energy explaining at the counter. Show the platform order, contact platform support, and start looking for nearby immediately bookable hotels if there is no quick progress.
The goal is not to prove who is right. The goal is to get a room for tonight.
Saveable summary
| Situation | Safer move |
|---|---|
| First night or transfer night | Choose a stable hotel type |
| Before booking | Confirm foreign passport check-in |
| Reading reviews | Search passport, foreigner, check-in |
| Front desk problem | Contact platform support and search backup |
