The three ways to do it
1. A group tour — fixed dates, a guide, a busload of strangers who become your crew. 2. Tailor-made private — your dates, a private guide and driver, an itinerary built around you (this is what our tour service does). 3. Independent — you, our guides, and a well-charged phone. Each is right for someone; here's the honest matrix.
What a tour actually buys you
- Zero logistics. Someone else holds the train tickets, speaks Sichuanese to the driver, and knows which sauna night is which. In a country where payments, the firewall and language are genuine friction, that's worth real money to some travellers.
- Instant company. Solo travellers who dread eating alone get a built-in dinner table — and in the gay-travel niche, tourmates self-select into people you'll actually want at the KTV afterwards.
- Doors you didn't know existed. A plugged-in gay guide can walk you into the right room on the right night — the thing that takes independent travellers a WeChat network to learn.
What it costs you
Money, obviously — a guided trip runs a multiple of the same route done solo (our budget guide shows how cheap independent China can be). But the bigger cost is spontaneity. Gay nightlife is a late, fluid thing: the group that met at the drag show wants to move on at 1am and your tour bus leaves for the pandas at 8. Group pace and scene pace are fundamentally at odds — which is exactly why the tours worth taking in this niche are small or private ones.
How hard is independent, really?
Easier than its reputation, if you prepare. The genuinely hard parts of China travel — paying for things, staying connected, booking trains — are all front-loaded into one afternoon of setup: Alipay, an eSIM, apps installed before you fly. Our survival guide is that afternoon, written down. After that, China is arguably Asia's easiest big country to travel: safe, punctual, and cheaper than you fear. The 10-day itinerary gives you a spine; the city guides fill in the nights. Going solo? The scene is genuinely welcoming to visitors — our solo guide covers the social side.
The honest recommendation
Confident traveller, second trip, or travelling as a couple: independent, no hesitation. First-timer who wants the scene without the homework: tailor-made private — tour flexibility where it matters (nights free, mornings movable). Solo and social-first: a small group tour if the dates work, but check how the operator handles evenings — a gay tour that ends at dinner has missed the point of gay China.
