The short answer: China's Great Firewall blocks Google, WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, X, Gmail, Google Maps, WhatsApp and most dating apps including Grindr. The fix is simple: a travel eSIM that routes your data outside China, or a VPN installed before you arrive. Sort it before you fly.

China runs the world's most sophisticated internet filtering, and a long list of the apps you use every day simply won't load on a local connection. The good news: getting around it is easy if you prepare. Here's exactly what's blocked, what works, and the two ways to stay connected.

What's blocked in China

Expect all of these to be unavailable without a workaround:

What still works

Plenty does — mostly local apps and a few surprises:

The two ways around it

1. A travel eSIM (easiest). An international eSIM connects to Chinese towers but routes your data out via Hong Kong or Singapore, so it lands outside the firewall — Grindr, WhatsApp and Google all work with nothing to configure. See our best eSIM for China guide.

2. A VPN (install it first). A reputable paid VPN disguises your traffic so blocked sites load. The catch: VPN websites are themselves hard to reach inside China, and servers get blocked and rotated — so install and test it before you fly, and pick one with a current China track record.

Install these before you go

  1. A travel eSIM and/or a VPN — set up and tested at home.
  2. WeChat and Alipay, with payment cards linked (this is how China pays for everything).
  3. A translation app with offline Chinese, and offline maps.
  4. Blued if you want to meet locals — see can I use Grindr in China?

For gay travellers specifically

Grindr is the big one travellers miss: it's unreliable on Chinese networks, so route around the firewall with an eSIM or VPN. For meeting locals, Blued — the dominant homegrown gay app — works on local networks without a workaround. The full app-by-app rundown is in our gay dating apps in China guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What apps are blocked in China?
China blocks Google (Search, Gmail, Maps, Drive, Play Store), Instagram, Facebook, X/Twitter, YouTube, WhatsApp, Telegram, Signal, Reddit, Wikipedia and most dating apps including Grindr. Local apps like WeChat, Alipay and Blued work normally.
How do I use blocked apps in China?
Two ways: a travel eSIM that routes your data outside China so blocked apps work with no setup, or a VPN installed and tested before you arrive. The eSIM is simpler because there is nothing for the firewall to block.
Does WhatsApp work in China?
No, WhatsApp is blocked by the Great Firewall. It works if you use a travel eSIM that routes data outside China or a VPN installed before arrival. Locally, WeChat is the messaging app everyone uses.
Does Google Maps work in China?
No, Google Maps and all Google services are blocked. Use an eSIM or VPN to access them, or download offline maps and a local navigation app like Amap or Baidu Maps before you travel.
Can I download a VPN after I arrive in China?
It's risky — many VPN websites and app-store listings are themselves blocked inside China, so you may not be able to get one after you land. Install and test your VPN, or set up a travel eSIM, before you fly.

Last verified: June 2026. Conditions in China change frequently — if anything here reads as out of date, tell us. General information only, not legal, medical or safety advice; always check current government travel advice for your nationality.