30-day unilateral visa-free entry
Not listedNot on the current NIA 30-day unilateral visa-free list. Check whether another separate agreement applies, otherwise use a visa route.
Visa & Entry
ビザ免除、240時間トランジット、観光ビザ、長期滞在、到着準備を比較します。
Country Checker
Results are based on the NIA country lists for ordinary passport holders. Border officers and official policy updates always prevail.
Result for
Not on the current NIA 30-day unilateral visa-free list. Check whether another separate agreement applies, otherwise use a visa route.
Listed for 240-hour transit, but your route must be Country/Region A -> mainland China -> Country/Region B through approved ports.
For stays beyond the visa-free or transit window, use the appropriate visa or residence route before travel.
Applicable Countries
The first list covers NIA's 30-day unilateral visa-free policy. The second list covers the 240-hour transit visa-free policy.
Checked against NIA lists published in 2025-2026. Recheck before ticketing.
Longer Stays
Visa-free and transit policies are not a substitute for long-stay permission. Pick the visa category by purpose first, then check the Chinese embassy, consulate, or Visa Application Service Center responsible for your place of residence.
For tourism when visa-free entry does not fit, or when your planned stay needs the duration printed on a visa. Prepare itinerary, hotel bookings, tickets, or an invitation if required.
For commercial activities, meetings, exhibitions, exchanges, visits, or study tours. A Chinese inviter or host organization is usually the key document source.
For employment in China. The employer normally prepares the work permit notice. After arrival, the work and residence permit process must be completed locally.
X1 is for study over 180 days and normally requires residence permit handling after entry. X2 is for short-term study of no more than 180 days.
Q visas are for relatives of Chinese citizens or permanent residents. S visas are commonly for relatives of foreigners working or studying in China, or other private affairs.
Journalist, high-level talent, and permanent residence routes have stricter supporting documents and should be checked directly with the responsible authority.
Decide the purpose first: tourism, business, work, study, family, private affairs, journalism, or residence.
Check the responsible Chinese embassy, consulate, or Visa Application Service Center for local requirements and appointment rules.
Prepare passport, photo, application form, itinerary or invitation, and category-specific approval documents.
Submit the application, complete biometrics if required, and confirm processing time before booking non-refundable travel.
After approval, check entries, validity, and duration of each stay printed on the visa before departure.
For Z, X1, Q1, S1, J1, and similar long-stay routes, handle the local residence permit after arrival as instructed.