Huizhou Entry Customs Guide 2026: Prohibited Items, Duty-Free Allowances & Currency Exchange
Updated June 2026 | Sources: General Administration of Customs of China (customs.gov.cn), State Administration of Foreign Exchange, People’s Bank of China. Regulations may change — verify current rules at customs.gov.cn before departure.
TL;DR — Quick Reference Checklist
| Item | Huizhou / Guangdong Port Reality |
| — | — | |
|---|---|---|
| Duty-free allowance | Alcohol/tobacco up to ¥15,000; general goods up to ¥5,000 | |
| Cash declaration | Required for cash over ¥5,000 / HK$12,000 / $5,000 USD equivalent | |
| Prohibited items | Drugs, weapons, endangered species products | |
| Meat, eggs | Strictly prohibited (includes cured meats, ham, sausages) | |
| Currency exchange | China Construction Bank ATMs at Huizhou South Station; best rates | |
| SIM card | Buy at airport arrival hall; convenience stores in city center also carry them |
Author’s Tip: When entering China from Hong Kong or any other port, never carry luggage for a stranger. If prohibited items are found, legal consequences — including criminal charges — fall on the person carrying them. This is one of the most common ways international visitors unintentionally break Chinese law.
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1. Entry Routes to Huizhou: Ports and Procedures
Three Routes to Huizhou
#### Route A: Hong Kong → Huizhou (Recommended)
Total time: Hong Kong International Airport → Huizhou South Station (70-90 min by high-speed rail)
Huizhou South Station key facts:
– Address: Danshui Street, Huiyang District, Huizhou, Guangdong
– ~25 km from Huizhou city center
– Exit hall has taxi queue and a China Construction Bank ATM
Real Visitor Voice: “Taking the direct high-speed rail from Hong Kong West Kowloon to Huizhou South saved me at least 1.5 hours compared to going through Shenzhen. There are 8 trains per day.” — Priya S., India, visited October 2025
#### Route B: Shenzhen Baoan Airport → Huizhou (Most Flexible)
Total time: Shenzhen Airport → Huizhou South Station (~40 min by rail / ~90 min by taxi)
#### Route C: Guangzhou Baiyun Airport → Huizhou (Best for International Flights)
Total time: Guangzhou Airport → Huizhou South Station (~90 min by rail / ~2 hr by taxi)
Author’s Tip: If your international flight lands in Shenzhen, the Shenzhen North Station transfer is the most efficient option — it’s the provincial rail hub connecting Huizhou, Chaozhou, Guangzhou, and Hong Kong. Budget an extra 1.5 hours from landing to your Huizhou hotel.
Immigration Wait Times by Port
| Port | Recommended Buffer | Peak Hours |
| — | — | — | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hong Kong International Airport | 30-60 minutes | 6:00-9:00 AM, 6:00-9:00 PM | |
| Shenzhen Baoan Airport | 30-45 minutes | 10:00 AM – 2:00 PM | |
| Guangzhou Baiyun Airport | 45-90 minutes | 8:00 AM – 12:00 PM | |
| Huizhou Pingtan Airport | 20-30 minutes | Rarely busy |
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2. Prohibited and Restricted Items (2026 Full List)
Absolute Prohibitions: Never Bring These
The following items are strictly prohibited regardless of quantity. Violations are treated as smuggling or drug/weapons offenses:
#### 1. Drugs and Controlled Substances
– All narcotics (heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine, cannabis, etc.)
– Controlled psychotropic substances (travellers with valid prescriptions must declare these)
– Drug paraphernalia
Author’s Warning: Even in jurisdictions where cannabis is legal (Canada, parts of the US, Thailand), cannabis products are illegal in China. As of 2024, China enforces some of the world’s strictest penalties for drug trafficking and possession. Entering China with any cannabis product — including CBD oil, edibles, or medications — will result in criminal prosecution, even with a foreign prescription.
#### 2. Weapons and Ammunition
– Firearms (including air rifles and imitation guns)
– Ammunition
– Military or police equipment
– Stun guns, pepper spray
#### 3. Endangered and Protected Species
– Elephant ivory, rhinoceros horn, hawksbill turtle shell (any form — jewelry, carvings, ornaments)
– Tiger bone, bear bile
– Rosewood and red sandalwood (raw logs and most finished products)
– Wild ginseng (specific protected varieties)
– Bird’s nest (canned/prepared bird’s nest for personal consumption is permitted; raw unprocessed bird’s nest is not)
– Dried seahorses
– Coral and coral products
Real Visitor Voice: “My grandfather asked me to bring an ivory carving back to China as a gift. It was confiscated at Shenzhen customs and I had to write a formal statement. Even unintentional violations create serious麻烦.” — James L., Canada, visited February 2026
#### 4. publications and Illegal Materials
– Publications inciting national分裂 or subversion
– Pornographic materials of any kind
– Unauthorized religious materials
– Pirated optical media and software
#### 5. Biological Samples
– Pathogens, viral cultures
– Animal specimens (without quarantine certificates)
– Plant seeds and soil (without quarantine certificates)
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Restricted Items: Know Before You Pack
#### Food Products
| Item | Rule | Penalty if Violated |
| — | — | — | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meat (raw, cooked, vacuum-sealed) | All prohibited | Confiscation + ¥5,000-50,000 fine | |
| Eggs (including salted, century eggs) | All prohibited | Confiscation + fine | |
| Dairy products | Limited, declaration required | Confiscation | |
| Canned bird’s nest (commercial, sealed) | Permitted in small quantities | — | |
| Fresh fruits and vegetables | All prohibited | Confiscation + quarantine treatment | |
| Roasted nuts in sealed packaging | Permitted in small quantities | — |
Author’s Tip: Many travelers of Chinese heritage carry cured meats, sausages, and dried seafood as gifts for family — this is one of the most common inadvertent violations. All fresh and cured meats (including vacuum-packed ham) are prohibited. If discovered, the items will be confiscated and fines will be issued. There are no exceptions for personal use quantities.
#### Medications
– Traditional Chinese Medicine ingredients: Some restricted for export (such as musk, endangered animal ingredients); no restrictions for personal import
– Prescription medications: May bring for personal use (up to the prescription amount), must carry prescription documentation
– Psychotropic substances: Must be declared; prescription required
– Cannabis-based medications (including CBD oil): Prohibited regardless of prescription or legality in country of origin
#### Cash and Currency
| Currency | Limit | Declaration Required |
| — | — | — | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chinese Yuan (CNY) cash | ¥20,000 | Yes, for amounts above this | |
| Hong Kong Dollar (HKD) | HK$120,000 | Yes, above this amount | |
| Other foreign currency | $5,000 USD equivalent | Yes, above this amount |
Declaration procedure: Complete the customs declaration form provided on your flight or at the port. Proceed through the Red Channel (goods to declare) if you have any dutiable or required-declaration items.
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3. Personal Duty-Free Allowances (2026)
Personal Purchases Made Overseas
| Category | Duty-Free Limit | If Exceeded |
| — | — | — | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alcohol and tobacco products | Within ¥15,000 total value | Pay duties on excess | |
| Perfume and personal cosmetics | Within ¥5,000 | Pay goods and services tax (GST equivalent) | |
| Electronics and daily use items | Within ¥5,000 | Pay import duties | |
| Clothing, footwear, and hats | Within ¥5,000 | Pay import duties | |
| Books and electronic publications | Within ¥800 | Pay import duties |
De minimis threshold: China does not currently have a formal de minimis exemption for postal and courier imports, but for personal baggage, goods under the above thresholds are generally not subject to duties if reasonably for personal use.
Import Duty Rates (BUSTO / Rates Applied to Excess Value)
| Category | Rate |
| — | — | |
|---|---|---|
| Food, textiles, basic consumer goods | 13% | |
| Cosmetics, watches, premium goods | 20% | |
| Tobacco, alcohol, luxury goods | 50% |
Calculation Example
You bring in ¥8,000 worth of Japanese skincare products:
– ¥5,000 within duty-free limit → ¥0 duty
– ¥3,000 excess → 20% = ¥600 in import duties
Author’s Tip: If your total overseas purchases are under ¥5,000 in value, use the “personal baggage” customs channel rather than the commercial channel. For items between ¥5,000 and ¥50,000, declare honestly and pay the applicable duties — this results in only a financial penalty with no legal consequences. Evading declaration is a smuggling offense with much harsher consequences.
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4. Customs Declaration Process: Step by Step
When Must You Use the Red Channel (Goods to Declare)?
Use the red channel if ANY of the following apply:
– Carrying more than ¥20,000 in RMB cash
– Carrying more than $5,000 USD equivalent in foreign currency
– Carrying endangered species products
– Carrying excess alcohol or tobacco
– Carrying动植物 products requiring quarantine
– Carrying professional video cameras, DSLRs, or laptops purchased overseas (above ¥5,000 combined value)
Declaration Steps
Step 1: Complete the Declaration Form
Flight attendants distribute the Entry Passenger Luggage Declaration Form (《进境旅客行李物品申报单》). Complete it in English or Chinese (name, passport number, nationality, flight number, number of bags, and declared items).
If you have nothing to declare, use the Green Channel (nothing to declare lane) — no form needed.
Step 2: Proceed Through Customs
At your port of entry (Shenzhen, Guangzhou, or Hong Kong West Kowloon), go to the red channel desk with your declaration form and all items that exceed limits.
The customs officer will review your form, inspect items if needed, and issue a duty payment slip or release note.
Step 3: Pay Import Duties (if applicable)
Pay at the customs payment window (accepts cash and card). Keep the official receipt — this is your proof of legal import.
Author’s Warning: Never take the green channel if you have declaration-required items. Choosing the green channel when you should have used the red is treated as “evading customs inspection.” The penalties — in addition to paying the full duties — include a fine of 1-3 times the duty amount and potential confiscation of the goods. Declaring voluntarily results in only paying the correct duty.
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5. Currency Exchange and ATM Guide (Huizhou Practical Guide)
Exchange Rate Comparison by Channel
| Channel | Rate Quality | Convenience | Fees |
| — | — | — | — | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| China Construction Bank / ICBC ATMs (Huizhou) | Best (bank mid-rate) | High (ATMs everywhere in city) | ¥10-20 per withdrawal (issuing bank fee) | |
| Alipay / WeChat Pay (linked to foreign card) | Good (real-time mid-rate) | High (accepted everywhere) | Varies by card network | |
| Hotel front desk exchange | Poor (3-5% markup) | High | None | |
| Port exchange counters | Poor (2-4% markup) | Medium | None |
Recommendation order: ATM with UnionPay debit card → Alipay/WeChat Pay → Port exchange (only if necessary)
ATM Locations in Huizhou
| Location | Banks Available | UnionPay | Visa/Mastercard |
| — | — | — | — | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huizhou South Station exit hall | China Construction Bank, ICBC | ✅ | Partial | |
| Huizhou city center | CCB, ABC, BOC, ICBC | ✅ | ✅ | |
| 5-star / 4-star hotels | Hotel ATM (usually CCB) | ✅ | ✅ | |
| Smaller hotels / hostels | Usually none | — | — |
ATMs accepting foreign cards show the relevant card network logo. UnionPay is accepted at all ATMs. Visa and Mastercard are accepted at roughly 30% of ATMs in Huizhou — look for the logo.
Real Visitor Voice: “I used my Citibank Visa debit card at the China Construction Bank ATM at Huizhou South Station to withdraw ¥2,000. The fee was ¥15, and the exchange rate was much better than the hotel’s front desk.” — Robert J., USA, visited March 2026
How to Use Mobile Payment (Essential in Huizhou)
#### Alipay (Recommended for Foreigners)
#### WeChat Pay
Author’s Tip: Major shopping centers (Huamao Tiancheng, Kaisa Plaza), upscale hotels, and most chain convenience stores (7-Eleven, Meiyijia) accept Alipay and WeChat Pay across Huizhou. Using mobile payment gives you the best exchange rate and eliminates cash risks. However, the vast majority of restaurants and small shops still only accept cash — always carry at least ¥500 in RMB as backup.
Cash vs. Card: Recommendation
– Bring one UnionPay debit card (for ATM withdrawals — best rates)
– Bring one foreign credit card (for hotels and upscale malls)
– Carry ¥500-1,000 in RMB cash (for small restaurants, local markets, tips, emergencies)
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6. SIM Cards and Mobile Data (Huizhou Practical Guide)
Options for Getting Connected in Huizhou
| Method | Pros | Cons | Cost |
| — | — | — | — | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buy a Chinese SIM card | Cheap data, local number | Requires identity verification (passport OK) | ¥20-50/month | |
| eSIM (if your phone supports it) | Ready immediately, no ID needed | Requires eSIM-compatible phone | ¥35/week (10GB) | |
| International roaming package | No SIM swap needed | Expensive | ¥70+/day | |
| Hotel WiFi only | Free | Cannot be used outside the hotel | Free (hotel-dependent) |
Where to Buy SIM Cards
– Guangzhou Baiyun Airport arrival hall: All three major carriers (China Mobile, China Unicom, China Telecom) have booths; short-stay packages available
– Shenzhen Baoan Airport arrival hall: All three carriers available
– China Mobile / China Unicom / China Telecom service centers in Huizhou: Full ID required (passport accepted)
– Convenience stores: Some carry prepaid cards (no ID required for ¥10-30 top-ups)
Author’s Tip: If your phone supports eSIM, buy a China Unicom eSIM for Travelers online before departure. It covers all of Guangdong including Huizhou, activates immediately on landing, and requires no identity verification. At ¥35 per week with 10GB of data, it’s better value than international roaming and much cheaper than a physical SIM.
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7. Essential Contacts
| Service | Phone | Purpose |
| — | — | — | |
|---|---|---|---|
| China Customs Information | 12360 | Luggage and goods inquiry | |
| State Administration of Foreign Exchange | 12378 | Foreign exchange inquiry | |
| Huizhou Public Security Bureau (Entry/Exit) | 0752-2811234 | Passport and visa issues | |
| Chinese Consulate General Guangzhou | 020-8516-8059 | Visa matters | |
| Hong Kong Immigration Department | +852-2824-6111 | Hong Kong entry matters |
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8. Quick Q&A
Q: How much alcohol and cigarettes can I bring?
A: Per Chinese customs guidelines: up to 1,500ml of alcohol (for persons aged 18+). For tobacco: up to 400 cigarettes (2 cartons). Exceeding these amounts incurs duties. Hong Kong has its own limits (1 liter of spirits over 17.5% ABV; 2 liters under 17.5% for those 18+).
Q: I forgot to declare my excess cash. What should I do?
A: Voluntarily report to customs before being inspected. First-time violations with minor excess are typically settled by paying the appropriate duties. Hiding undeclared cash and being caught results in fines and possible seizure.
Q: My luggage contains prohibited food items and I’m selected for inspection. What do I do?
A: Explain honestly and cooperate with the inspection. Meat, eggs, and fresh produce will be confiscated on the spot (without compensation) but no legal action will follow if cooperation is genuine. Contact China Customs 12360 if you have doubts before your trip.
Q: Are there 24-hour currency exchange services in Huizhou?
A: Major banks in the China Construction Bank and ICBC networks offer foreign exchange during business hours (9:00 AM – 5:00 PM). Huizhou’s high-end hotels offer 24-hour exchange services, but rates are 3-5% below market.
Q: Is tipping customary in Huizhou?
A: Tipping is not customary in Huizhou. High-end hotels and upscale restaurants may have a service charge, but individual tipping is rare and not expected.
Author’s Tip: Before departing for Huizhou, use the Bank of China app to purchase foreign currency and schedule a pickup at a Bank of China branch near your departure airport. This gives you the best exchange rate, zero wait time at the destination, and eliminates the need to carry large amounts of cash.
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Sources: General Administration of Customs of China (www.customs.gov.cn, 2026), State Administration of Foreign Exchange (www.safe.gov.cn, 2026), People’s Bank of China (www.pbc.gov.cn, 2026). Duty-free allowances, prohibited items, and exchange rates are subject to change; verify current regulations with Chinese customs authorities before travel.