Tea from China

China is the main point of reference for a large part of the Tealista catalog: from green classics and yancha to pu-erh, white tea, and regional styles.

This page brings Chinese teas together so visitors can compare provinces, styles, and active offers without jumping across random product pages first.

If the goal is to buy, the strongest path is usually region or style first, then a shortlist of teas, and only then the move to the seller.

Where to buy and how to compare

This section currently contains 24 tea cards and 0 active offers from 0 vendors. The fastest buying path is to shortlist 2-4 teas, review flavor notes, and only continue to the offers where the price and seller both look sensible.

Offers · Tea vendors

Teas worth comparing

  • Gunpowder
  • Anhua Bopian Wild Tea
  • Golden Silk Mao Feng
  • Yunnan Pine Needle
  • Golden Beauty No.1
  • Yellow Sun
  • Liu Bao
  • Lao Cha Tou
  • Gong Ting Shu Pu-erh
  • Jin Jun Mei

Related types: Oolong Tea · Black tea · Yunnan · Dian Hong · White Tea · Yancha · Black Tea (Red Tea) · Dan Cong · Dark tea · Phoenix · Pu-erh (Shou) · Anhui · Anxi · Bai Mu Dan

Related flavors: Floral · Honey · Cocoa · Woody · Mineral · Dried fruit · Earthy · Malty · Bready · Creamy · Grassy · Roasted · Vegetal · Hay

Browse: All origins · Types · Flavors

Provinces

  • Yunnan
  • Fujian
  • Anhui
  • Guangdong
  • Guangxi
  • Hunan
  • Sichuan
  • Zhejiang
  • Gunpowder
  • Anhua Bopian Wild Tea
  • Golden Silk Mao Feng
  • Yunnan Pine Needle
  • Golden Beauty No.1
  • Yellow Sun
  • Liu Bao
  • Lao Cha Tou
  • Gong Ting Shu Pu-erh
  • Jin Jun Mei
  • Dian Hong
  • Huang Zhi Xiang Dan Cong
  • Mi Lan Xiang Dan Cong
  • Shui Xian
  • Rou Gui
  • Milk Oolong (Chinese style)
  • Bai Mu Dan
  • Zhu Ye Qing
  • Da Hong Pao Gao Huo
  • White Phoenix
  • Show Dragon
  • Lapsang Souchong
  • Silver Needle
  • Dian Hong Honey Cone (Mitong)

Buying FAQ

Which Chinese tea is good for beginners?

It depends on style, but a softer long jing, a bai mu dan, or a straightforward dian hong are often easier entry points than more demanding profiles.

Should I compare provinces?

Yes. In Chinese tea the region often changes both the profile and the real market value of the tea.

Where should I buy Chinese tea online?

The practical path is to start from tea cards with active offers and compare which shops have the origin and price level you want.

All origins