Updated
Updated · The Japan Times · Jun 2
China's 50 Billion Yuan Companionship Economy Monetizes Hiking, Dining and Running
Updated
Updated · The Japan Times · Jun 2

China's 50 Billion Yuan Companionship Economy Monetizes Hiking, Dining and Running

7 articles · Updated · The Japan Times · Jun 2
  • Mount Tai hikers can now hire “climbing buddies” for a few hundred yuan to walk with them, carry bags and take photos, highlighting how paid companionship is moving into everyday leisure.
  • The broader market now sells partners for running, sightseeing and even hotpot meals, with providers promising “emotional value,” conversation and practical help through social-media listings.
  • Students and young gig workers are supplying much of the labor, turning favors once exchanged among friends into bookable services as lonely consumers seek social connection.
  • China’s companionship economy is projected to reach 50 billion yuan, or about $7.4 billion, by 2025, reflecting urban isolation, long work hours and weak traditional social networks.
In China’s $7.4B companionship market, who is protecting the emotional and financial health of the providers?
As China's youth buy companionship, are they finding connection or just a new kind of transaction?
With AI companions now regulated, will China’s youth choose human connection or a perfect digital friend?