
Who Controls the Checkout
Tencent says PayPal users will be able to make cashless payments in China using QR codes through WeChat Pay’s merchant network, a move designed to pull more foreign tourists into the company’s payment system. The feature will roll out first to U.S.-based PayPal users, with more markets to follow, according to Tencent’s statement. In a country where cashless payments have already become deeply embedded in daily life, the latest integration makes the corporate payment apparatus even more unavoidable for visitors moving through taxis, restaurants and other ordinary spaces.
Tencent’s WeChat is not just social media and messaging. In mainland China, it also offers payment services called WeChat Pay, or Weixin Pay, giving the company a sprawling role in how people exchange money. WeChat Pay and Ant Group’s Alipay, part of the Alibaba e-commerce empire, are widely available across China, including in taxis and restaurants. The source of convenience here is also the source of control: a handful of giant platforms mediate access to basic transactions across the country.
Tourism, Profit, and the Gatekeepers
Tencent said the feature is calibrated to attract more foreign tourists. That fits with China’s broader effort to bring in more foreign tourists, said Gary Ng, a senior economist for Asia Pacific at French bank Natixis. Tourism contributed more than 4% of China’s economy in 2024, official data show, which helps explain why the system keeps smoothing the path for spending while the people doing the traveling remain subject to the rules of the platforms and the state.
China has been expanding visa free access to travelers from dozens of countries including the U.K., Spain and Australia. That change has not yet been extended to U.S. travelers, who still need a visa to enter China, except for brief transits for those heading on to third countries. The border regime remains intact even as the payment rails get more polished. The state can loosen one gate while keeping another firmly shut.
The number of foreign visitors, excluding those from Hong Kong and Taiwan, plunged during the COVID-19 pandemic, when China closed its doors to most foreign arrivals and imposed stringent quarantines in many places. But it has since surged past the nearly 32 million visitors recorded in 2019, to over 35 million last year. The figures show a system that can slam shut and reopen on command, with ordinary people absorbing the consequences either way.
The Platform State and Its Limits
Ng said the PayPal move also aligns with a global trend of integration of payment platforms through mutually recognized cross-border QR codes. In other words, the corporate world keeps building bridges between payment systems so money can move more smoothly through the same concentrated channels.
Ivan Su, a senior equity analyst at Morningstar, said the impact of the QR code option with PayPal initially may be limited in terms of its overall benefit for Tencent given the current low volume of U.S. travelers to China. Even the company’s own expansion has limits when measured against the actual flow of people.
WeChat Pay has allowed users to link their foreign bank cards since 2019. Tencent also said it will be offering a transaction fee waiver for first time users linking their international bank cards to WeChat to encourage wider use of that option. The company is not merely opening access; it is using fee waivers and platform design to pull more users into its orbit.
Tencent said such transactions by foreign travelers in China jumped nearly 80% year-on-year in January-April. That spike is being presented as progress, but it also shows how thoroughly travel, spending and access to everyday life are being routed through corporate systems that sit between people and the places they move through.