All the Things You Can—and Can’t—Do with Your WeChat Account in China

Retailers in a Chinese market use WeChat QR code payment symbols to collect payments.

Retailers in a Chinese market use WeChat QR code payment symbols to collect payments. Freer/Shutterstock.com

It may even make the government's physical identity cards a thing of the past.

In China, people will soon be able to bring nothing but their smartphones (and clothes, perhaps) when going out, and the one and only app they’ll need to download is WeChat.

Owned by tech giant Tencent, WeChat has evolved from China’s answer to WhatsApp to an all-in-one app that let users order food, hail cars, and pay utility bills through its payment function. It has made cash and credit cards obsolete for many users, and it might soon do the same to physical identity cards issued by the government.

Owned by tech giant Tencent, WeChat has evolved from China’s answer to WhatsApp to an all-in-one app that let users order food, hail cars, and pay utility bills through its payment function. It has made cash and credit cards obsolete for many users, and it might soon do the same to physical identity cards issued by the government.

Below are two lists of all the things you can—and can’t—do with your WeChat account in China.

Things you can do with WeChat

  • Messaging, voice messaging, stickers (including badly made government ones), voice and video calls.
  • Share updates and photos with friends through the Moments feed.
  • Share real-time location with friends.
  • Find random people nearby through the Shake and Look Around features.
  • Toss Drift Bottles into a “sea” and let random people pick up your messages.
  • Read articles (and tip authors) through Public Accounts owned by traditional news outlets, online media, and solo bloggers alike.
  • Search everything that’s published and shared on WeChat.
  • Check friends’ updates and rankings in Tencent-owned mobile games (including some of the world’s most popular titles, such as Honor of Kings and Clash of Clans).
  • Send virtual red envelopes stuffed with real money to friends—especially popular during the Lunar New Year.
  • Transfer money and pay in stores through the Wallet feature.
  • Repay credit cards, pay utility bills, top up mobile phones, or buy wealth management products and a virtual currency owned by Tencent through the Wallet feature.
  • Get access to third-party services including ride-hailing, online shopping, and food delivery through Wallet.
  • Get access to public services including booking doctor appointments, applying for visas, and checking driving records.
  • Use the Mini Program feature, which offers miniature, low-memory “apps” within the WeChat app itself—and basically includes everything.

Things you can’t do with WeChat

  • Send politically sensitive messages or images.
  • Publish articles critical of the government (they’ll soon be deleted).
  • Change your alias to certain terms including “Xi Jinping,” “Falun Gong,” and “low-end population.”
  • Transfer 6.4 yuan or 89.64 yuan through Wallet around the anniversary of the 1989 Tiananmen massacre, also known as “June 4.”
  • Spread rumors, information, and other content that “disrupt the social order,” which can lead to up to seven years in jail.