1. Start with the traveler, not the package
We look at days, month, arrival city, departure city, group type, comfort needs, interests, and what the traveler most wants to feel in China.
China is too large for generic checklist planning. ChinaVoyage uses a specialist review method to judge whether a route is realistic, meaningful, comfortable, and worth developing before travelers commit money or time.

We check route shape, transfers, season risk, walking load, and whether the promised scenery is actually achievable.
We look at days, month, arrival city, departure city, group type, comfort needs, interests, and what the traveler most wants to feel in China.
We check whether the city count, nights, train or flight logic, scenic-area timing, and transfer buffers can actually work without turning the trip into a commute.
A famous city name is not enough. Each stop should have a reason: landscape, folk culture, old-town atmosphere, markets, food, gardens, temples, or seasonal beauty.
We flag crowd windows, weather exposure, altitude, long walking days, station friction, hotel-change overload, language/payment issues, and weak recovery time.
The first useful answer is a judgement: keep it, cut it, slow it down, change the order, or ask missing questions before deeper planning.
The point of ChinaVoyage is not to make every itinerary sound possible. It is to protect the traveler from beautiful but fragile plans before the bookings become expensive to undo.
The first reply is written like a route editor looking for travel reality, not a generic itinerary generator filling a template.
If a famous route is too rushed, the verdict says so before the traveler locks hotels, trains, flights, or park tickets.
Known facts, assumptions, missing details, and next questions are separated so the traveler can decide calmly.
The route brief is not public content and contact details are not shared with specialists unless the traveler later approves that step.
Travelers add a major scenic anchor but leave it only one rushed day after a long transfer.
Jet lag, payment/app setup, station logic, and first-day orientation are often treated as if they cost no energy.
A route made for fit adults can become the wrong route for parents, children, or mixed comfort needs.
Hotels, trains, flights, or scenic tickets get locked before the route shape is actually calm and coherent.
City order, trip length, group type, travel month, booked items, and the scenic anchor the route depends on.
Green, amber, or red — with a plain reason rather than a vague “looks good.”
Transfer pressure, weather exposure, walking load, hotel area, holiday crowds, language/payment friction, or weak recovery time.
What is safe to book, what should wait, and what must be clarified before money is committed.
A simpler order, fewer bases, extra nights, alternate scenic anchor, or the next missing question.
Many China routes look attractive on a map but fail in real travel conditions. A useful first reply should protect the traveler from over-planning.
The route is realistic if the traveler protects enough nights and does not add another remote scenic area.
The trip includes too many cities for the available days; remove one famous stop to make the best part work.
The destinations are good, but the route needs fewer hotel changes, better arrival buffers, or a softer family pace.
The same places may work better with a different gateway, rail sequence, or weather/crowd logic.
Missing month, group type, flight times, or comfort needs make a reliable recommendation impossible.
Send a rough city list, travel month, trip length, group type, and biggest concern. The first reply should tell you what works, what is risky, and what to decide next.