Why this guide exists
The single biggest anxiety a Muslim traveler has before a China trip is “where and how do I pray five times a day, especially in a country where most venues aren't set up for it?” The right answer is: China is more Muslim-friendly than you think — there are working mosques in every Tier-1 city, Jummah is held in Chinese, prayer apps work, and wudu is doable in any hotel bathroom. But the answer is also scattered across Reddit threads, mosque websites, and a dozen half-accurate blog posts.
This page is the short version. The full guide (in the kit) has 8 sections: the iman app recommendation, what to expect at a Chinese mosque (Hanafi-dominant, Mandarin-language, courtyard architecture, informal dress), wudu in 6 scenarios, Qibla direction cards, Jummah schedules, a mosque directory with amenities checklist, a du'a library with Arabic + transliteration + English, and 13 Mandarin phrases for the mosque.
Note: this is a free evergreen guide. Solat is one of two daily pillars of a Muslim's trip — Halal essentials covers the food side. Both live in the kit.
What's in the full guide
Six sections in the deep-dive. Each card below jumps straight to that section.
Prayer times & Qibla — use the iman app
A free, Muslim-made app that works in mainland China without a VPN. Get accurate azan reminders, Qibla compass, and Quran — by a Muslim developer, not a foreign-owned one.
How to fit in as a Muslim in China
China's mosques are different from SEA, Turkey, and the Gulf: Hanafi-dominant, Mandarin-language, Chinese-courtyard architecture, and informal dress. 13 things to know before you walk in.
Wudu (ablution) — anywhere
Wudu in a hotel, mall, train station, park, or restaurant. The 6 most common scenarios plus tayammum as a last resort.
Qibla direction per city
The bearing in degrees from true north, distance to Mecca, and a compass-rose visual for all 10 cities.
Jummah & mosque directory
Friday prayer times for major mosques, the full mosque directory, and an amenities checklist.
Du’a library & Chinese phrases
Pre-prayer, post-prayer, travel, Quranic, and moment du’as — plus 13 Mandarin phrases for the mosque.
Quick honest take
The two things that surprise new Muslim travelers in China the most: (1) how much halal infrastructure already exists — Shanghai has 5+ mosques, Beijing has 7+, Xi'an's Muslim Quarter is a centuries-old halal hub; (2) how reliable the iman app is in mainland China — it works without a VPN, supports JAKIM / KEMENAG / MUIS calculation methods SEA travelers already know, and is made by a Muslim developer. The catch: the mosques are concentrated in older neighborhoods, the khutbah is in Mandarin, and the dress code is more casual than Turkey or the Gulf. This guide gives you the what-to-expect before you walk in.
Open the full guide
The complete 8-section guide is in the kit: the iman app recommendation, what to expect at a Chinese mosque, wudu in 6 scenarios, Qibla direction cards, Jummah schedule, mosque directory with amenities, du'a library with Arabic + transliteration + English, and 13 Mandarin phrases.
Open the full guideFree with a kit account · takes ~2 minutes to sign up