Nanning Wuxu International Airport (NNG) — The Complete Master Guide 2026
Nanning Wuxu is the largest airport in Guangxi and the closest big mainland-Chinese hub to the Vietnam border, which is the single fact that shapes everything else about it. For most foreign travellers it is one of three things: a connection point for a trip into Guangxi (Guilin’s karst country is the regional prize), a self-transfer between Southeast Asia and inland China, or the arrival point for a short-stay business trip tied to the China–ASEAN trade that Nanning hosts. It handled about 13.5 million passengers in 2025 — mid-sized by Chinese standards, and noticeably quieter than the Kunming or Guangzhou hubs travellers often connect through alongside it. This guide covers the border rules that actually apply here, how you get the 32 km into the city, which lounges take your card, and an honest read on whether a layover here is worth leaving the terminal for.
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
Nanning Wuxu International Airport (NNG / ZGNN)
About 32 km southwest of Nanning city centre, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region
Terminal 2 (in service since 2014); Terminal 3 under construction, due 2027
Chinese yuan / renminbi (CNY, ¥). ≈ ¥6.8 to US$1, ≈ ¥7.9 to €1 (May 2026)
Four shuttle lines to fixed city points, flat ¥20, ~40–60 min
Wuxu Airport Railway Station (intercity HSR) → Nanning, ¥25–40, ~16 min (limited daily window)
China visa, OR 240-hour visa-free transit (NNG is a designated port), OR 30-day unilateral visa-free entry
GX Airlines (Beibu Gulf), plus China Southern, Shenzhen Airlines, Sichuan Airlines bases
Priority Pass and DragonPass both at Terminal 2; check the card against the specific lounge
Alipay / WeChat Pay everywhere; cash and foreign cards are second-class
📋 Table of Contents
- 🏢 1. Two Terminals & the Vietnam-Border Hub
- 🛂 2. China’s Border Rules at NNG: 240-Hour Transit, Visas & the Digital Arrival Card
- 🚌 3. Airport Buses, the Wuxu Airport Rail Station, DiDi & Taxi
- 🛋️ 4. Lounges: Which Card Gets You In
- 🍜 5. Guangxi Food: Rice Noodles, Lemon Duck & Sour-Bamboo Snail Soup
- 💡 6. Layover Reality: Should You Leave the Terminal?
- 🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Border
- ❓ Frequently Asked Questions
- 📊 2026 Summary Data Table
🏢 1. Two Terminals & the Vietnam-Border Hub
Nanning runs out of Terminal 2, which entered service in September 2014 and handles domestic and international flights under one roof. The international zone has its own immigration hall on the arrivals side. A third terminal has been under construction since January 2023, designed for 34 million passengers a year and due for completion in 2027 — until it opens, T2 is the whole show, so ignore any old reference to a separate “Terminal 1” departure point.
The home carrier is GX Airlines (Guangxi Beibu Gulf Airlines), a low-cost airline headquartered here that runs the bulk of its domestic network out of Nanning. China Southern operates the highest volume of flights through NNG and bases aircraft here, alongside Shenzhen Airlines and Sichuan Airlines. That domestic concentration makes connections to Guangzhou, Chongqing and the rest of southern China dense and cheap.
The international side is smaller and points mostly at Southeast Asia — Bangkok, Hanoi, and other ASEAN cities, flown by GX Airlines and carriers including Spring Airlines. The genuine 2026 development is GX Airlines’ Nanning–Hanoi route, which launched on 31 December 2025 with three weekly A320 services. It is a short hop that fits Nanning’s position 180-odd km from the Vietnamese frontier, and it is the kind of route that makes a self-transfer through Nanning between Vietnam and inland China a realistic option. One practical consequence of the low-cost mix: many of these fares are point-to-point with no through-checked baggage, so on a self-transfer you will usually clear immigration, collect your bag and re-check it — which makes the transit rules below relevant even if you only planned to stay airside.
🛂 2. China’s Border Rules at NNG: 240-Hour Transit, Visas & the Digital Arrival Card
Three separate systems can get a foreign traveller through the border at Nanning. Which one applies depends on your nationality and your itinerary — this is China’s national entry regime, and nothing else governs it.
240-Hour Visa-Free Transit — NNG is a designated port
China extended its visa-free transit allowance to 240 hours (10 days) in December 2024, and the port and country lists were expanded again on 5 November 2025. As of that update, citizens of 55 eligible countries can transit visa-free through any of 65 designated ports, and Nanning Wuxu is one of them — it was added in the December 2024 expansion.
The condition that catches people is the third-country rule. You must arrive from one country and depart to a different country or region — the textbook case is Country A → China → Country B, where B is not A. A round trip back to where you came from (A → China → A) does not qualify. You need a confirmed onward ticket to that third country with departure within 240 hours of arrival, and you must be able to show it at check-in and at immigration.
Entering on this scheme at Nanning limits your movement to the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region: the administrative areas of Nanning, Liuzhou, Guilin, Wuzhou, Beihai, Fangchenggang, Qinzhou, Guigang, Yulin, Hezhou, Hechi and Laibin. That is a useful boundary for once, because it includes Guilin — the karst-landscape destination most travellers actually want from this corner of China. The catch is distance, not permission: Guilin is roughly five hours from Nanning by high-speed train, so it is a genuine multi-day transit-trip target, not a layover one. Crossing into a province outside Guangxi on transit status risks removal and a future entry ban, so treat the regional line as hard.
When you need a visa
If your itinerary does not fit the transit rule — most obviously a return trip to your home country, or a stay longer than ten days — you need a Chinese visa arranged in advance. The standard tourist visa (L) is applied for at a Chinese embassy or visa centre before you travel. There is no general tourist visa-on-arrival at Nanning.
30-day unilateral visa-free entry
Separately from transit, China runs a unilateral visa-free scheme for ordinary-passport holders of around 50 countries, allowing visits of up to 30 days with no visa and no third-country condition. The list has grown through 2024–2026 — the United Kingdom and Canada were added on 17 February 2026, and the policy has been extended through the end of 2026 for most nationalities. Where it applies, this is simpler than transit: no onward-ticket rule, no regional cap. Because the list and dates change, check your own passport’s current status against an official National Immigration Administration source before you book rather than assuming.
The digital arrival card
Since 20 November 2025, China has run a mandatory online arrival card. Foreign arrivals complete the China Digital Arrival Card (CDAC) within 72 hours before landing — on the National Immigration Administration website, or via the “NIA 12367” mini-programs inside WeChat and Alipay — and present the resulting QR code at immigration. You can still complete it on arrival by scanning the checkpoint QR code or using the kiosks in the hall, but doing it in advance saves time at a busy international arrival.
🚌 3. Airport Buses, the Wuxu Airport Rail Station, DiDi & Taxi
The airport sits about 32 km southwest of the centre, so every option below is a real journey of 40 minutes or more, not a quick hop. There is no city metro line to the airport — ignore any source that claims one; the rail link is an intercity high-speed station, covered below.
🚌 Airport Shuttle Buses
Four shuttle lines run from the terminal to fixed points in the city, all at a flat ¥20 (about US$3 / €2.50):
- Line 1 → Nanning Railway Station, roughly 05:30–22:30, every 30 minutes, about 40 minutes.
- Line 2 → Nanning International Hotel, roughly 05:30–21:00 from the airport.
- Line 3 → Xixiangtang / the zoo area, roughly 09:00–22:00, hourly.
- Line 4 → Nanning East Railway Station, roughly 09:00–19:30.
Line 1 to Nanning Railway Station is the default for most arrivals, since the station is central and connects onward. The coaches sit in the same traffic as everyone else, so the time is less predictable than rail. Check the current route and hours at the airport ground-transport desk on arrival — these change, so confirm on the day rather than relying on an old timetable.
🚄 Wuxu Airport Railway Station — fast but narrow-windowed
The airport has its own intercity high-speed rail station on the Nanning–Pingxiang line. Trains to Nanning’s main station take about 16 minutes and cost roughly ¥25 second class to ¥40 first class, which is the quickest way into town when one is running. The drawback is the schedule: there are only about ten or so services a day and the useful window is narrow — verify departure times against the China Railway 12306 app before you bank on it, because a flight that lands outside the train window leaves you on the bus or in a taxi anyway. Tickets are bought through 12306 (app or counter), which needs a little setup for a foreign passport.
📱 DiDi — the Chinese rideshare
DiDi is the practical door-to-door option, and the app works in English with a foreign card or Alipay/WeChat linked. Expect a fare into the centre of roughly ¥50 that varies with traffic and time of day, and a journey of about 40 minutes. For a late arrival, DiDi or a taxi is the realistic choice once the buses and trains have stopped.
🚕 Taxi — use the official rank
Metered taxis queue at the official airport rank. The reference fare into the centre runs about ¥100 in the daytime and more at night, over roughly 40 minutes. Use the official line rather than anyone approaching you inside the terminal offering a ride — the unsolicited-driver approach is the standard overcharge trap at any large Chinese airport, and Nanning is no exception. Insist on the meter at the official rank.
🛋️ 4. Lounges: Which Card Gets You In
Nanning’s lounges are concentrated in Terminal 2, and in China the difference between Priority Pass and DragonPass matters more than usual — many Chinese lounges sit on the local DragonPass network and reject Priority Pass, so check your card against the specific lounge rather than assuming airport-wide access.
At Nanning the picture is friendlier than most: the Terminal 2 lounges accept both Priority Pass and DragonPass. Priority Pass lists access to the First Class Lounge and Concept Bookstore Lounge in Terminal 2, plus the China Southern premium lounges. DragonPass covers the same first-class lounges (the network lists International First Class Lounges 1–2 and First Class Lounges 1–4). The First Class Lounge sits past security in the domestic area, with daily hours in the region of 06:00–22:00 — confirm the exact lounge and hours on the day, as locations move with the terminal layout.
If you are flying business or first on a hub carrier, your boarding pass gets you into the matching carrier lounge regardless of card. Pay-per-use entry is also sold at the door for several lounges; the walk-in price is best confirmed at the desk rather than quoted from a stale figure.
🍜 5. Guangxi Food: Rice Noodles, Lemon Duck & Sour-Bamboo Snail Soup
Guangxi food is its own thing, distinct from the Cantonese cooking travellers expect this far south, and the airport’s landside food court does passable versions of the staples. The regional signature is rice noodles (米粉, mifen) — Nanning’s everyday breakfast, served in dozens of local styles. The dish outsiders come away talking about is luosifen (螺蛳粉), the river-snail rice-noodle soup from nearby Liuzhou, sour and pungent from fermented bamboo shoots; you either take to it or you do not, and it is worth finding out which. Lemon duck (柠檬鸭, ningmeng ya) is a Guangxi home-style classic, duck stir-fried with pickled lemon, ginger and chilli. Prices airside are inflated in the usual airport way; the landside court before security is cheaper and better.
Duty-Free & Souvenir Reality at NNG
International departures have the standard duty-free run of liquor, tobacco and perfume. The Guangxi-specific buys worth a look are luosifen instant-noodle packs (the export version of the snail-noodle soup, which travels far better than the fresh bowl) and regional fruit products — the area grows mangoes, longans and sugar oranges. As with food, anything you can buy in the city is cheaper there than airside, so save the duty-free counter for forgotten gifts.
💡 6. Layover Reality: Should You Leave the Terminal?
The honest answer for Nanning is more cautious than for a hub like Kunming, and the reason is simple arithmetic. The airport is 32 km southwest of the centre, and Nanning’s most-cited single sight — Qingxiu Mountain (青秀山), a hilltop scenic park with an orchid garden and city views — sits about 9 km southeast of the centre, on the far side of town from the airport. Add the airport-to-city leg to the cross-city leg and you are looking at roughly 75–90 minutes one way before you have seen anything. With the return trip and the international check-in and security buffer, Qingxiu is realistic only on a layover of around six hours or more, clear of immigration, and only if you are confident of your return timing.
Under about four hours, stay in the terminal — the maths of a 32 km each-way trip plus international security leaves no room. Nanning city itself is a working provincial capital rather than an obvious sightseeing destination, so the payoff for a short city dash is thinner here than in places where the airport sits beside the old town.
The Guangxi prize most travellers actually want — Guilin and its karst river country — is inside the 240-hour transit zone, so you may legally go there on transit status. But it is about five hours from Nanning by high-speed train, which puts it firmly in multi-day-trip territory, not layover territory. Do not try to fold Guilin into a connection; treat it as the reason to take the 240-hour transit and stay a few nights, or skip it.
🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Border
Payment. Nanning runs on Alipay and WeChat Pay. Both now let foreign visitors link an overseas card, and setting one up before you land is the single most useful piece of prep — many taxis, small eateries and ticket machines are effectively cashless. Carry some cash (¥) as a backup; foreign credit cards work at hotels and big stores but not reliably elsewhere.
Connectivity. China’s firewall blocks the usual Western apps and sites. If you rely on a non-Chinese service, sort out a working roaming plan or a travel eSIM that routes around it before arrival, because you cannot download a fix once you are inside without access.
Currency. The yuan trades at roughly ¥6.8 to the US dollar and ¥7.9 to the euro as of May 2026. Airport exchange counters give a poor rate against a markup — change only what you need at the airport and rely on Alipay/WeChat or a city ATM for the rest.
Border. Re-read section 2 before you fly. The most common Nanning mistake is assuming a return trip qualifies for 240-hour transit — it does not. Match your nationality and itinerary to the right one of the three systems before check-in, and remember the China Digital Arrival Card now has to be done online within 72 hours of arrival.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
📊 2026 Summary Data Table
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| IATA / ICAO | NNG / ZGNN |
| Distance to centre | ~32 km southwest |
| Terminals | T2 in service (2014); T3 under construction, due 2027 |
| Airport buses | 4 lines to fixed city points, flat ¥20, ~40–60 min; Line 1 → Nanning Railway Station |
| Airport rail | Wuxu Airport Railway Station → Nanning, ¥25–40, ~16 min, ~10 trains/day (check 12306) |
| Taxi / DiDi | Taxi ~¥100 daytime; DiDi ~¥50; ~40 min depending on traffic |
| 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 (designated port) · 30-day unilateral visa-free · standard visa |
| Transit zone limit | Guangxi region only (Nanning, Liuzhou, Guilin, Wuzhou, Beihai, Fangchenggang, Qinzhou, Guigang, Yulin, Hezhou, Hechi, Laibin) |
| Arrival card | China Digital Arrival Card (CDAC), mandatory, online within 72 h of arrival |
| Lounges | Priority Pass + DragonPass both in T2 (First Class Lounge, Concept Bookstore, China Southern) |
| Hub carriers | GX Airlines (Beibu Gulf), China Southern, Shenzhen Airlines, Sichuan Airlines |
| 2026 change | GX Airlines Nanning–Hanoi launched 31 Dec 2025 (3×/week, A320) |
| 2025 passengers | ~13.5 million |
| Short-layover verdict | Stay airside under ~4 hrs; Qingxiu Mountain viable at 6 hrs+; Guilin not layover-viable (~5 h by train) |



