
There’s a moment every first-time visitor to China eventually experiences. You’re standing at a street food stall in some narrow alley, the smell of something extraordinary drifting past you, and the vendor looks up with a smile and says something you can’t quite catch. You smile back. You point. You get lucky.
But imagine if you could say just a few words of Mandarin in that moment. Not a paragraph — just a phrase or two. Suddenly everything changes. You become a guest rather than a tourist. The conversation that follows might be brief and broken, but it’s real, and in China, that matters more than you’d expect.
This guide covers the most useful Mandarin phrases for first-time travellers to China, organised by situation: greetings, navigation, food, shopping and emergencies. You don’t need to memorise all of them. Pick the sections most relevant to your trip and start there.
Why Even a Few Mandarin Phrases Change Your Trip
English is spoken in the lobbies of major hotels and at the main tourist attractions in cities like Beijing, Shanghai and Chengdu. But leave those islands of familiarity — step into a local market, a neighbourhood restaurant, a rural train station — and you’ll quickly discover that English has very little presence in everyday Chinese life.
That’s not a problem. It’s actually what makes travelling in China genuinely interesting. But it does mean that a handful of Mandarin phrases isn’t just a nice bonus — it’s the difference between getting what you need and spending twenty minutes trying to communicate via mime.
More importantly, there’s a cultural dimension worth understanding. In China, making the effort to speak even a little of the language is deeply appreciated. It signals respect. It signals that you came as a guest, not just a visitor. The response you get from local people when you attempt Mandarin — even imperfectly — is almost universally warm. If you’d like to understand more about why Mandarin is genuinely worth learning beyond the trip, there are more compelling reasons than most people realise.
1. Greetings and Polite Basics
These six phrases are your social foundation. Learn them before you board the plane. A simple xièxie delivered with a genuine smile will carry you further than any phrasebook, and knowing how to apologise gracefully smooths over every minor awkward moment that travel inevitably brings.
That last phrase — nǐ chī le ma? — is one worth understanding deeply. It isn’t small talk about mealtimes. Asking whether someone has eaten is a Chinese way of expressing genuine care. Knowing this single cultural fact changes how you hear Chinese people speak, and using it yourself is one of the most effective ways to connect with someone beyond the language barrier.
2. Getting Around
China’s metro systems are genuinely world-class — Beijing and Shanghai especially have extensive networks with clear English signage. But once you leave the subway, you’ll need to navigate streets, ask for directions and communicate with taxi drivers who may not speak English. These six phrases cover the essentials.
One practical note on taxis: always have your destination written in Chinese characters on your phone screen before getting in. The driver’s navigation app uses Chinese addresses, and showing them Roman letters (pinyin) may cause confusion. Use Baidu Maps, or save a screenshot of your hotel’s Chinese address — and do it offline before you need it.
3. At Restaurants and Street Food Stalls
Food is one of the most compelling reasons to visit China. Regional cuisines vary dramatically — from the numbing fire of Sichuan málà to the delicate dumplings of Xi’an, from Cantonese seafood to Xinjiang lamb skewers slow-roasted over charcoal. Eating like a local is entirely possible with just a few well-placed phrases, and the rewards are extraordinary.
4. Shopping and Markets
Markets in China — from Beijing’s Panjiayuan antique bazaar to Shanghai’s Yuyuan shopping district — are among the most vibrant retail experiences in the world. Prices at street stalls and smaller markets are almost always negotiable. Knowing how to ask the price and push back confidently is part of the theatre, and it’s genuinely fun once you know the script.
One key rule: always agree on a price before any product or service with market vendors or unlicensed drivers. Use official metered taxis or DiDi (China’s equivalent of Uber) wherever possible — it removes the guesswork entirely.
5. Emergencies and Safety Essentials
China is a very safe country to travel in — petty crime against tourists is far less common than in many popular destinations. But emergencies, medical situations and moments of genuine confusion can arise anywhere. Having these four phrases stored as a screenshot on your phone is sensible preparation, not pessimism.
Making the Most of These Phrases
Don’t let tones stop you from trying
Mandarin is a tonal language — the same syllable spoken in four different tones carries four completely different meanings. Mā (first tone) means mother. Mǎ (third tone) means horse. This can feel intimidating before your first trip. Don’t let it be. In context, with gestures and goodwill on both sides, communication almost always finds a way through. Getting a tone slightly wrong rarely causes genuine confusion. Making no attempt causes far more.
If you want to get the tones right before you travel, even one or two sessions with a qualified teacher can make a significant difference to your confidence. Will teaches beginner Mandarin with a particular focus on tones and pronunciation from the very first lesson — it’s something most self-study learners get wrong, and something a good teacher can correct quickly.
Save phrases offline before you travel
Chinese internet is filtered, and many apps you rely on at home — Google Maps, WhatsApp, Instagram — don’t function without a VPN. Take screenshots of your most important phrases before you board. Save your hotel’s address in Chinese characters. Download an offline dictionary app — Pleco is the gold standard for Mandarin learners and works entirely offline. Have WeChat installed: it’s how almost everyone in China communicates, and increasingly how they pay for things at markets and restaurants.
What if you come back wanting more?
Many first-time travellers to China return with a different relationship to Mandarin than they expected. What started as “I should learn a few useful phrases” becomes something more genuine — a real curiosity about the language, the logic of the characters, the cultural depth behind everyday words.
If that happens to you, structured lessons are the fastest route from travel phrases to real conversation. Will’s Traveller course is built specifically for this — practical Mandarin tailored to your trip, taught live 1-on-1, at your pace and around your schedule. Three programmes are available in total, from complete beginner through to intermediate.
Your Essential Ten: A Quick-Reference Checklist
Before you travel, aim to feel comfortable with at least these ten — the phrases you’ll use every single day in China:
- Nǐ hǎo — Hello
- Xièxie — Thank you
- Duìbuqǐ — Sorry / Excuse me
- …Zài nǎlǐ? — Where is…?
- Wǒ yào zhège — I want this one
- Hǎo chī! — Delicious!
- Mǎi dān — The bill, please
- Bù là — Not spicy
- Duōshǎo qián? — How much?
- Wǒ bù dǒng — I don’t understand
Ready to Take It Further?
Twenty-six phrases won’t make you fluent. But they will make you a different kind of traveller — one who arrives in China with curiosity rather than anxiety, and who leaves with real stories rather than just photographs taken at a respectful distance.
Start with nǐ hǎo and xièxie. Add duōshǒ qián? before your first market visit. Master bù là before any Sichuan meal. Build from there, phrase by phrase, city by city.
And if the trip sparks something bigger — a genuine desire to understand the language, the structure behind the characters, the humour hidden inside everyday phrases — that’s exactly when proper lessons make all the difference. Book a free introductory call with Will and find out what structured Mandarin learning could look like for you.