Safety, Health & Emergencies in China
How to handle pharmacies, hospitals, tap water, and the very rare emergency while traveling.
Baseline
China is generally low-risk for violent street crime, but travel friction can still become a safety issue: language barriers, hospitals, weather, remote transfers, food reactions, and phone/payment failure.
Emergency numbers
- 110 - police
- 120 - ambulance
- 119 - fire
Save your embassy or consulate contact, travel insurance hotline, hotel phone number, and emergency contact offline.
Health basics
- Do not drink tap water directly; use bottled or boiled water.
- Carry your regular medication in original packaging.
- Bring a short medical summary and allergy note in Chinese if relevant.
- Use travel insurance that covers mainland China and evacuation where needed.
- In major cities, international clinics are easier but more expensive.
Pharmacies and hospitals
Pharmacies are common, but English support varies. For anything serious, go through your hotel, insurer, or a major hospital. Bring passport, insurance information, payment method, and translation support.
Personal safety
Use normal big-city caution: watch phones in crowds, avoid unlicensed taxis, keep your passport secure, and do not follow touts into unclear deals. Nightlife districts are safer when you keep your own transport plan and avoid heavy drinking with strangers.
Remote-area safety
Mountains, canyons, deserts, and border regions are where planning matters most. Check weather, last bus times, altitude, road closures, and whether your hotel can help if a transfer fails.
The practical safety layer
Your phone is payment, map, translator, and contact channel. Carry a power bank and keep one backup card/cash reserve away from the phone.