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Most travelers no longer need a visa to visit China. As of March 2026, citizens of 50+ countries --- including France, Germany, the UK, Canada, Australia, Japan, and South Korea --- can enter China visa-free for up to 30 days. Citizens of 55 countries (including the United States) qualify for 240-hour (10-day) visa-free transit through 65 designated ports. In 2025, China recorded over 150 million inbound visits, a 17% year-on-year increase, with visa-free entries by foreigners exceeding 30 million --- driven by the most significant expansion of visa-free access in the country's history. This guide covers every entry option, tells you exactly which one applies to your nationality, and walks you through the new COVA online application system if you do need a visa. [[1]](https://english.www.gov.cn/news/202603/07/content_WS69aba1f9c6d00ca5f9a09b0f.html) [[2]](https://www.chinahighlights.com/travelguide/visa-application/china-visa-exemption.htm)
Start here --- check your nationality: If you hold a passport from France, Germany, the UK, Canada, Australia, Japan, South Korea, or any of 40+ other listed countries, you can enter China visa-free for up to 30 days with no application required. If you're a US citizen, you qualify for 240-hour (10-day) visa-free transit as long as you have an onward ticket to a third country. Only travelers whose nationality appears on neither list need to apply for a standard visa --- and even then, the new COVA online system has made the process significantly faster than before. [[3]](https://www.visasupdate.com/post/china-e-visa-2026-guide-online-application-cova-system-fees-processing-times-visa-free)
Complete China Visa Guide 2026: Visa-Free Entry, 240-Hour Transit & Application Process
Last Updated: March 2026 | Author: LyrikTrip Advisory Team | Reading Time: 16 minutes
Which Countries Can Enter China Visa-Free for 30 Days?
How Does the 240-Hour Visa-Free Transit Work?
Do I Need a Standard Tourist Visa (L Visa)?
How Do I Apply for a China Visa Using the New COVA System?
How Much Does a China Visa Cost in 2026?
What About Business, Work, Student, and Family Visas?
Can I Extend My Stay in China?
Frequently Asked Questions
Citizens of 50+ countries can enter China without a visa for stays of up to 30 days, valid through at least December 31, 2026. This is the most expansive visa-free policy in China's history, and it has been the primary driver behind a surge in inbound tourism --- China recorded over 150 million inbound visits in 2025, with visa-free entries by foreigners exceeding 30 million, according to Minister of Culture and Tourism Sun Yeli. [[1]](https://english.www.gov.cn/news/202603/07/content_WS69aba1f9c6d00ca5f9a09b0f.html)
The complete list of eligible countries, organized by region:
Europe (38 countries): France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Netherlands, Switzerland, Ireland, Hungary, Austria, Belgium, Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal, Greece, Cyprus, Slovenia, Slovakia, Norway, Finland, Denmark, Iceland, Sweden, Andorra, Monaco, Liechtenstein, Bulgaria, Romania, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Malta, Estonia, Latvia, United Kingdom, Russia (valid through September 14, 2026), Lithuania (check latest status) [[2]](https://www.chinahighlights.com/travelguide/visa-application/china-visa-exemption.htm) [[3]](https://www.visasupdate.com/post/china-e-visa-2026-guide-online-application-cova-system-fees-processing-times-visa-free)
Asia-Pacific (6 countries): Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Singapore [[2]](https://www.chinahighlights.com/travelguide/visa-application/china-visa-exemption.htm)
Americas (7 countries): Canada (valid February 17 -- December 31, 2026), Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Peru, Uruguay [[4]](https://www.chinahighlights.com/travelguide/china-travel-reopen-restrictions.htm)
Middle East (4 countries): Saudi Arabia, Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain (valid June 9, 2025 -- June 8, 2026) [[4]](https://www.chinahighlights.com/travelguide/china-travel-reopen-restrictions.htm)
Other: Brunei, Thailand, United Arab Emirates [[2]](https://www.chinahighlights.com/travelguide/visa-application/china-visa-exemption.htm)
Gu Hui, Minister Counselor of the Department of Consular Affairs at China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, confirmed at the 2025 China International Travel Mart that "the citizens of 48 nations can now enjoy 30-day visa-free stays for business or tourism," with additional countries added in subsequent announcements bringing the total above 50. [[5]](https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202601/07/WS695d9c6ea310d6866eb32574.html)
You need only three things: a valid passport with at least 6 months remaining validity, a confirmed return or onward ticket, and a legitimate purpose (tourism, business meetings, family visits, or transit). No visa application, no invitation letter, no hotel bookings (though having them is recommended), and no advance approval are required. [[6]](https://www.tocntravel.com/insights/china-visa-free-entry-2026/)
Arrive at any Chinese international airport, seaport, or land border crossing
Proceed to immigration and present your passport and return/onward ticket
The immigration officer stamps a 30-day entry permit
Enter China --- you can travel anywhere in mainland China with no geographic restrictions
What you can do: Tourism, business meetings (no employment), family visits, short-term study (conferences, workshops), transit.
What you cannot do: Employment (requires Z visa), long-term study (requires X visa), journalism (requires J visa).
Yes. You can make repeated use of the 30-day visa-free policy. China Highlights confirms: "Once your 30-day stay expires, you can leave China and re-enter again." There is no official limit on the number of re-entries, but frequent entries within a short period may attract additional questions from immigration officers. [[2]](https://www.chinahighlights.com/travelguide/visa-application/china-visa-exemption.htm)
No. Hong Kong and Macau have separate immigration systems and separate entry requirements. Your 30-day mainland China visa-free entry does not cover Hong Kong, Macau, or Taiwan. However, many nationalities can enter Hong Kong visa-free for 7-180 days depending on passport, and Macau for 30-90 days. If you plan to visit Hong Kong or Macau during your China trip, check their specific entry requirements separately.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LyrikTrip Tip: A common and highly effective itinerary strategy is to enter mainland China visa-free for up to 30 days, then exit to Hong Kong (which counts as leaving China), and re-enter mainland China for another 30-day visa-free period. This effectively gives you up to 60+ days of travel across mainland China and Hong Kong without any visa application. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 240-hour (10-day) visa-free transit policy allows citizens of 55 countries --- including the United States --- to stay in China for up to 10 days without a visa, provided they have an onward ticket to a third country or region. This policy was fully relaxed and optimized in December 2024, when the National Immigration Administration extended the stay duration from the previous 72 and 144 hours to 240 hours and expanded the permitted travel areas. [[7]](https://english.www.gov.cn/news/202412/17/content_WS6760ead6c6d0868f4e8ee0c1.html)
As of November 2025, the policy covers 65 designated ports of entry across 24 provinces, autonomous regions, and municipalities --- up from 60 ports previously. The five additional ports added in Guangdong Province include the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge Port and the West Kowloon Station of the Guangzhou-Shenzhen-Hong Kong Express Rail Link. [[8]](https://english.beijing.gov.cn/latest/news/202511/t20251105_4259688.html) [[9]](https://english.www.gov.cn/news/202511/04/content_WS69094ae0c6d00ca5f9a07472.html)
55 countries are eligible, including many that are NOT covered by the 30-day visa-free policy. The most notable addition is the United States --- US citizens cannot use the 30-day visa-free entry, but they CAN use the 240-hour transit. [[10]](https://www.chinadiscovery.com/chinese-visa/240-hour-visa-free-transit.html)
Key eligible countries include: United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Russia, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, South Korea, Japan, Singapore, UAE, Qatar, and all Schengen-area European countries. [[11]](https://newyork.china-consulate.gov.cn/eng/tzgg/202412/t20241221_11513810.htm)
You must meet all four conditions --- missing even one will result in denial:
Valid passport with at least 3 months remaining validity
Confirmed onward ticket to a third country or region, departing within 240 hours of entry
Third country must be different from your origin country --- you cannot fly from New York to Beijing and then back to New York (but you CAN fly New York → Beijing → Tokyo)
Enter and exit through designated ports within the 24 permitted provincial-level regions [[10]](https://www.chinadiscovery.com/chinese-visa/240-hour-visa-free-transit.html)
Critical detail: Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan all count as "third countries/regions" for the purpose of this policy. This means you CAN fly from New York → Beijing → Hong Kong, which is a valid 240-hour transit. [[12]](https://www.chinatravel.com/guide/visa/240-hour-visa-free-in-china)
The 240-hour countdown begins at 00:00 (midnight) on the day AFTER your arrival. For example, if you arrive in Beijing at 4:00 PM on June 1, your 240 hours begin counting from 00:00 on June 2, and you must depart before midnight on June 11. This effectively gives you 10 full days if you arrive early in the day. [[12]](https://www.chinatravel.com/guide/visa/240-hour-visa-free-in-china)
Yes --- and this is a major improvement from the old policy. Under the fully relaxed 2024 rules, you can now travel freely within the 24 permitted provincial-level regions. Critically, your exit port can be different from your entry port. For example, you can enter through Beijing and exit through Shanghai. [[12]](https://www.chinatravel.com/guide/visa/240-hour-visa-free-in-china)
However, the policy does NOT cover certain autonomous regions and provinces including Xinjiang, Tibet, Inner Mongolia, Ningxia, Qinghai, Gansu, and Jilin. [[12]](https://www.chinatravel.com/guide/visa/240-hour-visa-free-in-china)
Fly: New York → Beijing (enter China, Day 1)
Stay: 9 days exploring Beijing, Great Wall, Tianjin
Fly: Beijing → Tokyo (third country, Day 10)
✅ Valid
Fly: Los Angeles → Shanghai (enter China, Day 1)
Train: Shanghai → Hangzhou → Suzhou → Beijing (Days 2-8)
Fly: Beijing → Hong Kong (third region, Day 9)
✅ Valid (Hong Kong counts as third region; exit port different from entry port is now allowed)
Fly: Seoul → Beijing (enter China)
Stay: 8 days
Fly: Beijing → Seoul (return to origin country)
❌ Invalid --- must exit to a THIRD country, not back to your origin
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LyrikTrip Tip: For US citizens, the 240-hour transit is the most practical way to visit China without applying for a visa. The key strategy is to book a cheap onward flight to a nearby destination (Hong Kong, Tokyo, Seoul, Bangkok) as your "third country" exit. Hong Kong is the easiest option --- it's a short flight or train ride from most Chinese cities, and US citizens can enter Hong Kong visa-free for 90 days. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You need a standard tourist visa (L visa) only if ALL of the following apply to you:
Your nationality is NOT on the 30-day visa-free list (50+ countries)
You do NOT qualify for 240-hour visa-free transit (55 countries), OR you cannot arrange an onward ticket to a third country
You need to stay longer than 30 days (for visa-free nationalities) or longer than 240 hours (for transit nationalities)
US citizens staying longer than 10 days who cannot use the 240-hour transit (no onward third-country ticket)
Indian, Indonesian, Filipino, Vietnamese, and other Southeast Asian citizens (not on either visa-free list)
Most African nationalities (not on either visa-free list)
Any traveler planning to stay in China for more than 30 days
Any traveler planning to work, study long-term, or practice journalism in China
Passport --- valid for 6+ months, with at least 2 blank visa pages
Completed COVA application form --- filled out online at cova.mfa.gov.cn (see next section)
Recent passport photo --- 48mm × 33mm, white background, uploaded digitally during COVA application
Flight reservations --- round-trip booking (use refundable reservations; don't buy final tickets until visa is approved)
Hotel reservations --- confirmed bookings for your entire stay, OR an invitation letter from a Chinese host
Financial proof --- bank statements for the last 3-6 months showing a minimum balance of \$3,000-5,000 (varies by consulate)
Travel itinerary --- detailed day-by-day plan including cities, attractions, and dates
Travel insurance (recommended) --- minimum \$50,000 coverage for the entire trip duration [[13]](https://us.china-embassy.gov.cn/eng/lsfw/zj/qz2021/202509/t20250920_11712385.htm)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LyrikTrip Tip: The most common rejection reasons are incomplete documents, insufficient financial proof, and unclear travel purpose. The single best thing you can do to ensure approval is to provide a detailed, realistic day-by-day itinerary that clearly shows you're a genuine tourist with plans to leave China before your visa expires. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The China Online Visa Application (COVA) system, fully launched in September 2025, is now the standard process for all China visa applications worldwide. It replaces the old paper-based application forms and allows you to complete most of the process online before visiting a visa center in person. The COVA system has significantly cut processing times compared to the previous fully paper-based method. [[3]](https://www.visasupdate.com/post/china-e-visa-2026-guide-online-application-cova-system-fees-processing-times-visa-free) [[13]](https://us.china-embassy.gov.cn/eng/lsfw/zj/qz2021/202509/t20250920_11712385.htm)
Important note: Despite being called an "e-visa" system, COVA is currently a hybrid process --- you complete the form and upload documents online, but you still need to submit your physical passport in person at a Chinese Visa Application Service Center (CVASC) or embassy. China is actively exploring a fully electronic visa (sticker-free) system, with pilots mentioned in recent policy updates, but as of March 2026, physical passport submission is still required. [[3]](https://www.visasupdate.com/post/china-e-visa-2026-guide-online-application-cova-system-fees-processing-times-visa-free)
The complete process takes approximately 2-5 weeks from start to visa in hand:
Go to the official COVA website: cova.mfa.gov.cn and switch to English
Click "Start my application"
Select your region and the specific visa office (based on your consular jurisdiction)
Choose your visa type (L for tourism)
Fill in the application form --- personal details, travel history, itinerary, employment information
Upload your passport photo (digital, meeting specifications), passport data page scan, and supporting documents
Submit for online pre-review (takes 1-3 business days) [[14]](https://ishotaphoto.com/blog/china-visa-online-application-cova-guide-20252026)
Once your online application is approved for submission, you'll receive a confirmation message
Print your application confirmation page
Bring your physical passport, printed confirmation, and all original supporting documents to the designated CVASC or embassy
Pay the visa fee (see next section)
Receive a collection receipt with your pickup date [[15]](https://visitchinavisa.com/step-by-step-guide-for-chinese-visa-application-2025/)
Standard processing: 4-7 business days after in-person submission
Express processing: 2-3 business days (additional fee)
Rush processing: 1 business day (additional fee, not always available)
Collect your passport with the visa affixed, or receive it by mail
Check all visa details carefully --- verify dates, number of entries, and duration of stay [[3]](https://www.visasupdate.com/post/china-e-visa-2026-guide-online-application-cova-system-fees-processing-times-visa-free)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LyrikTrip Tip: Start the COVA online form from your phone --- the system is fully mobile-responsive. But have your passport, flight details, and hotel bookings ready before you begin, as the form requires specific dates and reference numbers. A known bug occasionally displays "photo check failed" even for compliant photos --- if this happens, try re-uploading the same photo. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
China extended its reduced visa fee policy through December 31, 2026, making visas significantly cheaper than pre-2023 levels for most nationalities. The fees vary substantially depending on your citizenship: [[3]](https://www.visasupdate.com/post/china-e-visa-2026-guide-online-application-cova-system-fees-processing-times-visa-free)
| Nationality | Single Entry | Double Entry | Multiple Entry (6 months) | Multiple Entry (12 months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US citizens | \$140 | \$140 | \$140 | \$140 |
| Most other nationalities | \$23-50 | \$35-65 | \$50-80 | \$60-100 |
Express processing (2-3 days): +\$30-50
Rush processing (1 day): +\$50-80
CVASC service center fee: +\$20-30
Visa agency service fee: \$50-150 (if using a third-party agency)
Important for US citizens: The US visa fee of \$140 is a reciprocal rate --- it's higher than other nationalities because the US charges Chinese citizens a similar amount. This fee applies regardless of visa type or number of entries. [[3]](https://www.visasupdate.com/post/china-e-visa-2026-guide-online-application-cova-system-fees-processing-times-visa-free)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LyrikTrip Tip: If you're a US citizen planning a trip of 10 days or less, the 240-hour visa-free transit saves you \$140+ in visa fees and weeks of application time. Book a cheap onward flight to Hong Kong (\$50-100 one-way) as your "third country" exit, and you've effectively entered China for free. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
You need an M visa if your primary purpose is commercial activity --- business meetings, trade fairs, contract negotiations, factory visits, or market research. The M visa requires the same documents as the L visa, plus an invitation letter from a Chinese company (including your details, visit purpose, dates, and the inviting company's official stamp and business license copy). Note that the M visa does NOT permit employment --- for that, you need a Z visa (work visa).
| Visa Type | Purpose | Key Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Z (Work) | Employment in China | Job offer + work permit from Chinese employer |
| X1 (Study >180 days) | Long-term study | Admission letter + JW201/JW202 form |
| X2 (Study \<180 days) | Short-term study | Admission letter from Chinese institution |
| Q1 (Family >180 days) | Family reunion | Invitation from Chinese family member + relationship proof |
| Q2 (Family \<180 days) | Family visit | Invitation from Chinese family member |
| J1/J2 (Journalist) | Media work | Press card + approval from Chinese authorities |
All visa types are now applied for through the COVA online system, following the same basic process described above with type-specific additional documents.
Generally no. The 30-day visa-free entry and the 240-hour visa-free transit cannot be extended. If you need more time, you must exit China and re-enter (which resets the clock for visa-free nationalities), or apply for a standard visa before your trip.
Yes, L visas can typically be extended 1-2 times, for 30 days each extension. Apply at the local Public Security Bureau (PSB) Entry-Exit Administration office at least 7 days before your current visa expires.
Valid passport
Current visa
Hotel registration form (obtained from your hotel)
Reason for extension
Completed application form
Fee: ¥160 (\~\$22)
Processing time: 5-7 business days
Where to apply: Every major Chinese city has a PSB Entry-Exit Administration office. Your hotel can direct you to the nearest one. Bring your passport, hotel registration, and a clear explanation of why you need to stay longer.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- LyrikTrip Tip: Visa extensions are not guaranteed --- they're granted at the discretion of the local PSB. The most common successful reasons are: medical treatment, flight cancellation/delay, or completing a pre-planned itinerary that was disrupted. "I'm having fun and want to stay longer" is generally not sufficient. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No. Employment on a tourist visa (L visa) or during a visa-free entry is illegal and can result in fines of ¥5,000-20,000, detention, deportation, and a multi-year entry ban. If you need to work in China, you must obtain a Z visa (work visa) sponsored by your Chinese employer before arrival. This applies even to short-term freelance or remote work performed while physically in China.
Overstaying has serious consequences: fines of ¥500 per day (up to ¥10,000), possible detention of 5-15 days, deportation, and a ban on future entry to China. The penalty applies equally to visa-free entries and standard visas. Chinese immigration authorities track overstays electronically, and you will be flagged at any exit point. Never overstay --- if you realize you might exceed your permitted stay, contact the local PSB immediately to discuss options.
Yes. Every traveler, regardless of age, needs their own passport and their own visa or visa-free entry. Infants and children are not exempt. The same requirements apply --- a child from a visa-free country enters visa-free on their own passport; a child from a non-exempt country needs their own visa application through COVA.
No. Hong Kong and Macau have completely separate immigration systems. A mainland China visa does not grant entry to Hong Kong or Macau, and vice versa. Most Western passport holders can enter Hong Kong visa-free for 7-180 days and Macau for 30-90 days. Check the specific requirements for your nationality before planning a combined itinerary.
Can I apply for a China visa from a third country (not my home country)?
Possible but more difficult. Chinese embassies and consulates prefer to process applications from citizens or legal residents of their host country. If you're traveling and need a China visa urgently, you can attempt to apply at a Chinese embassy in your current location, but approval rates are lower and processing times may be longer. It's always easier and more reliable to apply from your country of citizenship or permanent residence.
There is no official limit on the number of re-entries. You can exit and re-enter China multiple times, each time receiving a fresh 30-day stamp. However, China Highlights notes that "frequent entries may raise questions" from immigration officers. Use the policy reasonably --- a pattern of continuous 30-day stays with brief exits could be interpreted as attempting to live in China without a proper visa. [[2]](https://www.chinahighlights.com/travelguide/visa-application/china-visa-exemption.htm)
Renew your passport before traveling. Both the visa-free entry and standard visa applications require at least 6 months of remaining passport validity. The 240-hour transit requires at least 3 months. If your passport is close to expiring, renew it first --- this is a non-negotiable requirement that cannot be waived.
Not yet. As of March 2026, COVA is a hybrid system --- you complete the application form and upload documents online, but you still need to submit your physical passport in person at a CVASC or embassy. China is actively exploring a fully electronic visa system, but the current process still requires physical passport submission for the visa sticker to be affixed. [[3]](https://www.visasupdate.com/post/china-e-visa-2026-guide-online-application-cova-system-fees-processing-times-visa-free)
→ Is your country on the 30-day visa-free list?
YES → Staying ≤30 days? → Use 30-day visa-free entry ✅
YES → Staying >30 days? → Apply for L visa through COVA
→ Is your country on the 240-hour transit list (e.g., USA)?
YES → Have onward ticket to third country? → Use 240-hour transit ✅
YES → No onward ticket? → Apply for L visa through COVA
→ Neither list?
→ Apply for L visa through COVA (required)
This guide is part of the LyrikTrip China Travel Series. For payment setup, see our companion guides: [Alipay Super-App Guide](/alipay-guide) and [WeChat Mini-Program Guide](/wechat-guide). For phone number setup, see: [Why a +86 Chinese Phone Number Changes Everything](/phone-number-guide).
Disclaimer: Visa policies are subject to change. The information presented here is based on official Chinese government announcements as of March 2026. Always verify the latest regulations with the nearest Chinese Embassy or Consulate, or at the official COVA website ([cova.mfa.gov.cn](https://cova.mfa.gov.cn)), before finalizing your travel plans.