Latest Comments

No comments to show.

Author: Mubbashir Qureshi, CEO, MTZ Global Visa Consultants Pvt Ltd — 25+ years personal experience guiding Pakistani students into study abroad & international medical education.

Last verified: May 2026  ·  Next review: August 2026  ·  Spotted an error? WhatsApp +92 315 1555507 — corrected within 24 hours.

Quick Answer Pakistani MBBS students in China live on secure, gated university campuses in international student hostels, study in English-medium programmes, eat at halal campus canteens, practise their faith freely, and are supported by well-organised Pakistani Students Associations on every campus. The academic workload is demanding — this is a genuine medical degree — but the community, facilities and support structure make it a manageable and rewarding 6-year experience for students who are prepared.

A Typical Day — Pre-Clinical Years (Year 1 and 2)

The first two years of MBBS in China are pre-clinical — focused on foundational medical sciences. Here is what a typical weekday looks like for a Pakistani student in Years 1 and 2:

TimeActivityNotes
6:00 – 7:30 AMFajr prayer, sehri (if Ramadan), personal preparationMost students wake early for prayer before the day begins
7:30 – 8:00 AMBreakfast at halal campus canteenMuslim canteen opens early. Common to eat with Pakistani classmates.
8:00 AM – 12:30 PMMorning lecturesAnatomy, Biochemistry, Physiology, Histology — in English. Typically 2–4 lectures per morning.
12:30 – 1:30 PMLunch break + Dhuhr prayerHalal canteen. Prayer in hostel room or campus prayer room.
1:30 – 5:00 PMAfternoon lectures or lab sessionsPractical labs are a significant part of Year 1 and 2. Anatomy dissection, biochemistry practicals.
5:00 – 7:00 PMSelf-study / revisionLibrary or hostel room. Most Pakistani students study in groups — helps with motivation and peer teaching.
7:00 – 8:00 PMDinner at halal canteen + Maghrib and Isha prayersCommunity dinner time. PSA social interactions happen here.
8:00 – 10:30 PMEvening self-studyThe serious study session. MBBS in China requires consistent daily effort — this is not optional.
10:30 PM – 6:00 AMSleepRest is a genuine study strategy. Students who sacrifice sleep consistently underperform.
📋Honest note on academic workload MBBS in China is a real medical degree — the workload is demanding and consistent. Students who treat it like a gap year or assume it is easier than Pakistani medical colleges are wrong. The syllabus is comprehensive, exams are frequent, and promotion to the next year requires passing all subjects. Successful Pakistani graduates consistently say the key is daily study discipline — not cramming before exams.

A Typical Day — Clinical Years (Year 3 to 5)

From Year 3, students move into clinical rotations at the university’s affiliated teaching hospital. The day becomes less lecture-based and more hospital-based. Here is what clinical years look like:

TimeActivityNotes
6:30 – 7:30 AMFajr, preparation, breakfastEarlier starts in clinical years — hospital rounds begin early.
8:00 AM – 1:00 PMHospital clinical rotationInternal medicine, surgery, paediatrics, obs & gynae — in rotation. Following consultants on ward rounds, assisting in procedures, clerking patients.
1:00 – 2:00 PMLunch + Dhuhr prayerHospital canteen (halal options available) or return to campus.
2:00 – 5:00 PMAfternoon clinical session or lectureSome days have afternoon ward duties. Others have didactic teaching sessions.
5:00 – 7:30 PMReturn to campus + evening studyReview of clinical cases from the day. Preparation for next day’s rotation.
7:30 – 9:00 PMDinner, Maghrib, Isha, social timePakistani community dinner and social interactions.
9:00 – 11:00 PMNight studyExam preparation, case reviews, online resources.

Hostel Life — What Your Room and Facilities Look Like

Pakistani MBBS students live in international student dormitories — separate from Chinese domestic student accommodation. Here is the standard setup:

Hostel FeatureStandard at MTZ’s 29 Universities
Room typeTypically twin-share (2 students per room) at most universities. Single rooms available at some — usually at a premium.
Room facilitiesBed, desk, wardrobe, air conditioning, central heating (in northern campuses), Wi-Fi, windows. Basic but functional.
BathroomEn-suite attached bathroom at most universities. Shared bathroom on the floor at some older dormitory buildings.
KitchenCommunal kitchen on each floor or in the building — used extensively by Pakistani students for home cooking.
LaundryCoin-operated laundry machines in the dormitory building. Some students hand-wash.
InternetWi-Fi in the room. With a VPN — access to all Pakistani apps, WhatsApp, YouTube, Google, family video calls.
SecurityCard-access entry. CCTV at all entrances. Reception desk staffed at all times.
CleaningShared corridors cleaned by university staff. Students clean their own rooms.
Common roomAvailable at most dormitories — used for socialising, watching TV, study group sessions.
💡Practical tip for new arrivals Bring a power strip / extension cord from Pakistan (Type C / Type G adaptors). Chinese sockets are Type A/I — different from Pakistani Type G. A VPN installed before departure is essential for all Pakistani apps and services. Pack key spices and comfort food items in your luggage — these make the first few weeks significantly easier.

The Pakistani Students Association — The Heart of Campus Life

The Pakistani Students Association (PSA) is the single most important community structure for Pakistani MBBS students in China. It exists on every one of MTZ’s 29 campuses and is run by senior Pakistani students for all Pakistani students on that campus.

PSA FunctionWhat It Does
Airport pickupArranges a named senior Pakistani student to meet new arrivals at the airport. You are not arriving alone.
First-week orientationCampus tour, hostel setup assistance, SIM card, bank account, university registration — all guided by senior students who have done it before.
Eid celebrationsEid ul-Fitr and Eid ul-Adha are celebrated on campus with communal prayers, special meals, gatherings — organised by the PSA.
Cricket and sportsInter-university Pakistani cricket matches and sports events are a major part of the social calendar.
Cultural eventsPakistan Independence Day (14 August), Defence Day, national events — celebrated with flags, food and community gatherings.
Study supportSenior students help juniors with difficult subjects, past papers, exam preparation strategies.
Emergency supportIf a student faces a personal crisis, the PSA is the first community responder — before formal university channels.
WhatsApp groupsCampus-specific Pakistani student WhatsApp groups for information, social coordination, safety alerts and news.

MTZ’s role: Before your child arrives in China, MTZ contacts the PSA on their specific campus and arranges a named senior student contact. This happens as part of the pre-departure process — not after arrival. Your child walks off the plane with a name and a WhatsApp number.

Social Life — What Pakistani Students Actually Do

Life in China for Pakistani students is not all study and hostel rooms. There is a genuine social life — shaped by the Pakistani community, the Chinese cultural environment and the university facilities.

Within the Pakistani community

  • Group meals at halal canteen and Pakistani restaurants — daily social anchor
  • Cricket matches between university teams and between Pakistani student groups
  • Eid gatherings, Independence Day celebrations, weddings of senior students
  • Study groups — a mix of social and academic function
  • Group travel — Pakistani students visit nearby cities and tourist spots together

Engaging with Chinese culture

  • Learning Mandarin — non-MOE students learn it formally; MOE students pick up basic conversational Chinese informally
  • Exploring local food markets, parks, city attractions
  • Chinese New Year — campuses are festive; many Pakistani students stay on campus and enjoy the celebrations
  • Making Chinese and international student friends — common in clinical years when students work together in hospital

Sports and recreation

  • University sports facilities: gym, basketball courts, table tennis, badminton — available to all students
  • Cricket — Pakistan vs India student matches are a major event on any campus with both communities
  • City exploration — Chinese cities offer affordable public transport, interesting food and cultural sites

Homesickness and Mental Health — The Honest Picture

This is the topic most guides avoid. MTZ does not avoid it because homesickness and adjustment difficulty are real — and a student who is not prepared for them is more likely to struggle.

💬What most students experience in the first 3 months The first 6–12 weeks are the hardest for most Pakistani students — regardless of personality or how excited they were before leaving. Being 5,000 km from family, in a country with a different language, food and culture, with a demanding academic schedule, while being a long-term resident for the first time — this is a genuine psychological adjustment. It is normal. It passes. Every senior Pakistani student at every campus has been through it.
ChallengeHonest RealityWhat Helps
Homesickness in first 3 monthsAlmost universal — especially weeks 4–8 after the initial excitement fadesDaily video calls home. PSA senior mentors who have been through it. Keeping busy with study and social activities.
Language barrierManageable but frustrating — especially outside campus and in clinical yearsBasic Mandarin phrases learned before arrival. Fellow Pakistani students who know Chinese. Google Translate and VPN.
Academic pressureReal — MBBS is not easy anywhere. Exams are frequent and promotion requires passing all subjectsDaily study discipline. Study groups. Senior student guidance on exam strategy and past papers.
Food adjustmentFirst few weeks can be difficult — campus canteen food is different from homeCommunal kitchen for home cooking. Pakistani restaurants near campus. Familiar spices brought from home.
Cultural isolationSome students feel disconnected from Pakistani cultural references, news, entertainmentVPN restores access to Pakistani TV, YouTube, news, social media. PSA cultural events. Regular calls home.
Financial stressUnexpected expenses, poor PKR-CNY exchange rate months, delayed transfersBudget planning before departure. Emergency fund. MTZ advises on money transfer options at pre-departure briefing.

Financial Management — Sending Money and Spending in China

Managing money as a Pakistani student in China requires planning. Here is the practical picture:

Monthly budget — what students typically spend

Expense CategoryTypical Monthly Range (CNY)Approximate PKR
Food (halal canteen + occasional restaurant)CNY 800 – 1,200PKR 32,000 – 48,000
SIM card and mobile dataCNY 50 – 100PKR 2,000 – 4,000
Transport (bus, metro, occasional taxi)CNY 100 – 200PKR 4,000 – 8,000
Personal items, toiletries, clothingCNY 200 – 400PKR 8,000 – 16,000
Entertainment, eating out, travelCNY 200 – 500PKR 8,000 – 20,000
Stationery and study materialsCNY 100 – 200PKR 4,000 – 8,000
Total monthly living estimateCNY 1,450 – 2,600PKR 58,000 – 104,000

Note: PKR figures are indicative at approximately 1 CNY = 40 PKR. The actual rate varies daily. MTZ advises families to budget conservatively and maintain a 2-month emergency buffer in CNY in the student’s Chinese bank account.

Sending money from Pakistan to China

MethodHow It WorksTypical Time
Bank wire transfer (TT)Family transfers from Pakistani bank to student’s Chinese bank account. Most common method. Rates and fees vary by bank.3–5 business days
Western Union / MoneyGramAvailable in Pakistan. Student collects in CNY at a Chinese agent or bank. Higher fees but faster.Same day to 1–2 days
Remittance apps (Wise, Remitly)Online transfer. Competitive rates. Student receives in Chinese bank account.1–3 business days
Informal channels (hundi)Not recommended. Illegal in both Pakistan and China. No recourse if funds lost.N/A — avoid

Payment apps in China

  • WeChat Pay (微信支付) — The primary payment app in China. Linked to a Chinese bank account. Used for everything — canteen, shops, transport, online orders.
  • Alipay (支付宝) — Second major payment app. Also linked to Chinese bank. Increasingly accepted internationally.
  • Chinese bank account — Essential. Open within the first 2 weeks of arrival at a bank near campus (Bank of China, ICBC, China Construction Bank are most common). University international office assists.
  • Cash (RMB/CNY) — Carry some cash initially. China is increasingly cashless but some markets and smaller shops still use cash.

Frequently Asked Questions — Life as a Pakistani Student in China

Q: Is life as a Pakistani student in China lonely?

Not for most students — because the Pakistani community on every campus is large, active and welcoming. The first 6–12 weeks can feel isolating as you adjust, but the PSA orientation, senior mentors, group meals and daily community interactions mean that most students feel settled and socially connected within 2–3 months.

Q: Can I use WhatsApp in China?

WhatsApp works in China with a VPN. Install a reliable VPN on your phone before leaving Pakistan — this is essential preparation, not optional. With a VPN, all Pakistani apps (WhatsApp, YouTube, Google, Instagram, Pakistani news apps) work normally. Without a VPN, these apps are blocked.

Q: How do Pakistani students manage Chinese language?

For MOE-listed university students (English-medium MBBS), Chinese is not required for academic work but is useful for daily life and clinical years. Most students pick up basic conversational Chinese over Year 1 and 2. For non-MOE bilingual university students, Mandarin is part of the curriculum from Year 1 and HSK-4 must be reached — this requires serious study alongside the medical syllabus.

Q: What do Pakistani students do on weekends?

Weekends are a mix of extended study, social activities and city exploration. Group trips to nearby cities, shopping at local markets, cooking together in hostel kitchens, cricket matches, and PSA social events are all common. Most Pakistani students describe weekends as important for mental recovery after a demanding academic week.

Q: Is the MBBS programme in China genuinely hard?

Yes. MBBS anywhere is hard. The Chinese medical curriculum is comprehensive and rigorous. Exams are frequent, and students must pass all subjects to progress to the next year. Pakistani students who struggle are typically those who did not maintain consistent daily study. Students who succeed are those who treat it with the same seriousness they would give to a Pakistani medical college.

Q: How do students handle exams — are they in Chinese or English?

At MOE-listed English-medium universities, all academic exams are in English throughout the MBBS. At non-MOE bilingual universities, exams progressively include more Chinese from Year 2 onwards as students’ Mandarin develops. MTZ confirms the exam language structure for your specific university before any commitment.

Q: What happens if a student wants to return home permanently?

A student who decides to discontinue MBBS in China must apply to withdraw through the university’s international student office. Tuition fees are generally non-refundable for personal withdrawal — this is standard policy across all Chinese universities. MTZ shares this clearly at the consultation stage. It is one reason why proper academic and personal planning before departure matters.

Related Articles

ArticleURL
MBBS in China for Pakistani Students — Complete Road Map 2026mtzvisas.com/mbbs-in-china/
Is China Safe for Pakistani Students?mtzvisas.com/blog/is-china-safe-for-pakistani-students/
Halal Food at Chinese Medical Universitiesmtzvisas.com/blog/halal-food-availability-in-china-universities/
Safety for Female Pakistani Students — MBBS in Chinamtzvisas.com/blog/safety-for-girl-students-china-mbbs/
How to Apply for MBBS in China from Pakistanmtzvisas.com/blog/how-to-apply-for-mbbs-in-china-from-pakistan/
Connect with a Senior Pakistani Student at Your Target University WhatsApp MTZ — we connect you with a named senior Pakistani student on your specific campus before you arrive, free. WhatsApp Islamabad: +92 315 155 5507 WhatsApp Lahore: +92 328 900 2222

MTZ Global Visa Consultants Pvt Ltd — SECP-registered · ISO 9001:2015 certified · British Council certified counselors

Islamabad: Basement 2-3, Block 20D, G8 Markaz, Islamabad

Lahore: Office No. 14, Mezzanine Floor, Al Hafeez Executive, Gulberg III, Lahore

Email: info@mtzvisas.com

← Back to: MBBS in China for Pakistani Students — Complete Road Map 2026  (/mbbs-in-china/)