China Tour Cost from Australia in 2026: Real Prices, No Guesswork
Planning • 9
How much does a China tour actually cost from Australia in 2026? Here is the straight answer: a fully organised ExploreChina Holidays package runs from A$999 for ten days to A$4,799 for an eighteen-day, two-country expedition — and every one of those prices includes your return international flights. No mystery maths, no “land-only” asterisk waiting in the fine print.
This guide breaks down all eleven 2026 itineraries, what the price covers, the four things that genuinely move the number, and how travellers squeeze the most value out of a booking. Every figure below comes straight from the published 2026 price list.
2026 Prices at a Glance: All Eleven Tours
| Tour | Length | 2026 price |
|---|---|---|
| Amazing China | 10 days | from A$999pp |
| Discover China | 13 days | from A$1,299pp |
| Legends of China: Warriors Through Time | 12 days | from A$1,499pp |
| Heart of China | 10 days | from A$1,899pp |
| Whispers of the Terracotta Warriors | 10 days | from A$1,999pp |
| Imperial China & the Timeless Yangtze | 16 days | from A$2,999pp |
| Caravans of Time: The Silk Road Journey | 16 days | from A$3,499pp |
| Exquisite China | 21 days | from A$3,899pp |
| China In Crystal | 13 days | from A$3,999pp |
| China's Sacred Heartland & Tibet | 13 days | from A$4,699pp |
| Empire & Horizon: China & Mongolia | 18 days | from A$4,799pp |
Prices are per person and include return international flights. The spread tells a story: the routes that stay on China's well-served eastern corridor cost the least, while journeys reaching Tibet, Mongolia or the far west of the Silk Road carry the logistics — and the price — of genuinely remote travel. You can compare every itinerary side by side on the full tours page.
What the Price Includes
The headline number is the trip. Return international flights are built into every package — which matters, because airfare is usually the single biggest line in any China holiday budget, and it is the line most “from $X” advertising quietly leaves out. Accommodation, guided sightseeing with English-speaking guides, transfers and most meals are part of the package structure rather than upsells, and there are no forced shopping stops padding the schedule.
Backed by China Travel Service and 41+ years of operating in China, the pricing philosophy is simple: more of your budget goes into the experience itself — better hotels, better guides, better meals — not bigger offices. For the complete item-by-item rundown, see what is included in a China tour package.
The Four Things That Move the Price
1. Length. More days, more cost — but rarely in a straight line. Amazing China works out around A$100 a day including airfare; the 21-day Exquisite China lands near A$186 a day. Long itineraries dilute the fixed cost of the flight across more travel.
2. Remoteness. Tibet requires permits and high-altitude logistics; Mongolia adds a second country; the Silk Road crosses some of the least-touristed terrain in Asia. That is why China's Sacred Heartland & Tibet (A$4,699) and Empire & Horizon (A$4,799) sit at the top of the table.
3. Hotel tier and pace. China In Crystal covers similar ground to Discover China in the same thirteen days — the A$2,700 difference is the five-star treatment and a gentler pace. Whether that is worth it is exactly the question answered in budget vs premium China tours.
4. Season and demand. Departure dates around peak periods price differently, and popular dates sell through first. Booking earlier in the year protects both the fare and your seat.
Departure Cities and Surcharges
Published prices are based on the main international gateways. Departing from some other Australian cities attracts a published flight and fuel surcharge — a fixed amount set by the airlines for that departure city, shown to the cent at booking. It is not a hidden fee and it is not negotiable padding; it is simply what the airline charges for that routing.
Package vs DIY: The Honest Maths
Could you assemble the same trip yourself? You can — and we have run the numbers line by line in our full tour vs DIY cost comparison. The short version: once you price return flights, comparable hotels, intercity transport, entry tickets and a licensed English-speaking guide separately, the DIY total typically meets or exceeds the package price — before you count the hours of planning and the risk of getting any single piece wrong in a country where spontaneity has a learning curve.
Three Ways to Get the Most Value
Go longer, not shorter. Per-day cost falls sharply on longer itineraries because the airfare is fixed. Book early. The published price is the starting price; early bookings get first claim on seats and departure dates. Match the tier to the traveller. First trip and budget-focused? Amazing China at A$999 is the entry point. Want the icons with breathing room? Heart of China or Imperial China & the Timeless Yangtze hit the middle. Celebrating something? China In Crystal exists for exactly that.
What a Realistic Total Budget Looks Like
Because flights, accommodation, guided sightseeing, transfers and most meals are inside the package, the add-on list is short. Budget for travel insurance (essential for any China trip; the premium depends on your age and level of cover), personal spending, and any meals you choose to take independently on free evenings. Many travellers are pleasantly surprised by day-to-day costs in China — a metro ride, a bowl of hand-pulled noodles or a museum entry typically costs a fraction of what the equivalent runs in an Australian capital. With visa-free entry currently available to Australian passport holders, one former budget line has disappeared entirely.
A sensible rule of thumb: take the package price, add your insurance, and allow whatever daily spending money suits your style. There is no equivalent of the resort-fee ambush at the end.
Reading the Per-Day Maths
Per-day cost is the cleanest way to compare itineraries, because the international airfare inside each price is fixed regardless of length. Amazing China works out near A$100 a day. Heart of China, with its richer inclusions, sits around A$190 a day. Imperial China & the Timeless Yangtze — sixteen days including a Yangtze cruise — lands near A$187 a day, and the 21-day Exquisite China drops to roughly A$186. At the other end, Empire & Horizon runs about A$267 a day — the price of operating across two countries. When two tours tempt you equally, the per-day number usually settles it.
Who Each Price Tier Suits
Entry tier (A$999–A$1,499). First trip, headline icons, maximum value. Amazing China, Discover China and Legends of China cover the Great Wall, the Terracotta Warriors and the big-city showpieces without stretching the budget.
Middle tier (A$1,899–A$2,999). More depth, better pacing, signature experiences — Heart of China for a richer ten days, Whispers of the Terracotta Warriors for archaeology lovers, and Imperial China & the Timeless Yangtze for travellers who want the river cruise woven in.
Premium tier (A$3,499–A$4,799). The far west, the high plateau, the five-star treatment. Silk Road, Exquisite China, China In Crystal, Tibet and the China–Mongolia expedition are for second visits, milestone celebrations and travellers who want the extraordinary version.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the lowest-priced China tour from Australia in 2026?
Amazing China — ten days from A$999 per person, return international flights included.
Do the prices include international flights?
Yes. Every package price on this page includes return international flights from Australia.
Why do some departure cities cost more?
Some Australian departure cities carry a published flight and fuel surcharge set by the airlines for that routing. The exact figure is shown at booking — no estimates, no surprises.
Which tour offers the best value per day?
Exquisite China: twenty-one days from A$3,899 works out to roughly A$186 per day with international airfare included.
The Bottom Line
A real, fully organised China holiday — flights and all — starts at A$999 and tops out under A$5,000 even for the most ambitious two-country route. The right question is not “what does China cost?” but “which China do you want?” Browse all eleven 2026 tours or start where thousands of Australians have: Amazing China, ten days from A$999.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the lowest-priced China tour from Australia in 2026?
Amazing China — ten days from A$999 per person (US$1,599 for US departures), with return international flights included. It covers China's headline icons and is the most popular first-trip choice.
Do ExploreChina Holidays prices include international flights?
Yes. Every published package price includes return international flights, which is usually the single biggest cost in a China holiday. Accommodation, guided sightseeing, transfers and most meals are also part of the package.
Why do some departure cities cost more?
Some departure cities carry a published flight and fuel surcharge — a fixed amount set by the airlines for that routing. The exact figure is shown at booking, so there are no estimates and no surprises.
Which China tour offers the best value per day?
Exquisite China: twenty-one days from A$3,899 (US$4,499) works out to roughly A$186 (US$214) per day with international airfare included — the lowest per-day cost across all eleven 2026 itineraries.