Private Airport Transfers in China

Private Airport Transfers in China

China's three largest international gateways — Beijing Capital (PEK), Shanghai Pudong (PVG) and Guangzhou Baiyun (CAN) — handle the vast majority of long-haul arrivals into the country. Each sits 28 to 32 kilometres from its city centre and funnels passengers through sprawling terminal complexes where English signage is improving but still inconsistent. Didi Chuxing dominates local rideshare (Uber exited in 2016), and metered taxis are plentiful, but app registration often requires a Chinese phone number and mainland payment rails (WeChat Pay, Alipay) that foreign visitors cannot easily set up before arrival. Booking a LocalsRide car in advance bypasses this friction entirely — the fare is quoted in USD, and an English-speaking driver waits at the designated meet-and-greet area holding your name.

Beijing Capital (PEK): The Northern Hub

PEK is 32 kilometres north-east of the Forbidden City and connects to central Beijing via the Airport Expressway or the Capital Airport Express light rail to Dongzhimen. Terminal 3, opened for the 2008 Olympics, remains one of the largest passenger terminals in the world. Transfer time to Wangfujing, Sanlitun or Chaoyang CBD is 45 to 75 minutes depending on traffic and direction — the Fourth and Fifth Ring Roads routinely back up in the late afternoon. Many international travellers now also arrive at Beijing Daxing (PKX), 46 kilometres south of the city, served by a separate expressway and high-speed rail link.

Shanghai Pudong (PVG): The Commercial Gateway

PVG handles most international arrivals into Shanghai and sits 30 kilometres east of the Bund. The Maglev train reaches Longyang Road in seven minutes at 431 km/h, but still requires a taxi or metro transfer from Longyang to most hotels. A direct private car to Lujiazui takes 35 to 55 minutes, to Xintiandi or the French Concession 45 to 70 minutes. The second Shanghai airport, Hongqiao (SHA), is 13 kilometres west of the city and primarily handles domestic routes — connect-through passengers should confirm which airport their onward flight uses before booking ground transport.

Guangzhou Baiyun (CAN): The Southern Gateway

CAN is 28 kilometres north of central Guangzhou and the busiest airport in the Pearl River Delta manufacturing region. Tianhe CBD and Zhujiang New Town are 40 to 60 minutes by car; the Canton Fair complex in Pazhou is 45 to 70 minutes. Metro Line 3 runs from the airport to Tiyu Xilu in the heart of Tianhe but requires navigating transfers at Tiyu Xilu or Jiahewanggang — awkward with luggage. Private cars are the standard choice for Canton Fair delegates, business travellers attending meetings in Shenzhen (140 km, 1.5 to 2 hours) and cross-border visitors continuing into Hong Kong via the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a Chinese SIM card or WeChat to get a taxi in China?

For DiDi Chuxing or unofficial car services the answer is effectively yes — mainland Chinese payment rails (WeChat Pay or Alipay linked to a local bank card) are now the default, and recent tourist-friendly international wrappers still require a working Chinese phone number for verification. Metered airport taxis accept cash in yuan and are safe if you queue at the official rank, but communicating a destination without Mandarin is a known friction point. A LocalsRide transfer is paid in USD at booking and the driver receives your destination in Chinese characters via the dispatch system — no local SIM, app or payment setup required on your side.

Is the Beijing or Shanghai airport express train faster than a car?

The Capital Airport Express to Dongzhimen is fast (about 20 minutes) but ends at a metro interchange in north-east Beijing — you still need a taxi or metro to reach most hotels, and luggage transfers through Dongzhimen are not convenient. The Shanghai Maglev is a novelty ride from PVG to Longyang Road; Longyang is not near most tourist hotels, and the onward taxi adds 20 to 35 minutes. For a single door-to-door journey with luggage and in a language you speak, a private car is more reliable even when the rail option looks faster on paper.

Can I book a driver from a Chinese airport across the border to Hong Kong?

Yes — private car transfers from Guangzhou Baiyun (CAN) or Shenzhen Bao'an (SZX) into Hong Kong via the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge (HZMB) or the Shenzhen Bay crossing are offered. Cross-border transfers require both driver and vehicle permits for dual jurisdiction operation, which limits the number of carriers who can legally operate the route. Journey times Guangzhou-Hong Kong are 3 to 4 hours including the border crossing; Shenzhen-Hong Kong 1.5 to 2.5 hours. A confirmed cross-border booking avoids the Lo Wu or Futian shuttle/rail transfer with luggage.

預訂前往中國的接送

比較可信賴的本地司機報價,幾個步驟即可確認行程。