Yes, Beijing Daxing Airport has staffed left-luggage counters, and one of them works 24 hours: the round-the-clock point is on Level 2 in the east part of the domestic arrivals hall, and a second counter is on Level 4 in the departures hall at the east end of check-in Island H. You can store a bag from one day up to 90 days.

For transit passengers this service is the key to a hands-free Beijing: drop the suitcase, ride into the city or to the Great Wall, and collect it before your next flight. Here is how it works.

Where the counters are

The 24-hour counter sits on Level 2, in the east section of the domestic arrivals hall, near the JD (Jingdong) service counter. Because it never closes, this is the right point for late arrivals and very early departures.

The second counter is on Level 4, the departures level, at the east end of check-in Island H. It works from 07:00 to 22:00. Both points are in the public area, so you can use them before security and pick the one closer to your route through the terminal.

Hours, duration, and what you need

Storage runs from 1 day to 90 days, which covers everything from a city layover to a long side trip through China. Bags go on supervised shelves or into separate locked cabinets, depending on what you choose at the counter.

Bring your passport: counters in China register stored items against an ID. Standard safety rules apply, so no dangerous goods (loose lithium batteries, aerosols, fuel), and keep documents, electronics, and valuables with you.

Prices

The rate depends on bag size and storage length, and the current price card is posted at the counter. Budget several tens of yuan per item per day as a working estimate, and confirm the exact figure before you hand the bag over. Payment works the usual Chinese way, with WeChat Pay or Alipay; cash is accepted but cards from foreign banks may not be.

If you want to check a detail in advance, the airport hotline +86-10-96158 answers around the clock and has English-speaking staff.

At a glance

DetailInformation
24-hour counterLevel 2, domestic arrivals hall, east side (near the JD counter)
Day counterLevel 4, departures hall, east end of check-in Island H, 07:00–22:00
Duration1 to 90 days; shelves or locked cabinets
PriceBy size and duration; rate card at the counter
Bring / payPassport; WeChat Pay or Alipay
Hotline+86-10-96158 (24/7)

The transit superpower: store and go

Daxing is built for stopovers: many travelers can enter Beijing without a visa for up to 240 hours under the visa-free transit policy. Storing your big suitcase at the airport turns that stopover into a real trip. The Daxing Airport Express reaches the city in about 20 minutes, and a layover tour to the Great Wall is realistic with six or more free hours.

See our 240-hour transit guide for the entry rules, and the Great Wall layover guide for timing. One practical tip: keep a small day bag with your documents, battery pack, and a layer of clothing, because Beijing weather can differ a lot from your departure city.

More Beijing Daxing airport guides

Frequently asked questions

Is there 24-hour luggage storage at Daxing Airport?
Yes. The counter on Level 2 in the east part of the domestic arrivals hall works around the clock. The second counter on Level 4 (Island H, east end) works 07:00–22:00.
How long can I store a bag at PKX?
From 1 day up to 90 days, one of the longest storage windows among major airports, useful if you tour China between flights.
How much does it cost?
The fee depends on size and duration; the binding rate card is posted at the counter. Expect to pay in yuan via WeChat Pay or Alipay.
Can I store luggage and visit Beijing without a Chinese visa?
Many nationalities can: the 240-hour visa-free transit policy covers stopovers in Beijing for eligible travelers on onward international routes. Check the rules in our dedicated guide and confirm your case with your airline before flying.

Sources

Locations, hours, and storage duration verified in June 2026. Details can change; the rate card at the counter and the 24/7 airport hotline +86-10-96158 are the binding sources. This is an independent guide and is not affiliated with the airport. Photo: N509FZ, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.


About the authorGrace Chen, Beijing Travel Editor. Grace covers Beijing Daxing Airport and practical China travel: transit rules, payments, connectivity, and the details that surprise first-time visitors.