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~9 km northwest of Dalian city centre · Liaoning Province · 240 · CNY

Dalian Zhoushuizi International Airport (DLC) — Airport Guide 2026

Northeast China’s busiest airport sits just 9 km from the city centre — a fact that changes the layover calculus entirely compared with the mega-hubs further south, and makes Dalian one of the more useful Chinese transit points for travellers who qualify for the 240-hour visa-free scheme.

Quick Reference

IATA / ICAO
DLC / ZYTL
Location
~9 km northwest of Dalian city centre, Liaoning Province
Terminals
Two (T2 opened September 2011); domestic + international
Currency
CNY (¥) — ≈ ¥6.8/US$1, ≈ ¥7.9/€1 (May 2026)
Metro to centre
Line 2, ~40 min, ~¥4, to People’s Square / Zhongshan Square
Metro hours
First ~06:15, last ~22:30
Hub / focus carriers
Dalian Airlines (hub); China Southern, Hainan Airlines (focus cities)
Border options
240-hour transit · 30-day unilateral visa-free · standard visa
Key 2026 change
UK & Canada added to 30-day visa-free list, 17 Feb 2026
Arrival card
Online only (nationwide since 20 Nov 2025)
Priority Pass lounges
China Southern Sky Pearl (domestic + international); Dalian Airport VIP Lounge
Payment
Alipay / WeChat Pay dominant; link a foreign card before you land
2025 passengers
~19.8 million (27th nationally; busiest in Northeast China)

✈️ Two Terminals & the Northeast Network

Zhoushuizi is compact by Chinese-hub standards — two adjacent terminals, the second of which opened in September 2011, with domestic and international traffic split across both. If your inbound and outbound flights land in different buildings, budget the walking time; immigration for international arrivals is on its own side of the hall. The corridor distances are nothing like Beijing Capital or Pudong, but they are real.

The home carrier is Dalian Airlines, a China Southern subsidiary. Both China Southern and Hainan Airlines run DLC as a focus city, which explains the dense domestic board: Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and the rest of the trunk network appear frequently, along with the Northeast cities. International departures are built almost entirely around Japan and South Korea — a legacy of the city’s long trading relationship with both — with some seasonal and scheduled service to other regional points. This is not an intercontinental gateway; most foreign travellers arrive on a one-stop itinerary via a larger Chinese or Asian hub.

⚠️ Forget the island airport
Dalian Jinzhouwan International Airport — the massive replacement being built on reclaimed land offshore — had its artificial island largely complete by 2024, but the terminal-and-runway opening has slipped well past every published target. Zhoushuizi is the operating airport for the foreseeable future. Plan around DLC.


🛂 Border & Visa — Three Systems, One Right Answer

Three separate entry routes exist for foreign travellers at Dalian. Which one applies is entirely about your nationality and itinerary; China’s national entry regime applies uniformly regardless of which agent sold you the ticket.

🕐 240-Hour Visa-Free Transit

China’s transit window was extended to 240 hours (ten days) in December 2024, and the list of eligible nationalities and designated ports was widened again in November 2025. Citizens of 55 eligible countries can now transit visa-free through any designated port — and Dalian Zhoushuizi is one, alongside Shenyang Taoxian airport and Dalian’s passenger port in Liaoning Province.

The rule that trips people up is the third-country condition. You must arrive from Country A and depart to a genuinely different Country B. A return to where you came from does not qualify — so if you are flying home, this scheme is not available. You need a confirmed onward ticket to the third country, departing within 240 hours of arrival, and you will be asked to show it at check-in and at immigration.

The December 2024 expansion removed the old per-port area cluster restriction. Entering at Dalian now permits movement across all 24 designated provinces and municipalities for the full ten days — Dalian, Beijing, Shanghai and Shandong are all in scope on a single transit entry. The exclusions are regional: Tibet, Xinjiang, Qinghai, Gansu, Ningxia and Inner Mongolia are outside the permitted zone. Treat those as hard boundaries; straying into an excluded region on transit status risks removal and a future entry ban.

⚠️ The transit trap
A return trip — Country A → China → Country A — does not qualify for 240-hour transit regardless of the gap between flights. You must be travelling onward to a different country. Check your itinerary before you book, not at the immigration desk.

📅 30-Day Unilateral Visa-Free Entry

Separately from transit, China runs a unilateral visa-free scheme covering ordinary-passport holders from around 50 countries for stays of up to 30 days. There is no onward-ticket requirement and no third-country condition — it is a clean single-entry allowance. The list grew substantially through 2024 and 2025. The meaningful 2026 addition: the United Kingdom and Canada were added on 17 February 2026, after years off the list. Most of Europe, Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Brazil and several Gulf states are also on it. Because the list and its terms change, verify your passport’s current eligibility against the National Immigration Administration’s official source before you book — not from a third-party travel site.

📝 Visa (Standard Route)

If your itinerary is a return trip and your nationality is not on the unilateral visa-free list, you need a Chinese tourist visa (L) arranged at a Chinese embassy or visa centre before travel. There is no general visa-on-arrival at Dalian for tourism.

📱 The Digital Arrival Card

Paper arrival cards are gone. China launched a fully online arrival card nationwide on 20 November 2025. Complete it before landing through the National Immigration Administration website, the NIA 12367 app, or the WeChat or Alipay mini-programs, and show the resulting confirmation code at immigration. Airlines now display the QR code at check-in and boarding; it takes a few minutes. Paper kiosks in the arrival hall remain as a fallback if you skip the online form. Airside-transit passengers on 24-hour transits are exempt from filling it in at all.


🚇 Getting Into the City

The 9 km gap between terminal and centre is Dalian’s biggest practical advantage over other Chinese hub airports. Every option is a short trip rather than a half-day commitment.

🚇 Metro Line 2 — ~¥4, ~40 min
The station is inside the terminal on the lower level. Line 2 runs directly to People’s Square (人民广场) and Zhongshan Square (中山广场) in around 40 minutes for roughly ¥4 (about US$0.60 / €0.50). First departure from the airport is around 06:15; the last is around 22:30 — confirm the exact last-train time on the day if you are arriving late.

The metro is the default. It bypasses surface traffic entirely, and at a busy hour it reaches downtown faster than anything on the road. Buy a single-journey token at the platform machine (cash, WeChat or Alipay) or tap in with a transport card.

Airport buses run from the terminal to fixed points in the city for around ¥10, taking roughly 30 minutes in light traffic. Routes and stop lists change; check the current board at the ground-transport desk on arrival rather than relying on a number you found online.

DiDi is the practical door-to-door option. The app works in English and accepts a foreign card or a linked Alipay / WeChat wallet. For a late arrival after the metro has stopped, DiDi or a taxi is the only realistic choice.

Taxis queue at the official airport rank around the clock. Use the rank; insist on the meter. Anyone approaching you inside the terminal offering a private ride is offering an overcharge — the unsolicited-driver pitch is standard at every large Chinese airport, Dalian included.


🛋️ Lounges

Dalian has a workable range of lounges, but the Priority Pass / DragonPass split matters more here than in many places — many Chinese airport lounges sit on the local DragonPass network and do not honour Priority Pass. Matching your card to the specific lounge before you walk in is worth the 30 seconds.

🛋️ Priority Pass — three confirmed lounges at DLC
The China Southern Sky Pearl Club (domestic departures), China Southern Sky Pearl Club (international departures), and Dalian Airport VIP Lounge (domestic departures) all accept Priority Pass. Other lounges at DLC sit on the DragonPass network instead — check the DragonPass app on the day rather than relying on a static list.

Walk-in pay-per-use access is sold at the door at several lounges; the price varies and is best confirmed at the desk. If you are flying business or first on China Southern, Hainan or another carrier, your boarding pass gets you into the matching carrier lounge regardless of which card you hold.


🍜 Food Before You Fly

Dalian’s identity is a port city on the Bohai and Yellow seas, and the city food reflects that clearly. The local specialities are clams, sea cucumber, prawns and grilled scallops, cooked simply enough that freshness does the work. Dalian-style braised seafood and cold seafood platters appear on most local menus, alongside the Dongbei (Northeastern) staples that anchor the regional diet: hearty stews, dumplings, and dishes built for cold winters rather than warm ones.

🍞 Dà liěba — the local bread worth knowing
Dalian and Harbin are the two cities in China where Russian-style heavy round bread (大列巴) is a genuine local product rather than a novelty import. It arrived with the Russian and Soviet presence in the region and stayed. Worth finding in the city; do not expect it airside.

The terminal food is the usual airport mix — local chains and noodle counters, priced above what the street charges for the same thing. Airside prices run above the city; if you have time before security, the landside options are cheaper and generally better. For anything resembling actual Dalian seafood, you want a restaurant in the city, not a terminal counter.

Duty-free and souvenirs: the international departures duty-free run covers liquor, tobacco and perfume in the standard configuration. The regional souvenir is dried and packaged seafood — sea cucumber, dried scallops, kelp — though customs rules at your destination make that a check-first purchase. Prices airside are higher than in the city.


💡 Layover Reality — the Honest Arithmetic

Dalian is one of the few Chinese airports where a layover-city-trip equation actually works in the traveller’s favour, and the reason is purely geometric: 9 km out, Metro Line 2 inside the terminal, roughly 40 minutes each way for about ¥4.

⏱️ Layover math at DLC
Budget 40 min metro each way, plus time in the centre, plus a firm return buffer of at least an hour at the international terminal for check-in and security. A four-hour layover (cleared of immigration) is roughly the minimum to make a centre trip rational. Six hours or more opens up the seafront.

Four hours or more: Zhongshan Square (中山广场) is the most rewarding short target — a short walk from the metro, ringed by the early-20th-century buildings from the city’s Russian and Japanese administrations, photogenic and compact. The surrounding older commercial streets are walkable. This is a realistic destination on a four-hour layover with a cushion.

Six hours or more: you can add the seafront. Xinghai Square (星海广场), one of the largest city squares in China, sits on the bay and is reachable on Line 2 plus a short connection. Binhai Road runs along the cliffs to the south. These are warm-season targets — Dalian winters are cold, and in January the seafront is bleak rather than scenic. A square and a few streets in the centre make more sense than a coastal walk in winter.

Under three to four hours: stay in the terminal. Even with the short distance, immigration on arrival plus international check-in and security on departure eats the time faster than the numbers suggest. The metro round trip is not worth the boarding risk.

None of these trips are restricted by the 240-hour transit scheme — Dalian and Liaoning Province are fully inside the permitted zone. The constraint is the clock, not the border.


🔧 Practical Notes

Payment. The city runs on Alipay and WeChat Pay. Both now allow foreign visitors to link an overseas card, and setting one up before you land is the single most useful piece of preparation — many taxis, ticket machines and small eateries are effectively cashless for anything except the two dominant apps. Carry some CNY as a backup; foreign credit cards work at large hotels and department stores but not reliably elsewhere.

Connectivity. China’s firewall blocks the search, maps, messaging and social apps most travellers depend on — including Google Maps, WhatsApp, Instagram, and most Western news sites. Sort out an international roaming plan or a travel eSIM that routes around the firewall before you arrive; you cannot easily download or configure a fix once you are inside without a working connection. If you arrive without one, there is a foreign-traveller service centre in the international arrivals hall where you can get a local SIM.

Currency. The yuan trades at approximately ¥6.8 to the US dollar and ¥7.9 to the euro as of late May 2026. Airport exchange counters charge a poor rate — change only what you need there and use Alipay / WeChat or a city ATM for the rest.

🌐 Sort your VPN or roaming before landing
China’s firewall is not a minor inconvenience — it blocks Google Maps, WhatsApp, most Western apps and news sites. If you arrive with no working solution, getting one requires a connection you do not yet have. Solve it before the flight, not in the arrivals hall.


❓ FAQ

Can I leave Dalian airport without a visa on a layover? +
Yes, if you qualify. Citizens of 55 eligible countries can use the 240-hour visa-free transit scheme, provided they are travelling from one country to a different third country — not a round trip. Nationals of around 50 countries (including, since 17 February 2026, the UK and Canada) qualify for 30-day unilateral visa-free entry with no onward-ticket condition. If neither applies to your passport and itinerary, you need a Chinese visa arranged before travel.
Is Dalian a valid port for 240-hour visa-free transit? +
Yes. Dalian Zhoushuizi is a designated entry point under the scheme, alongside Shenyang Taoxian airport and Dalian’s passenger seaport in Liaoning Province. Since the December 2024 expansion, there is no per-port area restriction — a transit entry at Dalian allows movement across all 24 designated provinces and municipalities, excluding Tibet, Xinjiang, Qinghai, Gansu, Ningxia and Inner Mongolia.
How do I get from Dalian airport to the city centre? +
Metro Line 2 has a station inside the terminal and reaches People’s Square and Zhongshan Square in around 40 minutes for roughly ¥4. The metro runs from approximately 06:15 to 22:30; after that, use a taxi from the official rank or DiDi. The airport is only about 9 km from the centre, so a taxi or DiDi is also a short, inexpensive trip regardless of the hour.
What currency does Dalian use, and can I pay by card? +
Chinese yuan (CNY, ¥) — approximately ¥6.8 to the US dollar and ¥7.9 to the euro in May 2026. In practice the city runs on Alipay and WeChat Pay; link an overseas card to one of them before arriving. Cash is a workable backup. Foreign credit cards are accepted at large hotels and stores, but not reliably elsewhere.
Which lounges at Dalian accept Priority Pass? +
The China Southern Sky Pearl Club (domestic departures), China Southern Sky Pearl Club (international departures), and the Dalian Airport VIP Lounge (domestic departures) all accept Priority Pass. Other lounges at DLC sit on the DragonPass network and do not honour Priority Pass — check the specific lounge against your card before walking in.
Can I visit the city on a layover at Dalian? +
Yes, more easily than at most Chinese hubs. Metro Line 2 covers the 9 km to the centre in roughly 40 minutes. On a layover of four hours or more (cleared of immigration, with a solid return buffer), Zhongshan Square and the central streets are realistic. Six hours or more opens up the seafront at Xinghai Square. Under about three to four hours, stay in the terminal — immigration plus international security on departure eats the margin fast.
Do I need to fill in a China arrival card? +
Yes. China moved to a fully online arrival card on 20 November 2025. Complete it before landing through the National Immigration Administration website, the NIA 12367 app, or the WeChat or Alipay mini-programs, and show the confirmation code at immigration. Paper fallback kiosks remain in the arrivals hall. Airside-transit passengers on 24-hour transits are exempt.
What airlines fly from Dalian? +
Dalian Airlines (a China Southern subsidiary) is the home carrier; China Southern and Hainan Airlines both use DLC as a focus city. The domestic network is dense, with frequent service to Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and the Northeast cities. International routes focus heavily on Japan and South Korea. Dalian is not a long-haul gateway — most foreign travellers reach it on a one-stop itinerary.
Will my usual apps work in Dalian? +
Many Western apps are blocked in China — Google Maps, WhatsApp, Instagram, most Western search and news sites. Arrange an international roaming plan or travel eSIM that handles this before you land. You cannot easily set up a fix once you are inside China without a working connection.
When is a new airport replacing Zhoushuizi? +

Dalian Jinzhouwan International Airport is under construction on an artificial island offshore; the island was largely complete by 2024. However, the terminal-and-runway opening has slipped well past its original targets and has no firm date as of 2026. Zhoushuizi remains the operating airport. Plan around DLC.


📊 At a glance — DLC 2026

Item Detail
IATA / ICAO DLC / ZYTL
Distance to centre ~9 km northwest
Terminals Two (T2 opened September 2011); domestic + international
Metro Line 2, airport station → People’s Square / Zhongshan Square, ~¥4, ~40 min
Metro hours First ~06:15, last ~22:30 (confirm last train on the day)
Taxi / DiDi Metered rank or DiDi app; short ride given the 9 km distance
Airport bus ~¥10, ~30 min, fixed city points (confirm route on arrival)
Currency CNY (¥); ≈ ¥6.8/US$1, ≈ ¥7.9/€1 (May 2026)
Payment Alipay / WeChat Pay dominant; link an overseas card before arrival
Border options 240-hour transit · 30-day unilateral visa-free · standard visa
Key 2026 entry change UK & Canada added to 30-day unilateral visa-free list, 17 Feb 2026
Arrival card Online, pre-arrival (nationwide since 20 Nov 2025); QR at immigration
Priority Pass lounges China Southern Sky Pearl (domestic + international); Dalian Airport VIP Lounge
Hub / focus carriers Dalian Airlines (hub); China Southern, Hainan Airlines (focus cities)
2025 passengers ~19.8 million (busiest in Northeast China; 27th nationally)
Short-layover verdict Stay airside under ~4 hrs · centre viable at 4 hrs+ · seafront at 6 hrs+

Posted 45d ago

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