Clear answers before you send a China route for verdict.
ChinaVoyage is designed for overseas travelers who saw beautiful China online and want to know whether the route actually works before booking flights, hotels, park tickets, or private travel support.

Rough dates, group type, must-see places, and what worries you are enough for a useful first verdict.
Not sure what to ask?
ChinaVoyage checks whether your rough China route works before any booking or payment discussion: timing, transfer pressure, scenic-anchor choice, walking comfort, season, public holidays, and whether the trip has too many bases for the days available.
No. The first step is a private route verdict. You can send a rough idea, receive practical questions or route-risk comments, and stop there if you do not want next-step planning support.
No. A rough idea is enough: travel month or dates, places you saved online, group size, walking comfort, and whether anything is already booked. If details are missing, ChinaVoyage asks follow-up questions instead of pushing a generic package.
Common red flags include too many hotel bases, one-night remote scenic stops, long transfers before mountain days, no weather buffer, major holidays, first-arrival friction, payment setup pressure, and combining several distant scenic regions in a short trip.
For many overseas travelers, three main bases usually works better than five or six rushed stops. A 10-day trip can support a classic route or one major scenic anchor, but it usually cannot comfortably include every place from short-video saves.
Yes. The sample route verdict library shows how ChinaVoyage judges classic first-time routes, Zhangjiajie timing, family comfort, and first-time logistics such as trains, payment apps, language, and arrival fatigue.
You send your route idea, travel dates, group size, budget range if useful, and the part that worries you. ChinaVoyage reviews the brief, clarifies missing details, and replies with a practical route verdict before any deeper planning conversation.
Yes. After the route check, if you want to continue, ChinaVoyage can discuss private planning direction and carefully scoped local support options. The first step is still route feasibility, not payment.
Yes. ChinaVoyage prioritizes English-friendly planning notes and can discuss language support needs when the request moves beyond the first route check.
ChinaVoyage does not ask for payment to begin. If a later custom planning or local-support conversation is useful, the scope would depend on travel date, group size, hotel level, guide language, ticket availability, transport needs, and human confirmation.
No. Your route-check request is not posted publicly, and your contact details are not broadcast for competing sales messages. Follow-up happens through the contact method you provide.
Start with the free route-check page, then send your rough route, dates, and must-see places when you are ready. ChinaVoyage gives a private route verdict and explains what details are needed before next-step planning.
Start with the free route check