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People not want a visa to go to China for as much as 10 days


If you have China on your travel Bingo card for 2025, I have good news for you. Effective immediately, Americans will be able to visit the country for up to 10 days without a visa.

This is a significant positive development for everything from last-minute trips to long-planned vacations, eliminating the paperwork, cost and stress of the visa application process.

Plus, 52 other countries will be able to take advantage of these new relaxed visa procedures, too, and the majority of those can stay up to 30 days without needing a visa (the U.S. doesn’t qualify yet, though, for the longer stay).

Here are some key points about China’s new visa-free policy for foreign visitors.

A view of Shanghai, China, from Viking Yi Dun. ASHLEY KOSCIOLEK/THE POINTS GUY

What was the previous China visa policy for Americans

Prior to this week, Americans were required to have a visa to enter China.

While you could apply for a multi-entry visa that was valid for 120 months, there was no guarantee that your application would be approved or that you would receive the full 10-year version, even if your visa request was granted.

TPG senior cruise writer Ashley Kosciolek applied for a Chinese visa in the fall before a recent cruise with Viking. She submitted documentation at the consulate in New York, along with the official cost of $140. While she was approved for a visa (which she had to pick up in person a few days later), it was only good for a single entry and allowed her into the country for 30 days. However, some fellow passengers on her sailing said they applied via the service the cruise recommended and were approved for 10-year visas, but at a cost of about $1,200 per person — a significant price difference that included service fees and shipping costs.

Why Americans no longer need a visa to visit China

Although China had slowly been relaxing visa requirements for many nations since the fall, up until yesterday (Dec. 16), the country required U.S. citizens to obtain a visa before they could enter the country. These visas cost $140 per person and took at least four days to process.

Starting in the fall of 2023, China had been relaxing travel requirements for foreign visitors, first allowing citizens of France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Spain, Norway and Malaysia to visit the country visa-free, according to China Briefing. Now, the U.S., along with 52 other countries, will be able to visit China for at least 10 days without a visa, and up to 30 days for some nations (although the U.S. maximum visa-free stay is 10 days).

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As of today, Dec. 17, that requirement for short trips has been lifted, and Americans can now stay up to 10 days (or, more specifically, 240 hours) when entering the country through one of 60 entry points across 24 provinces. That means for the kind of cruise that we mention above, there would be no visa, or cost, involved to visit the country as long as you visited for less than 10 days (for a longer stay, you would still need to obtain a visa).

A Buddha in a thousand-year-old temple in China. ASHLEY KOSCIOLEK/THE POINTS GUY

Restrictions to keep in mind

While visa-free entry is available for trips up to 240 hours, a passport is still required for travel to China, and passports must be valid for at least 6 months from the date of entry into the country.

Bottom line

If the thought of applying, and paying, for a visa to visit China has been causing you to hesitate to visit the country, that obstacle has now been removed.

Effective immediately, you can visit the country for up to 240 hours with a valid passport, with no other paperwork required.

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