Student International
Talk through your options
China · Guardianship

Steady welfare planning, made for students from China.

Whether the student is heading abroad straight from a Chinese boarding school, an international school, a national-stream school, a Sino-foreign programme, or a homestay arrangement, the move usually feels easier with a clear support plan in place. We help families in China plan guardianship, companionship, arrival support, and check-ins around welfare, communication across time zones, and the realities of distance.

Guardianship and companionship support helps Chinese students and families plan practical care around welfare, arrival, settling in, and communication during overseas study. The exact shape depends on the student's age, destination, institution, and accommodation — it might mean under-18 welfare planning, guardianship coordination with trusted overseas partners, accommodation and first-week support, regular check-ins, or a clear China-time-to-destination communication routine for the family.

This service is most useful for under-18 students who need a structured welfare plan, Chinese boarding-school graduates moving overseas, first-time international travellers, and university students who would value steady support in the early weeks abroad. It also helps Chinese families who want clearer communication around arrival, safety, and readiness without taking independence away from the student.

How we support this stage from China

Practical support across arrival and settling in.

Five connected areas of support, scaled to the student's situation rather than offered as a fixed package.

Think through the first week before it arrives.
Pre-arrival planning

Think through the first week before it arrives.

We help students and Chinese families plan flights from Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, or Shenzhen, accommodation, arrival timing, first-week tasks, and local contact points overseas, so the early days feel less uncertain and the practical questions are already answered.

Understand the role and the arrangements.
Guardianship coordination

Understand the role and the arrangements.

Where guardianship is required or appropriate, we help families understand expectations, available arrangements, and any institution-specific rules. This may include coordination or liaison with trusted overseas third-party partners where they are available.

Steady support for the early weeks.
University companionship

Steady support for the early weeks.

For university students, companionship support helps with arrival confidence, orientation, local understanding, and early practical tasks — banking, SIM, transport, registration. It is designed to support independence, not replace it.

Raise concerns early, not late.
Check-ins and welfare

Raise concerns early, not late.

Regular check-ins give the student a chance to raise concerns early — academic adjustment, accommodation, wellbeing, communication challenges, or simple practical uncertainty — before they grow.

Clear updates without crowding the student.
Family communication

Clear updates without crowding the student.

Parents or guardians in China may want reassurance, especially for younger students or first-time travellers. We help shape a communication routine that informs the family across the time-zone gap while keeping the student at the centre.

Chinese family rhythm overseas

Welfare planning that fits a family in China.

Distance changes the practicalities of welfare. A workable plan accounts for time zones, the Chinese return-home rhythm, identity-document realities, and how money reaches the student week to week. We help shape these into a routine the student and the family can both rely on.

This is supportive coordination, not a substitute for emergency, legal, medical, or safeguarding services. Where those are needed, we always route to the appropriate local or institutional support overseas.

  • China-time-to-destination call windows — China overlaps comfortably with Australia (AEST), more thinly with the UK (BST or GMT), and at the edges of the day with the US (EST or PST) and Europe (CET). A workable check-in cadence respects both sides without controlling the student.
  • Spring Festival, National Day, and year-end — the Chinese return-home rhythm rarely lines up neatly with overseas term and break calendars. Some returns are realistic, others are not, and term-time travel needs early planning.
  • Under-18 context — the age of majority in China is 18. Identity card and passport considerations, parental consent letters, and destination under-18 safeguarding rules sometimes apply differently and need confirming before travel.
  • Transition routes from China — boarding-school graduates, international school graduates, national-stream school graduates, Sino-foreign programme students, and first-time international travellers each arrive with a different starting confidence level.
  • RMB-denominated allowance — how Chinese families typically send daily-cost funds to the student abroad, account access, and banking continuity from a Chinese household account into a destination account.
The Student International approach

A grounded sequence for welfare planning from China.

A measured way of building support around the student rather than around a fixed template.

  1. 1

    Understand the student's situation.

    We review age, destination, institution type, accommodation, travel plans from China, family expectations, and the support that would genuinely help — before suggesting any arrangement.

  2. 2

    Map the right level of support.

    We identify whether guardianship, companionship, regular check-ins, or simple transition guidance is most appropriate — and where the student already has the independence to manage alone.

  3. 3

    Prepare for arrival from China.

    We organise practical steps before departure from Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, or Shenzhen, so the first week overseas feels less uncertain and the student arrives with a plan rather than an open list of unknowns.

  4. 4

    Support the transition and review.

    We provide steady guidance as the student settles in, then adjust the level of support as confidence grows and the family communication routine finds its own rhythm across the time-zone gap.

Is guardianship required for every Chinese student studying overseas?

No. Requirements depend on the student's age, destination, institution, accommodation, and local rules. The age of majority in China is 18, but some destinations and institutions still apply under-18 safeguarding rules. We help families understand what applies to their situation and whether a formal guardianship arrangement is genuinely needed.

Is companionship the same as full guardianship?

No. Companionship is practical transition support for Chinese students who want steady guidance during arrival and the early weeks abroad but do not require a formal guardianship arrangement under institution or local rules.

Can parents or guardians in China be kept informed?

Yes, where family communication is useful. Updates and check-ins can be shared with parents or guardians in China across the time-zone gap. The support remains student-led and is designed to help the student grow in confidence, not reduce it. Student mentorship from China is a related option for older university students.

What if an issue becomes serious while the student is overseas?

If a student needs specialist, emergency, medical, legal, or institutional support overseas, the appropriate local or university service should always be used. We can help the student and family in China understand the next practical step. For UK-specific welfare planning, see UK guardianship and companionship from China.

Begin

Plan welfare from China with more clarity.

A first conversation is short and obligation-free. We listen first, then suggest a guardianship or companionship plan that fits the student's age, destination, accommodation, and the level of support the Chinese family actually wants.