La millor època per visitar la Xina: una guia mes a mes
Una guia franca, mes a mes, sobre quan és millor visitar la Xina — amb la finestra sense visat, les trampes dels dies festius i quin itinerari de Viatsy s'adapta millor a cada estació.
It's 6:47 AM at the Mutianyu Great Wall in mid-October. The air smells faintly of woodsmoke from a village below, the watchtower stone is cold under your palm, and there are maybe twelve other people on the ramparts. Three weeks earlier — during Golden Week — this same stretch saw queues that snaked back to the cable car. Same wall. Same view. Completely different trip.
That's the thing about China: when you go matters almost as much as where.
This guide is written for European travelers — Spanish, French, German, Italian, and beyond — now that most EU passports get 30 days visa-free entry until December 31, 2026. The biggest barrier just dropped. Now it's about picking your window.
Why Timing Your China Trip Matters More Than You Think
China isn't one climate. It's five climate zones across more than 50 degrees of latitude — cold-temperate up near Harbin, tropical down in Hainan. Beijing in July is a sweaty 33°C with smog. Kunming in July is 18°C with afternoon thunderstorms and jacaranda still in bloom. Same country, same week.
This matters for Europeans because of one awkward truth: July and August — when most of us actually have time to travel — are China's worst months in most regions. Peak domestic season, rainy season, and the so-called "furnace cities" of Chongqing and Wuhan hitting 40°C with humidity. I'll come back to this paradox, because there's a workaround (it's called Yunnan). If you want to understand just how extraordinary that region is, our Yunnan Province Travel Guide covers it in depth.
The good news: the visa-free policy now covers Spain, France, Germany, Italy, Portugal, the Netherlands, Belgium, Austria, Greece, Poland, Sweden, and most other EU states (notable exceptions: Czech Republic and Lithuania). The UK joins on February 17, 2026. Fragomen has the full legal breakdown if you want to verify your passport.
The two genuinely golden windows are mid-April to mid-May and mid-October to early November. Everything else is a tradeoff. Let's get into it.
The Chinese Holiday Calendar: Dates Every European Must Know
These are the dates that will ruin your trip if you don't know about them. Burn them into your calendar.
- Chinese New Year / Spring Festival — 2026: February 15 (and roughly 10 days either side). The world's largest annual human migration. Hundreds of millions traveling home. Many businesses, restaurants, and smaller attractions close or run reduced hours. Trains and flights book out months ahead.
- Qingming Festival — April 3–5. Short, but causes localized crowding at scenic and historic sites.
- Labor Day / May Golden Week — April 30 to May 4. Five days that turn the best travel month of the year into a crowd nightmare. This one catches Europeans out constantly.
- National Day / October Golden Week — October 1–7 (sometimes 8). The big one. China's Ministry of Transport estimated 2.36 billion passenger journeys over 8 days in 2025 — roughly 295 million trips a day. Hotel prices jump 30–50%. Badaling Great Wall has reported crowd increases of up to 900%.
My honest take: don't try to be clever about Golden Week. Don't think "surely it can't be that bad." It is that bad. Either travel before October 1 or after October 8. If you absolutely must be in China that week, get out of Beijing and Shanghai entirely — Dali, Dunhuang, or quieter Yunnan towns are far more bearable.
Month-by-Month: When to Go and Where
January
Northern China is brutal. Harbin sits at –20°C with wind chill, and that's not exaggeration. But this is also when the Harbin International Ice and Snow Festival is in full swing — the world's largest ice park covers 1.2 million square meters. The 2026 edition opened January 5 and ran until late February. The next edition is expected around December 20, 2026.
Southern China is the opposite story. Yunnan is dry and mild (Kunming sees daytime highs of 15°C). Sanya in Hainan is beach weather. Low season everywhere except Harbin means cheaper flights and hotels.
February
Chinese New Year dominates. If you want to experience it — red lanterns, fireworks, dumplings with a local family — book it deliberately, three or four months out, and accept the chaos. Otherwise, avoid the two weeks around February 15. Late February starts to feel like spring in the south. Tibet is closed to foreign tourists during a 5–6 week window in February and March.
March
Spring begins. Cherry blossoms appear around Shanghai and Hangzhou; rapeseed fields turn the hills around Wuyuan electric yellow. Beijing is still chilly (highs of 10°C, mornings near freezing). Yunnan is in its dry-season prime. Crowds are thin. A quietly excellent month if you don't mind packing layers.
April
One of the two best months overall. Peach blossoms in Tibet's Nyingchi valley, jacaranda lining the streets of Kunming, comfortable 18–22°C in Beijing and Xi'an. Skies are clear. Flowers are showing off.
Two dates to dodge: April 3–5 (Qingming) and April 30 onwards (Labor Day Golden Week starts April 30). The sweet spot is roughly April 8 to April 28. This window pairs perfectly with Easter school holidays — Viatsy's 9-day Golden Triangle (Beijing → Xi'an → Shanghai) fits cleanly inside it.
May
The other peak month. Warm, dry, green. Zhangjiajie's sandstone pillars are at their photogenic best. The Li River around Yangshuo is jade-green and the karst peaks are crisp on the horizon. Yunnan's mountain villages are blooming.
Avoid the first week (Labor Day Golden Week, April 30 to May 4). After that, the whole month is golden until late May, when southern China starts shifting into the rainy season. May is the ideal launch window for The Great China Rail Journey — 16 days from Beijing to Shanghai via Xi'an, Chengdu, and Guilin, all on high-speed rail.
June
Shoulder month. The rains start in the south — Guilin gets sticky, Shanghai sees afternoon downpours. Beijing and Xi'an are still relatively dry and pleasant before the July heat lands. Yunnan enters its wet season but the mist on the rice terraces of Yuanyang is honestly more beautiful than in dry season. Fewer tourists, better prices.
July
Peak domestic travel. Hot, humid, and frequently soaking wet. Chongqing and Wuhan earn their nickname "furnace cities" — 38°C is normal, often higher. The honest advice: if July is your only window, head to Yunnan. Kunming averages 18°C in July. Inner Mongolia's grasslands are cool. Higher elevations like Shangri-La (3,200m) are jacket weather.
This is exactly why Chasing Clouds in China — 14 days through Beijing, Kunming, Dali, Lijiang, Shangri-La, Deqin, and Shanghai — is Viatsy's strongest summer route. You get one taste of Beijing, then escape to mountain Yunnan.
August
Similar to July, with August 1–15 being the absolute domestic peak. Coastal cities like Qingdao and Xiamen are popular but packed. The Qingdao International Beer Festival is genuinely fun if you're already in the area. For everyone else: Yunnan and Guizhou remain the smart play.
September
Autumn arrives. Crowds thin. Skies clear. Temperatures slide back into the comfortable 18–25°C range across most of the country. Baby pandas are sometimes born at the Chengdu Giant Panda Breeding Research Base in early autumn — a quiet wildlife moment if you time it right.
The whole month is good, but watch the calendar — late September can bleed into Golden Week prep, with prices already rising. Beyond the Great Wall (14 days including Zhangjiajie's Avatar peaks) is a strong September pick because Zhangjiajie's notorious mist clears earliest in autumn.
October
The most complex month of the year. The first week is Golden Week — avoid the headline sites or go to lesser-known destinations with pre-booked tickets. From roughly October 9 to early November, you're in what I'd argue is the single best window of the year. Red maples at Beijing's Xiangshan Park. Golden ginkgo leaves carpeting the courtyards of the Forbidden City. The blue lakes of Jiuzhaigou Valley framed by yellow larch and red maple. Temperatures 10–25°C. Skies clear.
This is when I'd put the 16-day Rail Journey at the top of the list. October half-term in the UK and autumn breaks across Europe line up beautifully.
November
Underrated. Crowds drop sharply after Golden Week. Yunnan and Guilin are still warm and dry — early November is arguably the best time to visit Yunnan all year, with the dry season just starting and post-summer crowds gone. Northern China cools fast and smog can creep in. Flights and hotels get noticeably cheaper.
December
Low season. Beijing averages 2°C and feels colder thanks to dry wind. Harbin Ice and Snow World opens mid-December — bucket-list stuff if you can handle the cold. Yunnan and Sanya stay mild. Christmas isn't a Chinese public holiday, so there's zero disruption to travel. Good month for budget-conscious travelers who don't mind layering up.
Best Time to Visit China's Key Destinations
A quick reference, because regional variation matters more than season:
- Beijing: April–May, September–October. Avoid July–August.
- Xi'an: April–May, September–October. Autumn is drier and clearer.
- Shanghai: April–May, October–November. Watch for typhoons late August into September.
- Guilin & Yangshuo: April–May, September–October. Skip June–August (heavy rain, occasional flooding).
- Chengdu: March–June, September–November. The city is overcast much of the year — don't expect blue skies.
- Yunnan (Kunming, Dali, Lijiang, Shangri-La): November–April for dry season; March–May for spring flowers. Wet season (June–September) is still beautiful but plan for rain.
- Zhangjiajie: September–November for the clearest views of the sandstone peaks. Spring is good but mistier.
- Harbin: Late December to mid-February. Early-to-mid January is the fullest experience with slightly thinner crowds than the Chinese New Year rush.
- Sanya / Hainan beaches: November–April. Avoid May–October typhoon season.
The European Holiday Window Cheat Sheet
Matching what you actually have off work to what China is actually doing:
- Easter (late March–April): Excellent. Aim for mid-April after Qingming. The 9-day Golden Triangle slots in cleanly.
- May bank holidays: Tricky. Labor Day Golden Week (April 30 – May 4) overlaps with most European May holidays. Push to mid-May if you can.
- Summer holidays (July–August): Not ideal, but workable if you go to Yunnan. Skip Beijing and Shanghai in August unless you genuinely don't mind heat and crowds.
- October half-term: The golden window. Mid-to-late October is arguably the best time of year, full stop.
- Christmas / New Year: Surprisingly good for southern China and Harbin. Low crowds, lower prices, no disruption.
Visa note: the 30-day clock starts the day you enter China. The 9-day Golden Triangle gives you huge buffer. The 16-day Rail Journey is well within the limit but I'd plan for a 28-day total trip max to allow for delays. There's also a 240-hour visa-free transit policy for travelers from 55 countries doing multi-city itineraries — useful if you're combining China with Japan or Southeast Asia. If you want to double-check your specific passport situation before booking, the China Visa guide for EU citizens has the latest details.
Practical Tips for Timing Your Trip
Book 3–4 months ahead for spring and autumn. These are peak windows for international visitors, and the better hotels in Lijiang, Yangshuo, and central Beijing fill up.
If you can't avoid Golden Week, do this: choose Mutianyu over Badaling for the Great Wall (far fewer crowds, better-restored sections, the cable car queues are manageable). Pre-book every attraction ticket. Consider Dali, Dunhuang, or Fenghuang instead of the headline cities. A private tour with pre-arranged tickets and a guide who knows the back entrances is genuinely worth it during peak periods — that's where private trips earn their keep over group departures.
Pack for 15°C swings. Spring and autumn mornings in Beijing or Xi'an can start at 6°C and hit 22°C by lunch. Layers, always. Summer needs breathable fabrics and a compact rain shell. Harbin in winter needs serious gear: thermal base layers, a real down jacket, gloves rated for –20°C, and a hat that covers your ears (your ears will tell you within ten minutes whether you packed correctly).
Check air quality apps for northern cities November–January. Beijing and Xi'an can have rough smog days. Reschedule outdoor sightseeing — the Great Wall is much better on a clear day anyway.
One last opinionated take: don't overthink this. If you've got two weeks free in mid-October, book it. If you've only got summer, accept that and go to Yunnan. The worst trip to China is the one you keep postponing because you're waiting for the theoretically perfect month. Mid-April or mid-October — those are your gold standards. Everything else is good with the right route.
Ready to pick a window? Have a look at the Golden Triangle for a first visit, or the Rail Journey if you want to go deeper. Both have private and group options — the private ones give you the flexibility to dodge holiday peaks by a week or two, which can change the trip entirely.