Why this guide exists
“Can I drive in China as a foreigner?” is one of the most-asked questions by travelers planning a trip — and the answer is almost always wrong on the rest of the internet. Most guides say you need an International Driving Permit (you don't, alone), or that you can't drive as a tourist (you can), or that the process takes months (it takes about 2 weeks).
The truth: a Chinese driver's license is reachable for any short-stay visitor, the permit office accepts a hotel address, and the road-trip routes in this country are the single best reason to skip the bullet train for at least one leg of your trip. This page is the short version; the full guide (in the kit) has the 9 sections, the rental company matrix, the cost breakdown, the route catalog, and the China vs Japan vs Korea comparison.
Note: this is a free evergreen guide. The Plus tier has a separate Drivers & help product for vetted local driver contacts — different thing.
What's in the full guide
Six sections in the deep-dive. Each card below jumps straight to that section.
Why driving is awesome in China
Scenery, freedom, EV network, and the only way to see the country outside Tier-1 cities.
Who can drive & how to get a permit
Any short-stay visitor can. The 5-step permit process, plus the place-of-stay address workaround.
Rental companies & cars you can rent
Hertz, 神州, 携程, 飞猪, plus EV specialists. Economy, SUV, EV — what to pick and why.
How much it costs
Daily rental, insurance, tolls, fuel vs charging, parking. Real CNY bands (low / typical / high).
Where to drive
12 road-trip routes: G318 Sichuan-Tibet, Yunnan, Hainan loop, Xinjiang Silk Road, and more.
How it compares to Japan and Korea
IDP rules, English tests, rental costs, road quality. China wins on most of these.
Quick honest take
The single best reason to self-drive in China is access: the Sichuan-Tibet highway, the Yunnan mountain loops, the Hainan island, the Xinjiang Silk Road, the Guizhou minority villages — these are unreachable by train in any practical sense. A rental car gets you to all of them. The other best reason is cost: a mid-size SUV rents for ¥200–500/day and a full road trip is cheaper than the equivalent train + Didi + tour combination. The catch is paperwork: budget 2 weeks for the permit, and learn the place-of-stay workaround before you fly.
Open the full guide
The complete 9-section guide is in the kit: the 5-step permit process, the place-of-stay workaround, 8+ rental companies, 4 car classes, 6 cost categories, 12 routes, and the China vs Japan vs Korea comparison.
Open the full guideFree with a kit account · takes ~2 minutes to sign up