How to Say Thank You in Chinese

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How to Say Thank You in Chinese

谢谢 (xièxie) — and the natural ways to thank someone, plus how to reply. Tap any phrase to hear a native speaker.

谢谢
Quick answer
xièxie
“Thank you”

The first word of gratitude every learner meets is 谢谢 (xièxie) — and it carries you through almost any situation, from a shopkeeper handing over change to a friend doing you a favour.

But thanking someone in Chinese is about more than one word: there’s a more formal 谢谢您, warmer turns among friends, and a whole set of replies for when someone thanks you. This guide covers the natural ways to say thank you in Chinese — tap any phrase to hear it spoken by a native voice, and use the flashcards to make them stick.

10 ways to say thank you in Chinese

谢谢 works any time — but Chinese has a thank-you for every level of warmth and formality. Tap 🔊 on each.

Flashcard mode hides the meaning so you can test yourself — tap a card to reveal.
谢谢
xièxie
Thank you
The universal thanks — works any time, with anyone.
Anytime
谢谢你
xièxie nǐ
Thank you (to you)
A touch warmer — thanks aimed at the person.
Personal
谢谢您
xièxie nín
Thank you (polite)
Formal 您 — for elders, teachers and customers.
Formal
非常感谢
fēicháng gǎnxiè
Thank you very much
Heartfelt, slightly formal gratitude.
Heartfelt
多谢
duōxiè
Many thanks
Short and a little casual or literary.
Casual
太谢谢了
tài xièxie le
Thanks so much
Warm and enthusiastic — for a real favour.
Warm
麻烦你了
máfan nǐ le
Thanks for the trouble
When someone went out of their way for you.
Favour
辛苦了
xīnkǔ le
Thanks for your effort
Acknowledges hard work — staff, colleagues, helpers.
Effort
感谢
gǎnxiè
To be grateful
A more formal “to thank” — common in writing and speeches.
Formal
谢谢大家
xièxie dàjiā
Thank you, everyone
Thanking a group or an audience.
Groups

How to respond to “thank you”

When someone thanks you, here’s what to say back.

不客气
bú kèqi
You’re welcome
不用谢
bú yòng xiè
No need to thank
没关系
méi guānxi
It’s nothing
没事
méi shì
No problem

In casual settings a quick 不谢 (bú xiè) or a simple smile works too. 不客气 is the safe, standard reply in almost any situation.

Pronunciation

The tone change in

(bù) is normally said in the fourth, falling tone. But before another fourth-tone syllable it shifts to the rising second tone — . That’s why “you’re welcome” is 不客气 bú kèqi and “no need to thank” is 不用谢 bú yòng xiè — never a flat “bù”.

It’s the same tone sandhi rule you meet across Mandarin. You don’t write the change down — just train your ear. Listen to the replies above and copy the rhythm.

Will, a native teacher, explaining how to say thank you in Chinese
Will’s tip

In China, piling on 谢谢 with close friends and family can actually feel distant — as if you’re treating them as outsiders. With people you’re close to, a warm 谢啦 (xiè la) or simply returning the favour says more than repeated thanks.

Which thanks, when?

SituationSayWhy
Anyone, any time谢谢Always safe and correct
An elder or a customer谢谢您The polite 您 shows respect
A close friend多谢Casual and warm
For real effort辛苦了Acknowledges their hard work
Replying to thanks不客气The standard “you’re welcome”

Common mistakes to avoid

The little slips that mark out a beginner saying thank you in Chinese — and the natural fix for each.

谢谢 with close family

Constant formal thanks can feel cold with people you’re close to — a casual 谢啦 (xiè la) or returning the favour fits better.

Saying as “bù”

In 不客气 and 不用谢, 不 rises to before a fourth tone — a flat “bù” sounds unnatural.

Leaving 谢谢 unanswered

Letting a thank-you hang feels awkward — a quick 不客气 (bú kèqi) closes the loop politely.

Casual with elders

Using 谢谢你 with an elder or customer can feel over-familiar — 谢谢您 (xièxie nín) shows due respect.

Quick check

1. How do you reply to 谢谢?

2. The polite way to thank an elder is…

3. Which means “no need to thank you”?

FAQs

The standard word is 谢谢 (xièxie). It works any time, with anyone. For a more formal version use 谢谢您 (xièxie nín), and for strong gratitude 非常感谢 (fēicháng gǎnxiè).
The standard reply is 不客气 (bú kèqi) — “you’re welcome”. You can also say 不用谢 (bú yòng xiè) “no need to thank”, or a casual 没事 (méi shì) “it’s nothing”.
Both mean “thank you”, but 您 (nín) is the respectful form of “you” — so 谢谢您 is more polite, ideal for elders, teachers and customers. 谢谢你 is the everyday, friendly version.
Use 非常感谢 (fēicháng gǎnxiè) or 太谢谢了 (tài xièxie le) for strong, warm thanks. 多谢 (duōxiè) is a shorter, more casual “many thanks”.
Not in close relationships — among family and close friends, constant thanks can even feel distant. With strangers, in shops and in formal settings, a clear 谢谢 is always appreciated.
Literally “you’ve worked hard”, 辛苦了 (xīnkǔ le) is a warm way to thank someone for their effort — said to staff, colleagues, drivers or anyone who’s gone to trouble for you.
Will Zhang, founder of WillyChina
Written by
Will Zhang
Native Mandarin speaker · born in China, raised in Australia · 10+ years teaching
Every WillyChina guide is written and reviewed by Will and the team — real teaching experience, checked by a native speaker. More about Will →

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