Short version: China is an extraordinary place to celebrate the two of you — neon mega-cities, misty mountains, lantern-lit canals and some of the best food on earth. It does not recognise same-sex marriage, so think of this as a romantic celebration rather than a legal milestone. Day to day, two men checking into a hotel, sharing a big bed and lingering over dinner is a complete non-issue. Keep public affection gentle, pair a glamorous city with a slower scenic stop, and you have a honeymoon you will talk about for years.

So you want to celebrate the two of you somewhere that feels like another world. Good instinct. China rewards couples who are curious — it is vast, layered and genuinely romantic in a way the glossy lists never quite capture. Let me walk you through how to make it yours, honestly.

Why China makes a memorable romantic trip

The magic here is contrast. One morning you are gliding past skyscrapers that look airbrushed onto the sky; by evening you are on a wooden bridge in a thousand-year-old water town, watching red lanterns double in the canal. You can stand on a wild, fog-wrapped stretch of the Great Wall with almost no one around, then be back in a city of twenty million for cocktails on a rooftop. Add the food — late dumplings, hotpot that makes you sweat and laugh, tiny places where the owner remembers your faces by night two — and you have the raw material for a trip that feels enormous and intimate at once.

None of this requires you to perform or explain yourselves. You are simply two travellers, and that is exactly how you will be treated.

The honest bit: a celebration, not a legal event

Let me be straight with you, because that is what a local friend does. China does not recognise same-sex marriage, and you cannot marry or register a partnership here. So frame this as what it is — a celebration of your relationship, a honeymoon in spirit. Manage your expectations on legal recognition and you will not be caught out.

Here is the reassuring part, and it is genuinely reassuring: the romantic experiences themselves are completely doable. Booking a hotel together, sharing a bed, anniversary dinners, couples' spa afternoons, private boat rides — all of it is open to you and none of it raises an eyebrow. The legal gap is real; the day-to-day welcome is warm. Both things are true at the same time. For more on the social texture, our guide to public affection is worth a read before you go.

City pairings that feel like a honeymoon

Resist the urge to cram in five cities. Two, maybe three, with room to breathe. The classic romantic formula is one glamorous metropolis plus one slower, scenic counterpoint.

Shanghai glamour. If you want sparkle, start here. Art deco riverfront, rooftop bars, world-class dining and a genuinely relaxed feel for visiting couples — our gay Shanghai guide has the detail. It is the easiest place in the country to feel sophisticated and at ease together.

A scenic counterpoint. Balance the city with something slower. A canal water town near Shanghai or Suzhou gives you lantern-lit evenings and quiet stone lanes. If you would rather have drama, the karst mountains and rivers of the south-west — think bamboo rafts drifting between green peaks — are unforgettable, and far more moving in person than any photo.

A beach add-on. To finish on sand and sun, fly south to the tropical island of Hainan. It is China's beach-resort escape, with palm-fringed bays and big resort rooms made for a lazy honeymoon coda — see our Sanya and Hainan guide for how to play it.

Hotels for couples: genuinely a non-issue

This is the question I get asked most, so let me settle it. Two men checking in together and asking for one big bed is completely normal and completely fine. International and upscale domestic hotels are used to all kinds of guests, and a same-sex couple sharing a room is unremarkable.

One small practical note: Chinese hotels often default to twin rooms, so book a king or "big bed" room explicitly when you reserve, and you will avoid the polite shuffle at the front desk. We cover the nuances — wording, booking apps, what to expect — in sharing a hotel room as a couple. For a honeymoon, lean into it: a high-floor room with a city view, or a resort villa with its own plunge pool, costs less than the equivalent in Europe and feels twice as special.

Public affection, gently

Chinese culture is reserved about public displays of affection across the board — you will not see many straight couples kissing in the street either. So the move is not to hide, but to read the room. Holding hands in a buzzy bar district or a relaxed cafe is fine; a long embrace on a crowded metro platform will draw glances simply because that is true for everyone. Save the romance for your hotel, a candlelit dinner, a quiet stretch of riverside at night — and you will feel completely comfortable.

Budgeting a special trip

China can be whatever you want it to be financially. A genuinely special two-week honeymoon — nice hotels, the odd splurge dinner, internal flights and a beach finish — typically lands in the mid four figures per person, give or take, depending on how much luxury you build in. Five-star rooms in major cities often run a fraction of what you would pay in London or New York, so your money buys real glamour. Food is the great bargain: you can eat like royalty at a neighbourhood place for the price of a coffee back home, then splurge once or twice on a tasting menu without guilt.

Set aside budget for one or two signature moments — a private river cruise, a couples' spa day, a long anniversary dinner — and let the rest be spontaneous. Get a few days into a sensible route with our itinerary guide, and the whole thing starts to feel less like logistics and more like the trip you have been imagining.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can we get married in China?
No. China does not recognise same-sex marriage or partnerships, so you cannot register a union here. Treat the trip as a romantic celebration rather than a legal event, and you will not be disappointed. This is general information, not legal advice.
Will a hotel give us one big bed without a problem?
Yes. Two men sharing a room and a king bed is a non-issue at international and good domestic hotels. Just book a king or "big bed" room explicitly, since many properties default to twins. See our guide to sharing a hotel room as a couple for wording and tips.
Is it safe to be affectionate in public?
China is reserved about public affection for everyone, gay or straight. Gentle gestures like holding hands in relaxed, lively areas are fine; big displays anywhere draw glances. Save the more romantic moments for your hotel, dinners and quiet spots, and you will feel at ease.
What cities should we pair for a honeymoon?
The romantic formula is one glamorous city plus one slower, scenic stop. Shanghai for sparkle, paired with a lantern-lit water town or the karst mountains of the south-west, then an optional beach finish on Hainan island. Two or three places, not five.
How much should we budget?
A special two-week trip with nice hotels, internal flights and a beach add-on tends to land in the mid four figures per person, depending on luxury level. Five-star rooms are often far cheaper than in the West, and food is a bargain, so your budget stretches a long way.