Beijing Daxing International Airport (PKX) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
PKX is Beijing’s new mega-airport, opened 26 September 2019 — Zaha Hadid Architects’ starfish-shaped 700,000+ m² terminal that became the world’s largest single-building airport terminal at opening. Designed for ~100 million passengers by 2040; 53.61 million passengers in 2025 (up 8.4%). The terminal’s distinctive star pattern was timed to open as China’s 70th-anniversary infrastructure showpiece. Critical distinction: PKX supplements Beijing Capital (PEK) — the two airports split SkyTeam vs Star Alliance. China Southern transferred all Beijing operations to PKX on 25 October 2020; China Eastern, Xiamen, Delta, Saudia plus other SkyTeam members operate from PKX; Air China and most Star Alliance carriers remain at PEK. Daxing Airport Express from Caoqiao downtown to PKX in 19 minutes for ¥35; ¥50 in business class. 240-Hour TWOV applies at PKX. Currency: CNY; ¥1 ≈ €0.13 ≈ $0.14 (May 2026). Alipay/WeChat Pay universal.
📍 50 km S of Tiananmen · NOT PEK
🚄 Daxing Airport Express · ¥35
🛂 240-hour TWOV · 54 nationalities
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
¥35 economy / ¥50 business class · 19-22 min · runs ~06:00-23:00 · extends to Lize Shangwuqu in 2026 with Line 14 transfer
From Caoqiao transfer to Line 19 → Yongdingmen Wai for downtown · ~30-40 min more to Tiananmen area
High-speed rail from PKX to Beijing West Station + Xiongan New Area · ¥30-50 · ~30 min · alternative to airport express
~¥200-300 (~€26-39) · 1 hr depending on traffic · use the official metered queue
~¥180-250 · the universal Chinese rideshare app
Plaza Premium Library Lounge (1st floor, Priority Pass, 192 seats) · Aerotel hotel/lounge (Plaza Premium Group) · China Southern + China Eastern first/business 3rd floor · BCS International Premier Lounge
PKX = SkyTeam hub (China Southern + China Eastern + Xiamen + Delta + Saudia) · PEK = Star Alliance hub (Air China + Lufthansa + United + ANA + Singapore)
Chinese yuan (¥/CNY) · ¥1 ≈ €0.13 ≈ $0.14 (May 2026) · Alipay/WeChat Pay universal · foreign cards limited
🏢 1. The Zaha Hadid Starfish Terminal & the SkyTeam Hub
PKX opened on 26 September 2019 — timed as the centrepiece infrastructure showpiece for the PRC’s 70th anniversary, and immediately becoming the world’s largest single-building airport terminal at 700,000+ m². Designed by Zaha Hadid Architects (Zaha Hadid herself died in 2016, with the studio completing the project), the distinctive starfish/dragon five-arm radial plan was praised for putting any gate within ~8 minutes’ walk of the central hall. 53.61 million passengers in 2025 (up 8.4%), and the airport is targeted for ~100 million by 2040. The PKX-vs-PEK Beijing airport split is the defining operational fact: China Southern transferred all Beijing operations to PKX on 25 October 2020; SkyTeam members concentrate at PKX (China Eastern, Xiamen, Delta, Saudia); Star Alliance carriers remain at PEK (Air China + Lufthansa + United + ANA + Singapore + others).
🛫 The Zaha Hadid Starfish Terminal
Designed by Zaha Hadid Architects + ADP Ingénierie + Beijing Institute of Architectural Design, the 700,000+ m² terminal’s five-arm starfish radial plan ensures any gate is within ~8 minutes walking from the central hall. The central atrium uses cascading skylights to flood the interior with natural light.
Opened 26 September 2019 — a deliberately symbolic date timed to the PRC’s 70th anniversary celebration four days later.
📍 SkyTeam Hub — China Southern + China Eastern + Delta
China Southern moved all its Beijing operations to PKX on 25 October 2020, becoming the dominant carrier. China Eastern + Xiamen + Delta + Saudia operate from PKX as SkyTeam partners.
Air China and most Star Alliance carriers remained at PEK (Beijing Capital, 30 km north-east of central Beijing) — Lufthansa, United, ANA, Singapore Airlines, Air New Zealand, EVA, Thai Airways, Asiana, all PEK.
Operating airlines at PKX (May 2026)
- China Southern Airlines — the dominant carrier at PKX since transferring all Beijing operations 25 October 2020. Major domestic + international SkyTeam hub.
- China Eastern Airlines — major SkyTeam member at PKX; domestic + international.
- Xiamen Airlines (SkyTeam) — Xiamen-based SkyTeam regional.
- Delta Air Lines — Detroit + Seattle + Minneapolis transpacific (SkyTeam).
- Saudia (Saudi Arabian Airlines) — Riyadh + Jeddah connection (SkyTeam).
- Various other SkyTeam carriers — Aeroflot (suspension status — verify current), KLM, Air France, Korean Air, Aeroméxico — selected service.
- Spring Airlines, Juneyao Airlines, China Express, Lucky Air — Chinese domestic LCC.
- Hainan Airlines — domestic + selected Pacific (oneworld member).
- British Airways (selected oneworld carrier at PKX) — verify current route.
- Royal Brunei, Garuda Indonesia, MEA, EgyptAir — selected international service.
- FOR PEK STAR ALLIANCE TRAVEL, USE BEIJING CAPITAL (PEK), NOT PKX — Air China + LH + United + ANA + Singapore + Asiana + EVA + Thai all at PEK 30 km NE.
🛂 2. 240-Hour TWOV, China Visa & PKX vs PEK
China is not in Schengen, not EU. EES and ETIAS do not apply at PKX. China operates its own visa regime — the 240-Hour Transit Without Visa (TWOV) policy applies at PKX (Beijing municipality is fully covered) for 54 eligible nationalities. The PKX vs PEK split is the defining Beijing airport question — these are two separate airports 60 km apart, with different carrier alliances and different transit setups. Currency: CNY; ¥1 ≈ €0.13 ≈ $0.14 (May 2026). Alipay/WeChat Pay universal in mainland China.
240-Hour TWOV — 10 Days Visa-Free
54 eligible nationalities can transit China visa-free for up to 240 hours (10 days). Includes US, Canada, UK, Ireland, all EU member states, Russia, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Mexico, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, Australia (added late 2024). Beijing is fully covered for TWOV.
China Digital Arrival Card (QR)
Apply for the China Digital Arrival Card at s.nia.gov.cn — needed for TWOV eligibility, generates a QR code presented at the border. Apply 3-30 days before travel. Also need a confirmed onward ticket to a third country within 240 hours.
PKX vs PEK Inter-Airport
PKX and PEK are 60 km apart — no fast inter-airport transit. The Beijing-Xiongan Intercity Rail allows transfer via Beijing West Station; the Beijing Subway makes the connection but takes 2+ hours. Allow 4+ hours for a PKX↔PEK airport-to-airport transfer; impractical for tight connections.
Who needs what to enter China via PKX
| Passport | Visa needed? | 240-hour TWOV? | Entry process |
|---|---|---|---|
| US, Canada, UK, Ireland, EU member states, Russia, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Mexico, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, Australia (added late 2024) | No (TWOV) — if onward ticket to 3rd country in 10 days | Yes — 240 hours / 10 days | Digital Arrival Card QR + onward ticket · TWOV stamp at border |
| NZ, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Israel, UAE | No (verify current Chinese bilateral visa-exemption) | Often covered by separate agreements | Bilateral visa-free entry |
| India, Indonesia, Philippines, Egypt, South Africa, most African and South Asian nationals | Yes — Chinese visa | No | Apply at Chinese embassy in advance · standard L/M/F visa |
| Iranian, Syrian, North Korean, restricted nationalities | Yes — additional vetting | No | Apply in advance · longer processing |
Check your boarding pass carefully — these are TWO different Beijing airports, 60 km apart. If your flight is on China Southern, China Eastern, Xiamen, Delta or Saudia → almost certainly PKX. If your flight is on Air China, Lufthansa, United, ANA, Singapore, Asiana, EVA, Thai → almost certainly PEK. The taxi from PKX to PEK is ~¥400-500, 1-1.5 hours.
🚄 3. Daxing Airport Express, Beijing-Xiongan HSR, DiDi & Taxi
PKX sits 50 km south of central Beijing (Tiananmen Square / Forbidden City). The Daxing Airport Express (opened 26 September 2019 with the airport) is the dedicated subway connection — from Caoqiao in central Beijing’s Southern 3rd Ring Road to PKX in 19-22 minutes for ¥35 economy / ¥50 business class. The express extends to Lize Shangwuqu (Lize Business District) in 2026, adding interchange with Beijing Subway Line 14. Beijing-Xiongan Intercity Rail also serves PKX — high-speed rail to Beijing West Station and the planned Xiongan New Area. Taxi and DiDi are the door-to-door options.
⭐ Daxing Airport Express — the Default
- Fare: ¥35 economy / ¥50 business class — Alipay/WeChat Pay QR or paper ticket from vending machines.
- Operating: approximately 06:00-23:00 daily.
- Journey: 19-22 minutes PKX → Caoqiao Station (Southern 3rd Ring Road).
- 2026 extension: the northern extension to Lize Shangwuqu (Lize Business District) opens with interchange to Beijing Subway Line 14, plus future Lines 16 and 11; the Lize Shangwuqu Station will have a city terminal for air check-in.
- Onward to Tiananmen / Forbidden City: from Caoqiao, transfer to Line 10 → Guomao → Line 1 → Tiananmen East. ~45-60 min more after the Express ride.
🚆 Beijing-Xiongan HSR (China Railway High Speed)
- High-speed rail from PKX to Beijing West Station takes ~30 minutes for ¥30-50 — an alternative to the airport express, useful for travellers whose Beijing destination is closer to Beijing West.
- The same line continues to the Xiongan New Area (the central-government new economic zone 100 km south of Beijing).
- Useful if: connecting to Xiongan-based hotels or business, or if Beijing West Station is more convenient for your destination.
📱 DiDi — Chinese Rideshare
- Fare: ~¥180-250 to Tiananmen / Forbidden City area, 50-80 min depending on traffic.
- Uber pulled out of China in 2016 — DiDi Chuxing is the universal rideshare app.
- English-language interface available; payment via Alipay, WeChat Pay, or international cards on DiDi’s global app.
🚕 Taxi — Use the Metered Queue
- Fare: ~¥200-300 to central Beijing (Tiananmen / Forbidden City area), ~1 hour depending on traffic.
- Use the official taxi queue outside arrivals. Always ask for a fapiao (printed receipt with taxi number).
- Avoid touts in the terminal hall quoting ¥500+.
⚠️ PKX ↔ PEK Inter-Airport (60 km)
PKX and PEK are 60 km apart — no fast inter-airport transit. Options include:
- Inter-airport coach: direct shuttle ~¥50, 2 hours.
- Daxing Express + Beijing Subway: ~2 hours via downtown.
- Taxi: ~¥400-500, 1-1.5 hours.
Allow 4+ hours for a PKX↔PEK transfer including buffer — impractical for tight connections.
🛋️ 4. Plaza Premium Library + China Southern + China Eastern Lounges
PKX has substantial lounge coverage. The Plaza Premium Library Lounge on the 1st floor (192 seats) is the Priority Pass-accessible flagship, with international buffet + à la carte menu. China Southern + China Eastern first/business lounges on the 3rd floor for SkyTeam premium-cabin passengers. BCS International Premier Lounge for selected partner programmes. Aerotel (Plaza Premium Group’s airport hotel + lounge concept) offers hourly rooms for transit travellers. No Centurion Lounge, no Capital One Lounge, no Chase Sapphire Lounge at PKX.
🛋️ Plaza Premium Library Lounge — Priority Pass Flagship
Location: 1st floor of the main terminal.
Access: Priority Pass + LoungeKey + DragonPass + walk-in day pass.
Capacity: 192 seats.
What’s inside: wide international buffet + à la carte menu, full bar, work zones, shower facilities. The standout Priority Pass option at PKX.
🛋️ China Southern + China Eastern (SkyTeam)
Location: 3rd floor of the main terminal.
Access: China Southern + China Eastern first + business class passengers, Sky Pearl Club + Eastern Miles elite tier, SkyTeam Elite Plus on same-day SkyTeam international travel.
🛋️ BCS International Premier Lounge
Location: Terminal main area.
Access: selected partner credit cards and elite-tier programmes.
🏨 Aerotel — Plaza Premium Group Hourly Hotel
Aerotel (Plaza Premium Group’s airport-hotel concept) offers hourly + nightly rooms for transit travellers — particularly useful for 8+ hour overnight layovers at PKX. Verify current rates and booking via Plaza Premium Group.
⚠️ No Centurion / Capital One / Chase Sapphire
None of the major US flagship card-network lounges have a PKX presence. Amex Platinum holders use the Plaza Premium Library Lounge via Priority Pass.
🦆 5. Beijing Food: Peking Duck, Jianbing, Zhajiangmian, Lamb Hotpot
Beijing’s food culture sits at the historical heart of Northern Chinese cuisine — anchored by the imperial-court tradition, the wheat-noodle-and-bread-leaning carbohydrate base (vs the rice-focused South), Mongolian + Manchu influences, and the famous slow-roasted duck that gave the city its global food identity. The defining specialties: Peking duck (the cherry-glazed crisp-skinned duck served with thin pancakes, scallion, cucumber, hoisin sauce — the dish that made Beijing famous), jianbing (the Beijing breakfast street-food savoury crepe with egg, scallion, chili sauce, crispy wonton), zhajiangmian (the Beijing-style “fried sauce noodles” with fermented soybean meat sauce), and lamb hotpot (the Mongolian-influenced copper-pot lamb broth with sesame-paste dipping sauce). PKX’s airside food is functional with credible Beijing concepts; tenant lineup varies.
Peking duck (北京烤鸭, Beijing kao ya) is the dish that made the city globally famous — duck dried then roasted in an open fire (traditionally fruit wood like jujube or peach) until the skin is glassy + crackling, then carved tableside and eaten in thin pancakes (春饼, chunbing) with scallion + cucumber + hoisin sauce. The carving is a culinary performance — the master carver slices 108 pieces from a single duck in front of guests. Quanjude (since 1864, multiple locations across Beijing — the original at Qianmen) is the institutional name; Da Dong (the upscale modern version, multiple locations) is the contemporary critical favourite; Siji Minfu (the working-class version near the Forbidden City) is the local-favourite. ¥250-400 per duck (for 2-3 people), 90-120 min meal duration.
Jianbing (煎饼) — a savoury Beijing-street-food crepe made on a hot griddle: thin batter spread with a wooden T-stick, egg cracked + spread on top, fried until set, then loaded with scallion + cilantro + crispy wonton (报章, baozhang) + chili sauce + sweet bean paste, folded into a wrap. The defining Beijing breakfast street food. ¥8-15 per crepe from street-side vendors; the wholeprocess takes 90 seconds.
Zhajiangmian (炸酱面, “fried sauce noodles”) is the Beijing street-classic noodle dish — thick wheat noodles topped with a thick salty-sweet fermented yellow-bean paste sauce with ground pork, served with a mountain of topping vegetables (cucumber, radish, soy bean sprouts, garlic, edamame) that the diner mixes in. Lao Beijing Zhajiang Mian Dawang (multiple locations) is the heritage institutional version. ¥18-35 per bowl.
Lamb hotpot (涮羊肉, shuan yang rou) — Beijing’s Mongolian-influenced hotpot tradition, distinct from Sichuan/Chongqing málà style. Thinly-sliced fresh lamb is briefly swished (涮) in a clear broth from a copper “Mongolian pot” with a central chimney, then dipped in a sesame-paste sauce (with garlic + chive sauce + soy + chili oil), eaten with sesame flatbread (烧饼). Dong Lai Shun (since 1903, the heritage institutional version) and Yi Tiao Long are the named brands. ¥150-300 per person.
Duty-Free & Souvenir Reality at PKX
🏯 Forbidden City + Beijing Imperial Memorabilia
¥50-500. Forbidden City-branded silk scarves + porcelain replicas + miniature imperial-treasure reproductions; the Beijing-as-imperial-capital identity gives PKX duty-free a distinctive Chinese-court souvenir line.
🥃 Moutai + Wuliangye Baijiu
¥500-15,000+ per 500ml. Maotai (Guizhou-distilled, the “Four Famous Liquors” flagship) and Wuliangye (Sichuan, “Five Grains”) at PKX duty-free. The state-banquet baijiu tradition. Customs allowance varies — verify.
🍵 Longjing + Pu’er Tea
¥100-2,000+ per gift box. Premium Chinese teas — Longjing (West Lake Dragon Well green tea from Hangzhou), Pu’er (Yunnan fermented), Tieguanyin (Fujian oolong). Available at PKX duty-free in gift-grade tin packaging.
🐼 Panda + Dragon Plush + Imperial Toys
¥50-300. Panda plush toys, dragon-themed silk garments, miniature lion + dragon performance masks for kids. The Beijing-airport classic-souvenir line at every airside gift shop.
💡 6. Insider: Forbidden City, Tiananmen, Great Wall (NOT a Layover), 798 Art
The Forbidden City (故宫, Gugong) — the Ming and Qing dynasty imperial palace complex (1420-1912), UNESCO World Heritage Site, 980 buildings across 72 hectares, the largest and best-preserved imperial palace complex in the world. ¥40 (low season) / ¥60 (high season) entry, advance booking required at gugong.ktmtech.cn; closed Mondays. Adjacent Tiananmen Square, the 880,000 m² political-symbolic square, free entry (security check required). From PKX: Daxing Airport Express + Beijing Subway Line 1 to Tiananmen East, ~90-110 min each way. DiDi direct ~¥200-280, 60-90 min. Honest layover math: 2-3 hours each way + 2-3 hr on-site + airport buffer = 7-9 hours minimum. Realistic for a 9-10+ hour layover; tight for shorter. Forbidden City admission requires advance booking 7+ days ahead for high-season slots.
Mutianyu Great Wall (慕田峪长城) — the most-visited restored Great Wall section near Beijing, ~70 km north-east of central Beijing. From PKX: 138 km via the Beijing 6th Ring Road, ~2.5 hours by car each way. With on-site time (2-3 hours for cable car + walk + photos + lunch) and security buffer: 12+ hour layover minimum. For a real Great Wall visit during a PKX transit, plan a TWOV stopover of 2+ nights — not a same-day layover. If you arrive at PEK instead of PKX, the Great Wall is somewhat more accessible (~9 hour layover minimum from PEK) but still tight.
798 Art District (798艺术区) in north-east Beijing’s Chaoyang district — a former East-German-designed industrial complex converted to galleries, studios, design boutiques, cafés in the early 2000s. The modern Beijing cultural anchor — major Chinese contemporary artists (Ai Weiwei, Zhang Xiaogang, Yue Minjun) showed here. Free entry; individual gallery and venue charges. From PKX: Daxing Airport Express + Beijing Subway transfers, ~70-90 min one way. Realistic for a 5-6 hour layover from PKX.
Temple of Heaven (天坛) — the Ming-Qing imperial sacrificial complex (1420), UNESCO World Heritage Site, set in 273 hectares of park. The iconic round Hall of Prayer for Good Harvests (with the famous three blue-glaze tile roofs) is one of Beijing’s most-photographed buildings. ¥30 entry, ~2 hours for a real visit. From PKX: Daxing Airport Express + subway transfers, ~70-90 min one way. Realistic for a 5-6 hour layover from PKX and closer than the Forbidden City.
For early flights: the airport-corridor options near PKX include various Chinese-chain hotels (¥400-800); Aerotel within the airport itself for hourly rates; the dedicated airport hotels along the Daxing Airport corridor still developing. For a real Beijing stay: the upscale options near Tiananmen + Forbidden City + Wangfujing (Peninsula Beijing, Mandarin Oriental Beijing Wangfujing, Rosewood Beijing, Bvlgari Hotel Beijing, the historic Beijing Hotel). 90-110 min back to PKX via Daxing Airport Express. Allow 3 hours total for the PKX commute on departure day.
🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Border
Chinese yuan (CNY / ¥). ¥1 ≈ €0.13 ≈ $0.14 (May 2026). Alipay and WeChat Pay are the universal payment methods in China — set up an account in-app before travel, link an international card (Visa/Mastercard now work on both for tourists since 2024), or load via cash. Foreign Visa/Mastercard credit cards work at the airport duty-free, international hotels and Starbucks, but not at most local restaurants, street stalls, taxis, or convenience stores. ATMs at PKX dispense CNY.
China operates the 240-Hour Transit Without Visa (TWOV) policy for 54 eligible nationalities — 10 calendar days of visa-free transit at 60+ ports including Beijing/PKX. Need: valid passport from eligible country + confirmed onward ticket to a third country within 240 hours + China Digital Arrival Card QR (apply at s.nia.gov.cn). EES and ETIAS do not apply at PKX — those are EU systems.
Chinese networks — China Mobile, China Unicom, China Telecom. Local prepaid SIM ~¥80-150 with passport at the airport kiosk. The Great Firewall blocks Google, Gmail, WhatsApp, Instagram, Facebook, X/Twitter, YouTube, the New York Times, BBC News, and most western services — you’ll need a VPN configured BEFORE arrival.
5-6 hour layover: 798 Art District (~70-90 min each way via Daxing Express + subway) or Temple of Heaven (~70-90 min each way) — both realistic for a half-day commitment. 9-10+ hour layover: Forbidden City + Tiananmen Square is the standout move (advance ticket booking required). 12+ hour layover: Great Wall Mutianyu becomes feasible. Under 4 hours: stay airside — Plaza Premium Library Lounge with the international buffet is the credible call. PKX↔PEK inter-airport transfer requires 4+ hours.



