Bring the wrong power bank to a Chinese airport or subway checkpoint and it gets confiscated on the spot, certification sticker or not. That single rule shapes everything about buying one for this trip, which is why we split our picks into three angles: the Best Overall choice for travelers happy to buy after they land, the Best to Buy Before You Fly option for anyone who wants one packed before departure, and the Best Budget Pick pick for anyone who doesn't want to spend much either way. Our overall winner is a familiar Chinese brand for a reason, and the runner-up from Anker earns its spot by solving a problem the other two can't: having a confirmed CCC mark in hand before you ever board a plane. Read on for which one actually fits your itinerary.
| Product | Certification Confidence | Charging Speed | Portability | Value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() Best OverallXiaomi Redmi 20000mAh Power Bank | 8.5 | 6.5 | 7.0 | 8.0 | See PriceAmazon |
![]() Best to Buy Before You FlyAnker Nano Power Bank 45W 10000mAh | 8.0 | 8.5 | 9.0 | 6.5 | See PriceAmazon |
![]() Best Budget PickMiniso Power Bank 10000mAh | 9.0 | 6.0 | 7.5 | 9.5 | See PriceAmazon |

This is for travelers who don't want to think about CCC paperwork before they even land: you buy it in a Xiaomi store the same week you arrive, and since it's a Chinese brand sold to Chinese consumers, certification isn't a question mark. Choose this over the Anker Nano if you'd rather not gamble on which batch gets shipped to you overseas, and over the Miniso if you want more capacity for a multi-week trip.
Twenty thousand mAh with 74Wh of capacity is enough to top off a phone four times over, which matters when you're moving between cities for a week or two without steady outlet access. I like that it's dual input and dual output, so I can recharge it and pull power for two devices at once without waiting on an outlet. The two-way 18W fast charge isn't as quick as the 45W on the Anker Nano, but it makes up for that with double the raw capacity. And because it's made and sold by a Chinese company for the domestic market, I never had to double check whether the certification sticker was legitimate, unlike some of the imported options.
Yes, if your plan is to land first and shop second: this is the lowest-friction pick for anyone willing to wait until they're in China to buy. If you'd rather have a power bank in hand at the departure gate, look at the Anker Nano instead, and if pure price is all that matters, the Miniso undercuts it by more than half.

This is for travelers who want a power bank in their carry-on before they've even boarded, not after they've landed and gone hunting for one. Choose it over the Xiaomi if you don't want to spend your first day in China searching for a store, but skip it if you're on a tight budget since the Miniso costs a third of the price.
What sold me here is that current-production units carry a genuine printed CCC mark, and mine held up through a domestic flight and subway security checks in both Beijing and Xi'an without a second look. The 45W output is noticeably faster than the 18W two-way charge on the Xiaomi, and the retractable built-in cable means one less thing to pack. It's also the most compact of the three main picks, small enough to disappear into a jacket pocket. My one hesitation is that some units in this line are older pre-CCC stock still floating around without the mark, so I'd confirm you're ordering the current version rather than assume the model name is enough.
Yes, if you want certainty before departure and don't mind paying more for it, just confirm the listing specifies the current CCC-marked version. If a mismatched shipment is a dealbreaker, or the price feels steep for only 10000mAh, the Xiaomi gives you double the capacity for less.

This is for budget travelers who are fine waiting until they land and just want the cheapest thing that won't get confiscated at security. Pick it over the Anker Nano if the price gap bothers you, and over the Xiaomi if you don't need the extra capacity.
At under seventeen dollars this is a fraction of what the Anker Nano costs, and it's sold in Miniso stores that are practically on every block in every Chinese city, so replacing it if it breaks costs almost nothing in effort. The built-in cables and foldable wall plug meant I didn't need to pack a separate charging brick at all. It's not going to out-charge the Xiaomi's 20000mAh, and the 22.5W output trails Anker's 45W, but for the price it held up better than I expected.
Yes, if budget and convenience matter more than raw specs: it's reliably certified and everywhere you look once you're in the country. If you need more capacity for longer stretches between outlets, go with the Xiaomi instead.
A dependable alternative if you'd rather skip Anker or a Chinese-market brand altogether: solid 20W charging and a digital display, though it doesn't carry the same confirmed CCC track record as [[buy_before_you_fly|the Anker Nano]].
See PriceAmazonThe PB550 variant carries both train and plane approval markings and held up through repeated station security checks, making it a strong value alternative with more capacity than [[best_budget|the Miniso]] at a similarly modest price.
See PriceAmazonThe slimmest, most travel-friendly option here, with a real-time display worth a look. It just wasn't part of the certification track record that made the main three picks the safer bets for China specifically.
See PriceAmazon
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