How to Say “What is your best price?” in Chinese
Shopping · HSK 3
"What is your best price?" in Chinese is 最低多少钱? (Zuì dī duō shǎo qián?). Bargaining (讨价还价 tǎo jià huán jià) is alive in markets like Beijing's 秀水街 or Shanghai's 七浦路, but fixed-price stores and malls don't negotiate. 最低多少钱 literally means 'what is the lowest, how much money'; it signals you expect a discount.
Primary translation
最低多少钱?
Zuì dī duō shǎo qián?
Traditional: 最低多少錢?
Variants by register
Formal
您能给的最低价是多少?
Nín néng gěi de zuì dī jià shì duō shǎo?
Casual
最便宜多少?
Zuì pián yi duō shǎo?
When to use it
Bargaining (讨价还价 tǎo jià huán jià) is alive in markets like Beijing's 秀水街 or Shanghai's 七浦路, but fixed-price stores and malls don't negotiate. 最低多少钱 literally means 'what is the lowest, how much money'; it signals you expect a discount. A softer opener is 能便宜点吗?(Néng pián yi diǎn ma?; 'Can it be a bit cheaper?'). Vendors often start 2-3x above their floor price, so counter-offer boldly.
Example sentences
老板,最低多少钱?
Lǎo bǎn, zuì dī duō shǎo qián?
Boss, what's your best price?
能再便宜点吗?
Néng zài pián yi diǎn ma?
Can you go a bit lower?
如果我买两件,可以打折吗?
Rú guǒ wǒ mǎi liǎng jiàn, kě yǐ dǎ zhé ma?
If I buy two, can I get a discount?