A Complete Guide to China’s Visa-Free Policies

Posted by Written by Arendse Huld Reading Time: 8 minutes

China has fully reopened its borders, promising recovery of international tourism and travel. Many of the visa-free travel policies that were in place prior to the pandemic have therefore come back into effect, enabling people from a wide range of countries to visit China on a short-term basis. In this article, we provide an overview of all of the China visa-free travel policies currently available and explain who is eligible to enjoy them.


After almost three years, China has finally reopened its borders to international travelers and tourists, and in March 2023, it resumed issuing all types of visas to foreigners. This means China has begun permitting people with valid travel documents that allow visa-free entry back into the country and has once again started issuing its short-stay entry permits that are available on arrival for citizens of certain countries.  

Below we provide an overview of all the visa-free options that are currently available for people traveling to China, and who is eligible to enjoy these policies. 

Countries with mutual visa exemption agreements with China 

China has also signed agreements on mutual visa exemption with over 150 countries, which enables certain citizens from traveling to China without a visa. However, for the majority of countries, visa-free arrangements apply only to diplomatic or official passports.

A few countries do enable visa-free travel to China for citizens holding ordinary passports. Citizens from these countries are allowed to travel to China without a visa for up to 30 days for the purposes of tourism, travel, business, and visiting family or friends. 

These countries are: 

  • Armenia 
  • The Bahamas 
  • Barbados
  • Belarus 
  • Bosnia and Herzegovina 
  • Dominica 
  • Fiji 
  • Grenada 
  • The Maldives 
  • Mauritius 
  • San Marino 
  • Serbia 
  • Seychelles 
  • Suriname 
  • The United Arab Emirates 

Citizens from the above countries will still need to apply for a corresponding visa to China if they intend to work, study, or settle in China, or intend to stay for longer than 30 days. 

Countries with visa-free travel to China (yet to resume) 

In the past, citizens with a valid ordinary passport from Japan, Brunei, and Singapore have been permitted to travel to China for a period of up to 15 days without applying for a visa for the purposes of tourism, business, visiting relatives and friends, or transiting to a third country. However, this policy appears to remain suspended since the end of COVID-19 restrictions in China, and it is not clear when it may resume. This means citizens from these countries still need to apply for a Chinese tourist, business, or another type of visa to enter China at this time. 

To note, citizens from these three countries would previously also have had to apply for a visa in advance if they: 

  1. Expect to stay in China for more than 15 days; 
  2. Intend to study, work, settle down, or attend an interview in China; or 
  3. Are holders of Japanese diplomatic and official passports. 

24/72/144-hour China visa-free transit 

China allows eligible travelers from certain countries to enter and stay in certain areas of China for 24, 72, and 144-hour periods without prior application for a visa when transiting to a third country. 

Note that people are excluded from this policy if they are: 

  • Not permitted to enter the country as stipulated by laws and administrative regulations (such as people who have been subject to sanctions or travel bans); 
  • Hold a passport or other international travel document that is valid for less than three months upon the time of arrival, or which has a refusal stamp from a Chinese visa issuing agency; 
  • Have records of illegal entry and exit, illegal residence, and illegal employment in China in the last five years; and/or
  • Have violated accommodation registration regulations in the last two years and the circumstances are deemed serious. 

144-hour visa-free transit 

Under the 144-hour visa-free transit policy, foreign travelers can apply for a six-day entry permit to certain Chinese cities upon arrival at the port of entry, provided they hold a passport from one of the 53 eligible countries. They also must show that they are traveling on to a third country after leaving China, which means they must show a connecting ticket to a third country when arriving in China. This is a great option for people who want to make a short stop-over to explore various areas of the country. 

The 53 countries are: 

  • 24 countries in the Europe Schengen area: Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland.  
  • 15 other countries in Europe: Russia, United Kingdom, Ireland, Cyprus, Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine, Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Macedonia, Albania, Monaco, and Belarus.  
  • Six countries in the Americas: the United States, Canada, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, and Chile.  
  • Two countries in Oceania: Australia and New Zealand.  
  • Six countries in Asia: South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Brunei, the United Arab Emirates, and Qatar. 

Eligible travelers can only apply for the 144-hour visa-free transit if they enter through one of 29 designated ports of entry in 20 mainland Chinese cities. In addition, travelers are only allowed to travel within a certain area on the entry permit and exit the country through designated ports as well. People who travel outside the permitted area and exit the country through a non-designated port may face certain penalties. 

For more information on eligibility requirements, permitted ports of entry and exit, and permitted scope of travel, see our dedicated article: 144-hour Visa-Free Transit Policy for Foreigners. 

72-hour visa-free transit 

Travelers from the 53 countries that are eligible for the 144-hour entry permit are also eligible for the 72-hour visa-free policy. However, there are currently only three entry ports in China that offer 72-hour visa-free entry, as the majority of ports that previously offered it now offer the 144-hour permit instead. The ports are Guilin Liangjiang International Airport, Harbin Taiping International Airport, and Changsha Huanghua International Airport.

Travelers that enter through Guiling and Harbin are only allowed to travel within the scope of the cities themselves, whereas travelers who enter through Changsha are permitted to travel within the whole of Hunan Province. 

All the same requirements and restrictions for the 144-hour entry permit apply to the 72-hour entry permit. 

24-hour visa-free transit 

All international travelers (except those exempted due to special circumstances) that are transiting through China are permitted to apply for a 24-hour visa-free entry permit upon arrival. As with the other two visa-free transit policies, travelers must provide a connecting ticket to a third country. They are not permitted to leave the city in which they arrived during their 24-hour stay and must leave the country within 24 hours.  

China’s Visa-Free Transit Policy
Policy  144-hour visa-free transit  72-hour visa-free transit  24-hour visa-free transit 
Exemption 
  • People who are not permitted to enter the country as stipulated by laws and administrative regulations (such as people who have been subject to sanctions or travel bans); 
  • People holding a passport or other international travel document that is valid for less than three months upon the time of arrival, or which has a refusal stamp from a Chinese visa issuing agency; 
  • People with records of illegal entry and exit, illegal residence, and illegal employment in China in the last five years; 
  • People who have violated accommodation registration regulations in the last two years and the circumstances are deemed serious. 
Applicable countries  53 countries  53 countries  All countries 
Entry-exit ports  27 ports in 20 cities  3 ports in 3 cities/provinces All international airports 
Scope of permitted travel  Each entry port has a designated area of activity  Each entry port has a designated area of activity  Within the city where the entry port is located after applying for a temporary entry permit on arrival 

China visa-free policies for individual travelers and tour groups

Pearl River Delta 

People from countries that have established diplomatic relations with China and are traveling in a tourist group organized by a travel agency registered in Hong Kong or Macao can travel to the nine mainland Chinese cities of the Pearl River Delta (PRD) region (Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Zhuhai, Foshan, Dongguan, Zhongshan, Jiangmen, Zhaoqing, and Huizhou) for up to six days without a visa. The same policy also applies to tour groups visiting Shantou in Guangdong Province, as long as their activities do not extend beyond the administrative area of Shantou. 

To be eligible for this policy, the tour group must depart from Hong Kong or Macao. 

Shanghai

International tour groups of two and above who arrive on a cruise ship at Shanghai Cruise Port can get 15 days of visa-free travel to Shanghai and other coastal provinces, regions, and municipalities in which the cruise ship berths. These are Liaoning, Hebei, Tianjin, Shandong, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, and Hainan.

The tourists are allowed to travel around the cities in which the cruise has berthed, as well as neighboring cities. This includes Beijing but otherwise does not include any cities or regions outside the above-mentioned provinces and regions. 

The tour groups must be organized by travel agencies that have registered with the Shanghai Tourism Administration and Shanghai Customs. 

Hainan 

Citizens of 59 countries are now eligible for 30 days of visa-free travel to the province of Hainan. This policy was previously only applicable to tour groups but has now been expanded to individual travel as well. Eligible travelers are free to travel around the whole province of Hainan and can travel from Hong Kong or any other place outside Mainland China with a direct flight to the island. 

The eligible countries are Russia, the UK, France, Germany, Norway, Ukraine, Italy, Austria, Finland, the Netherlands, Denmark, Switzerland, Sweden, Spain, Belgium, Czech Republic, Estonia, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Ireland, Cyprus, Bulgaria, Romania, Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Macedonia, Albania, the US, Canada, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Chile, Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Kazakhstan, Philippines, Indonesia, Brunei, UAE, Qatar, Monaco, and Belarus. 

Guilin 

Tour groups consisting of a minimum of two people from the 10 ASEAN countries (Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Singapore, Brunei, and the Philippines) that are organized and hosted by a travel agency registered and approved by the tourism authority of Guilin, Guangxi Province, can enter and exit through Guilin airport port and stay in Guilin for up to six days without a visa. 

Visa-free travel for tour groups from six countries 

Some of the agreements on mutual visa exemption also enable visa-free travel for tour groups. These countries are Azerbaijan, Belarus, Russia, Georgia, Moldova, and Turkmenistan. 

The requirements for the tour groups differ slightly between the different countries’ agreements and may include having a minimum of five people in the tour group, and in general, the trip can last up to 30 days. There are no limits placed on where the tour group can travel, but the tours must be organized by certain designated agencies.  

Special cards enabling China visa-free entry 

APEC Business Travel Card holders 

Holders of a valid Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Business Travel Card (ABTC) can enter China multiple times within the card’s validity period for business purposes for periods of up to 60 days at a time. The ABTC is valid for five years and thus functions as a five-year multi-entry visa.

Only citizens of the 21 APEC member economies are eligible for the ABTC (Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Canada, Chile, China, Hong Kong, China, Indonesia Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Peru, the Philippines, Russia; Singapore; Taiwan, Thailand, the US, and Vietnam). 

Note that although Canada and the US do offer ABTCs, they only provide fast-track immigration processing and do not offer reciprocal entry arrangements, meaning that ABTC holders from the US and Canada are not eligible to enter China directly without a visa, and vice versa. 

In addition, candidates must engage in regular business travel through the APEC member economies and not hold a criminal record. 

Entry to China with the ABTC was suspended during the COVID-19 pandemic but resumed on August 24, 2022. 

Permanent residence cards holders 

It goes without saying that holders of a Chinese permanent residence card do not need to apply for a visa to travel to China, and can freely leave and enter the country through all passenger ports for work, business, family visits, and travel. 

To be eligible for the permanent residency card, foreigners must meet a relatively high bar of work and liquidity requirements, which vary from region to region. For more information on this topic, see our articles on applying for a permanent residence card in Shanghai, Guangdong, and Beijing. 

Residence permit holders

Foreigners with residence permits issued by Chinese public security organs who are in China for work or study are permitted to leave and enter the country as many times as they wish without applying for a visa each time, provided it is during the validity period of the residence permit.

Foreigners and resident foreign journalists who come to China for work or study are required to apply for a residence permit after first entering the country. 

Note that the residence permit will be provided as a sticker in the passport with the word “residence” on it, rather than as a separate residence card. 

China Briefing is written and produced by Dezan Shira & Associates. The practice assists foreign investors into China and has done so since 1992 through offices in Beijing, Tianjin, Dalian, Qingdao, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Ningbo, Suzhou, Guangzhou, Dongguan, Zhongshan, Shenzhen, and Hong Kong. Please contact the firm for assistance in China at china@dezshira.com.

Dezan Shira & Associates has offices in Vietnam, Indonesia, Singapore, United States, Germany, Italy, India, and Russia, in addition to our trade research facilities along the Belt & Road Initiative. We also have partner firms assisting foreign investors in The Philippines, Malaysia, Thailand, Bangladesh.