Good news: China has opened up a lot. Depending on your passport and plans you may not need a visa at all — via the 30-day visa-free policy or the 240-hour (10-day) visa-free transit. Everyone else applies for a simple tourist (L) visa.
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30-day visa-free

~50 countries · direct visits · up to 30 days · no onward ticket needed.

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240-hour transit

55 countries · transiting onward · up to 10 days · onward ticket required.

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Tourist (L) visa

Everyone else · apply before you travel · longer stays.

1. 30-day visa-free entry (the easiest route)

Ordinary-passport holders from around 50 countries can enter mainland China with no visa and stay up to 30 days for tourism, business, visiting family or friends, or transit. Eligible countries include the UK, most of Europe (Schengen and beyond), Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, Canada, Brazil and more. The policy has been extended through the end of 2026, with countries added over time (Sweden was added in late 2025).

2. 240-hour (10-day) visa-free transit

If your country isn’t on the 30-day list — most notably the USA — the transit policy is your friend. Citizens of 55 countries (incl. the USA, UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, most of Europe, Japan, South Korea, Singapore and Indonesia) can stay up to 10 days visa-free while travelling from one country/region to a third country/region.

This single 240-hour policy replaced the older 72-hour and 144-hour transit programs in December 2024. It now works at 60+ ports across 24 provinces — including Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Chengdu and many more — and you can move freely within those regions during your stay.

3. The tourist (L) visa

Not covered above, or want to stay longer than visa-free allows? Apply for a standard L (tourist) visa at a Chinese embassy, consulate or visa application centre before you travel. You’ll typically need a passport, photo, application form and travel/accommodation details. It’s routine — just allow a couple of weeks.

4. Regional & special schemes

Beyond the national rules, a few regional options exist (confirm current details before relying on them):

5. Hong Kong, Macau & Taiwan are separate

These have their own entry rules, independent of mainland China. Many nationalities enter Hong Kong and Macau visa-free for set periods; Taiwan has its own visa/permit system. A mainland Chinese visa does not cover them, and vice-versa — check each one separately.

Practical tips

⚠️ Always verify before you book. Visa rules change frequently and depend on your exact nationality, route and port of entry. This guide reflects policy as of early 2026 and is a friendly starting point, not official advice. Confirm with China’s National Immigration Administration or your nearest Chinese embassy/visa centre.

Questions about planning a trip? partnership@unveilchina.com · Updated June 2026.