‘Chinamaxxing’ explained: Inside viral Gen Z trend taking over TikTok and Instagram

This shift represents a surging fascination with Chinese soft power, similar to previous waves of interest in South Korean and Japanese cultures

By Aqsa Qaddus Tahir
|
February 26, 2026
‘Chinamaxxing’ explained: Inside viral Gen Z trend taking over TikTok and Instagram

In the social media landscape, another viral trend has captured the attention of millions.

Known as Chinamaxxing, the latest internet movement portrays growing Westerners, especially American Gen Zs’ inclination towards Chinese lifestyle habits, technology, and fashion.

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This shift represents a surging fascination with Chinese soft power, similar to previous waves of interest in South Korean and Japanese cultures.

What is the Chinamaxxing phenomenon?

At its core, Chinamaxxing refers to people who admire Chinese culture , tech, fashion and productivity trends and romanticize modern Chinese infrastructure and digital ecosystem.

Videos tagged with Chinamaxxing have taken the internet by storm, amassing millions of views across various social media platforms. In these widely circulating videos, the Gen Z creators present different routines, such as herbal drinks, traditional exercises, and fashion styles intended to become “more Chinese.”

Some social media users are also sharing videos of futuristic skylines in cities like Shanghai and Chongqing, highlighting modern infrastructure, urban imagery and transportation systems.

What’s driving this trend?

According to experts, the viral trend is fueled by Gen Z's disillusionment with various domestic issues, such as economic pressures, fragmented politics, high cost of living, and gun violence.

Moreover, increasing exposure of Chinese apps and devices has strengthened this trend.

On the contrary, some critics argue that this trend is going to turn Chinese culture into a social media aesthetic while ignoring political and social realities. And others considered Chinamaxxing trend simply internet humor mixed with lifestyle curiosity, not a serious political statement.

Whatever the reason behind this trend, Chinamaxxing highlights Gen Z's growing penchant for calm lifestyles and diverse cultural curiosity.

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