The country's National Tourism Administration (NTA) will keep a database of travelers who commit offences, with their names passed onto police, customs officials and even banks, the official Xinhua news agency reported Saturday.
Offences that could earn obnoxious tourists a place on the blacklist include "acting antisocially on public transport, damaging private or public property, disrespecting local customs, sabotaging historical exhibits or engaging in gambling or pornographic activities," Xinhua said.
People will be blacklisted for two years after they offend, it added.
China's economy has boomed over the past decade, expanding the ranks of its middle-class who are hungry for foreign travel after the country's decades of isolation in the last century.
Chinese travelers took 100 million "outbound" trips -- including to Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan -- last year, according to official figures.
But the surge of wanderlust has left some officials back home red-faced and the blacklist is the latest of China's efforts to control its citizens behaviour abroad.
Chinese tourists were reported to have outraged locals in Thailand this year by drying underwear in an airport, defecating in public and kicking a bell at a temple.
Several air rage incidents -- including Chinese passengers opening emergency exit doors and throwing boiling noodles at cabin crew -- have also been reported in the last year.
In 2013, a Chinese sparked online outrage after he wrote his name on an ancient carving in Egypt.
The NTA said in a 64-page "Guidebook for Civilised Tourism", issued in 2013, that tourists should not pick their noses in public, pee in pools or steal airplane life jackets.
Chinese travellers spent $102 billion overseas in 2012, making them the world's biggest spenders ahead of German and US tourists, according to the UN World Tourism Organisation.
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