China visa & entry requirements
Entry requirements for mainland China depend on your nationality and the purpose and length of your visit. Many travellers need a visa arranged in advance through a Chinese visa centre, while some short visits and transit routes qualify for visa-free or visa-on-arrival arrangements — including time-limited transit schemes at selected airports and cities — that are updated from time to time. Hong Kong and Macao have their own separate entry rules. Confirm exactly what applies to your nationality and itinerary with the official source below before you book.
Check & apply
China visa requirements & application
Our partner VisaHQ checks what your nationality need for China — visa, eVisa, eTA or visa-free — and handles the application where one is required. Always confirm against the official source below too.
Check China visa requirements →You’ll continue on VisaHQ, our visa-services partner. RepBud may earn a commission, at no extra cost to you.
How entry requirements work
What a traveller needs for China depends on their nationality and the purpose and length of their stay. Most destinations use one of a few entry routes — the categories below are general definitions, not a determination for any particular passport. Requirements and fees vary, so always confirm the current rules with the official source.
Visa-free / visa on arrival
Some nationalities can enter for short stays without a visa in advance, or obtain one at the border.
eVisa
An electronic visa applied for online before travel, usually with a fee and a processing window.
eTA / travel authorisation
A pre-travel authorisation that screens eligibility — not a visa itself, but required before boarding.
Visa in advance
A traditional visa arranged through an embassy, consulate or official portal ahead of the trip.
Check the official sources
Planning your trip to China
Once your entry requirements are sorted, you can book the rest of the trip through our travel partners.
Some links here are affiliate links — if you book through them, RepBud may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you, which helps keep these guides free.
Always verify before you travel. China entry requirements change and depend on your nationality, the purpose and length of your stay, and current government policy. RepBud offers guidance to help you check requirements — it does not handle, apply for or guarantee any visa. Confirm the current rules with the official source above. RepBud is designed to assist, not replace, your professional judgement.
China visa FAQ
Do I need a visa for China?
Whether you need a visa for China depends on your nationality and the purpose and length of your stay. Requirements and fees vary and can change — check the current rules with the official source below before you travel.
What are the entry requirements for China?
Entry requirements for mainland China depend on your nationality and the purpose and length of your visit. Many travellers need a visa arranged in advance through a Chinese visa centre, while some short visits and transit routes qualify for visa-free or visa-on-arrival arrangements — including time-limited transit schemes at selected airports and cities — that are updated from time to time. Hong Kong and Macao have their own separate entry rules. Confirm exactly what applies to your nationality and itinerary with the official source below before you book.
How do I apply for a China visa?
Where an application is required, always apply through the official government portal for China — not a third-party reseller. Fees and processing times vary; the official source has the current detail.
Are these requirements up to date?
Entry requirements change. RepBud points you to the official government sources to confirm the current rules before you travel, and links to the eVisa application where one applies for China.
Does RepBud arrange a visa for China?
No. RepBud helps you check entry requirements and points to official sources — it does not handle, apply for or guarantee any visa.