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China Entry Requirements for Tourists in 2026: What You Need

To enter China as a tourist in 2026 you need a passport valid at least six months with blank pages, plus either a tourist (L) visa OR eligibility for one of China's visa-free routes — the 30-day unilateral visa-free entry (50 countries) or the 240-hour visa-free transit. Which one applies depends on your nationality and your itinerary. This guide sorts you into the right lane.

Entry rules for China have changed more in the past two years than in the previous decade, and most of what's online is out of date. China has aggressively expanded visa-free travel — a 30-day exemption now covers 50 nationalities (National Immigration Administration, `en.nia.gov.cn`, list compiled 17 February 2026; Last verified: 2026-07-03), and it retired the old COVID-era health declaration entirely. So the honest starting point is: many tourists who assume they need a visa no longer do.

One positioning note. LyrikTrip is a private tour designer for high-end, family-focused trips inside China — not a visa agency or an immigration authority. We don't file your paperwork. What we can do is give you a correctly dated, officially sourced overview so you know which route is yours before you book flights, then point you to the detailed guides for each step.

Entry rules are YMYL — verify before you travel. Country lists, visa-free durations, and transit ports have all shifted within the last year. Treat every figure here as accurate only as of 2026-07-03, and confirm your specific situation with the nearest Chinese embassy or consulate and your airline before you book or fly. A wrong assumption can mean being denied boarding or refused entry.

Key Takeaways

- Three ways in, in order of "no paperwork" to "most paperwork": 30-day unilateral visa-free entry (if your country is on the list), 240-hour visa-free transit (if you're passing through to a third country), or a tourist (L) visa (everyone else, or longer stays). - 50 countries currently get 30-day visa-free entry for tourism, business, family visits, exchanges, and transit — extended through 31 December 2026 for most (NIA; Last verified: 2026-07-03). Some third-party trackers cite higher counts by bundling other schemes; the NIA unilateral list is 50 — verify your nationality directly. - Your passport must be valid at least six months beyond your planned stay, with at least two blank pages. This is the safe standard airlines and consulates apply — don't cut it close. - China scrapped the routine health declaration on 1 November 2023. There is no COVID form to fill in. Customs still applies normal duty-free and declaration rules. - Most arrivals now complete a digital arrival card (launched 20 November 2025). It is free and it is not a visa — see the arrival-card guide. - Work is never permitted on any visa-free route or a tourist visa. Employment requires the correct work visa. - Rules change without notice — confirm with your embassy before travel. Every figure here is dated and sourced; reconfirm before you commit.

Do I Need a Visa to Enter China as a Tourist?

Maybe not. Whether you need a China tourist visa depends entirely on your passport and your trip: if you hold a passport from one of the 50 unilateral visa-free countries and are staying 30 days or less, you can enter without any visa; if you're only transiting to a third country, the 240-hour visa-free transit may cover you; otherwise you need a tourist (L) visa applied for in advance. Run the table below first — it's the fastest way to find your lane.

This is the decision most travelers get wrong, because the visa-free landscape expanded so recently. Find the row that matches your situation:

Do You Need a Visa? — The Decision Table

Your situationWhat you needDo this
Passport from one of the 50 unilateral visa-free countries, staying ≤ 30 days for tourism/family/businessNo visa — 30-day visa-free entryJust bring a valid passport + onward/return plans. Confirm your nationality is current on the NIA list.
Passport from a visa-free country, but staying more than 30 daysTourist (L) visaApply at a Chinese embassy/consulate or visa center before you fly.
Passport not on the unilateral visa-free listTourist (L) visaApply in advance — you cannot enter for tourism without it.
Only transiting through China to a third country or region, staying ≤ 10 days (240 hours)No visa — 240-hour visa-free transitCheck eligibility and approved ports in our transit-visa guide.
Russian ordinary-passport holderNo visa — separate 30-day arrangementConfirm current validity dates; Russia's exemption runs on its own timeline (through Dec 2027 per NIA).
Traveling for work, study, or journalismThe specific visa for that purpose (Z, X, J)Visa-free and tourist visas never permit employment. Apply for the correct category.

The single most common mistake is assuming "I always needed a visa for China, so I still do." If your country was added to the visa-free list (the UK and Canada were added on 17 February 2026, joining most of Europe, Australia, New Zealand, South Korea, Japan, Brazil, and others), a short holiday may now require no visa at all (NIA; Last verified: 2026-07-03). But if you're not certain your passport is on the current list, treat a visa as required and confirm with your embassy — the cost of guessing wrong is being turned away.

What Is China's 30-Day Visa-Free Entry?

China's unilateral visa-free entry lets ordinary-passport holders from 50 designated countries enter mainland China without a visa and stay up to 30 days for tourism, business, visiting family, exchanges, or transit. It is the simplest way in — no application, no fee — and it is the route most Western leisure tourists will now use (NIA, `en.nia.gov.cn`; Last verified: 2026-07-03).

The essentials, as officially stated:

- Who: Ordinary-passport holders of the 50 listed countries. Diplomatic, service, and emergency travel documents are generally excluded — check your document type. - How long: Up to 30 days, counted from 00:00 on the day after you enter (NIA wording; Last verified: 2026-07-03). Plan your departure inside that window. - What you can do: Tourism, business, visiting relatives and friends, exchange visits, and transit. You may not work — paid or unpaid employment can bring fines, deportation, and a re-entry ban. - How long the policy lasts: Extended through 31 December 2026 for most countries (Russia runs separately through end-2027). It has been renewed repeatedly, but it is not permanent — reconfirm before trips in late 2026 (NIA; Last verified: 2026-07-03).

A note on the numbers, because you'll see them disagree online. The NIA's own unilateral list stands at 50 countries (compiled 17 February 2026). Some travel-industry trackers report higher figures — 70-plus — but those bundle in mutual visa-exemption treaties, the 240-hour transit scheme, and regional arrangements. For a straightforward tourist decision, the 50-country unilateral list is the one that matters. Because it has moved several times in a year, verify your specific nationality against the current official list rather than trusting any third-party count — including this one.

If you're eligible for visa-free entry but your itinerary is really just a stopover between two other countries, read the next distinction carefully — you may fall under transit rules instead.

Visa-Free Entry vs Visa-Free Transit: Which One Applies to You?

Use 30-day visa-free entry if China is your destination and your passport is on the 50-country list; use 240-hour visa-free transit if China is a stopover and you're continuing to a different third country or region. They are separate schemes with different rules, and confusing them is a common and costly error.

The quick contrast:

30-day visa-free entry240-hour visa-free transit
When it appliesChina is your main destinationChina is a layover en route elsewhere
Onward ticket required?No — you can return home from ChinaYes — confirmed ticket to a third country or region
Eligible nationalitiesThe 50 unilateral countriesA separate, broader list (54/55 per source)
Max stay30 days10 days (240 hours)
Where you can goNationwideOnly within permitted regions

If you qualify for 30-day visa-free entry, you generally don't need to bother with transit rules at all — entry is longer and less restrictive. Transit-free matters mainly for travelers whose nationality isn't on the 30-day list but who are passing through. The full eligibility list, approved ports, and the onward-ticket fine print (this is where people get denied boarding) live in our dedicated China transit-visa guide — defer to it for that decision.

What Are the Passport Rules for Entering China?

Your passport should be valid for at least six months beyond your planned departure from China and carry at least two blank visa pages. This is the safe, widely-applied standard — even where the strict visa-free wording is more lenient, airlines and border officers commonly enforce the six-month rule, so don't travel on a near-expiry passport (GOV.UK China entry advice; NIA visa-free notices; Last verified: 2026-07-03).

The specifics:

- Validity: The six-month buffer beyond your stay is the standard to plan around. China's visa-free notices state the passport must be valid "for at least the duration of intended stay," but the six-month convention is what carriers check at the gate — so use six months as your working rule. - Blank pages: Keep at least two blank pages for entry and exit stamps (and for a visa sticker if you're applying for an L visa). A full passport can get you turned back at check-in. - Passport type: The visa-free routes are for ordinary passports only. Emergency or temporary travel documents are not accepted for visa-free entry. - Renew early if in doubt: If your passport expires within a year of travel, renew before you apply for a visa or fly — it removes the single most avoidable point of failure.

If your passport is close to expiry or heavily used, sort that out first; every other entry requirement assumes a clean, valid document. Confirm the exact requirement for your nationality and document with your nearest Chinese embassy before travel.

Do I Need to Fill In an Arrival Card or Health Form?

You almost certainly need to complete China's arrival card, but you do NOT need any health or COVID declaration — China abolished the routine health declaration on 1 November 2023. Since 20 November 2025, most foreign arrivals file a free digital arrival card; there are a handful of exempt categories (China General Administration of Customs; NIA; Last verified: 2026-07-03).

What this means in practice:

- No health declaration. The COVID-era Entry/Exit Health Declaration Card was scrapped for all travelers on 1 November 2023 (General Administration of Customs; english.gov.cn). There is no QR health code to generate. The only exception: if you arrive with symptoms of, or a diagnosis of, an infectious disease, you must still declare it voluntarily. - Yes to the arrival card. China's NIA launched an online arrival card on 20 November 2025 that most foreign travelers — including visa-free arrivals — must complete. It is free on the official NIA portal (ignore paid look-alike sites), and paper forms remain available at the airport. - The arrival card is not a visa. It's a declaration; you still need a valid visa or visa-free eligibility to be admitted.

Because the arrival-card system is only months old and has its own exempt categories, fill-in steps, and customs detail, we cover it in full — including who's exempt and how to file in advance — in the dedicated China arrival-card guide. This overview just flags that you'll need it.

What Happens When You Arrive in China?

On arrival you'll clear the arrival-card check, immigration (with fingerprints and a face photo for most adults), baggage claim, and then a customs channel — typically 30 to 60 minutes from jet bridge to arrivals hall. For a prepared tourist with the right documents, it's routine (NIA; China Customs; Last verified: 2026-07-03).

The sequence, at a high level:

1. Arrival card check — have your card (digital QR or paper) ready. 2. Immigration counter — passport and visa/visa-free eligibility checked. Fingerprints are collected from travelers aged 14–70; children under 14 and travelers over 70 are exempt. A face photo is taken at the counter. 3. Baggage claim — collect your bags before customs. 4. Customs channel — walk the green channel if you have nothing to declare (most tourists do), or the red channel if you exceed duty-free allowances or carry cash over USD 5,000 / RMB 20,000.

On customs specifics — what you can bring in duty-free, alcohol and tobacco limits, and what must be declared — see our China customs and duty-free allowance guide. And if you're still deciding where to land, our which airport to fly into China guide compares the main gateways. None of the arrival steps should surprise a prepared traveler, but confirm current procedures on the official NIA portal before you fly, as a new system can change.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do US citizens need a visa to visit China in 2026? As of 2026-07-03, the United States is not on China's 30-day unilateral visa-free list, so US tourists generally need a tourist (L) visa applied for in advance. US passport holders may still use the 240-hour visa-free transit if only passing through to a third country. Confirm current rules with the Chinese embassy before travel.

How many countries have visa-free entry to China? China's unilateral 30-day visa-free entry covers 50 countries as of 17 February 2026 (National Immigration Administration). Some trackers cite higher numbers by including mutual-exemption treaties and transit schemes. Because the list changes often, verify your specific nationality on the official NIA list before booking.

How long is my passport valid to enter China? Plan for at least six months of validity beyond your intended departure, plus at least two blank pages. While visa-free notices state validity for the duration of stay, airlines and border officers commonly enforce the six-month rule, so don't travel on a near-expiry passport. Renew early if in doubt.

Do I still need a COVID test or health declaration for China? No. China abolished the routine Entry/Exit Health Declaration Card for all travelers on 1 November 2023, and there is no COVID testing requirement for tourists. The only exception is voluntarily declaring if you arrive with symptoms of an infectious disease. Confirm current health rules before travel.

Can I work or study on a tourist entry to China? No. Neither visa-free entry nor a tourist (L) visa permits employment or formal study — work needs a Z visa and study an X visa. Working on the wrong status risks fines, deportation, and a re-entry ban. Apply for the correct visa category for your purpose.

What's the difference between visa-free entry and visa-free transit? Visa-free entry (30 days) applies when China is your destination and your passport is on the 50-country list. Visa-free transit (240 hours) applies when China is a stopover and you hold a confirmed onward ticket to a third country. See our transit-visa guide for the transit rules.

Getting Your China Entry Right

Entering China as a tourist in 2026 comes down to three questions, and you can answer them now. First, which route is yours — 30-day visa-free entry if your passport is on the 50-country list, 240-hour transit if you're passing through, or a tourist (L) visa otherwise. Second, is your passport ready — six months of validity and blank pages. Third, have you handled the arrival card — required and free, but not a visa. Get those right and the border itself is routine.

Because this is a fast-moving, high-stakes area, the one rule that never expires: confirm your specific situation with the nearest Chinese embassy or consulate and your airline before you book or fly. Every figure here is dated and officially sourced as of 2026-07-03, but lists change without notice.

Once your entry route is settled, LyrikTrip builds the trip on the other side of immigration — a private, family-paced itinerary designed by one travel designer start to finish, in 400+ Chinese cities. Sort your visa or visa-free eligibility first; when you're ready to plan the actual holiday, tell us your dates and we'll take it from there.