Author
Mei Lin
China visa policy researcher · Former consular services advisor · Bilingual English-Mandarin, reads original MFA and NIA source text · Monthly re-verification of visa-free and transit rules
Mei Lin has spent over eight years tracking China visa policy changes, reading every Ministry of Foreign Affairs announcement and National Immigration Administration update in the original Mandarin before it hits English-language media. She previously advised consular services teams on China entry rule interpretation and now translates that expertise into actionable visa guides for NihaoVisit readers. Her work is cited by travel industry professionals who need authoritative, up-to-the-week China entry information.
Expertise
- China visa policy (30-day visa-free, 240-hour transit, L visa)
- Entry requirements and port eligibility by nationality
- Tibet and restricted-area permits
- Visa-free country list tracking and bilateral agreement analysis
Articles (5)
China Visa Guide 2026
38+ countries can visit China visa-free for 30 days in 2026. 55+ more can use 240-hour transit. Everyone else needs a tourist (L) visa. Here is the current ruleset, country-specific requirements, and how to apply.
240-Hour Visa-Free Transit Guide
55+ countries can transit through mainland China visa-free for up to 240 hours (10 days). Learn which ports qualify, what documents you need, and how to avoid common mistakes.
China Entry Requirements 2026
Everything you need to enter mainland China in 2026: passport validity, arrival card rules, customs declarations, health requirements, and what to expect at immigration.
China Customs Declaration Guide
Most tourists don't need to declare anything. The exceptions: cash over $5,000 USD, drones, certain medications, large amounts of alcohol, and items for commercial use. Here is the practical guide.
China Visa Denied: What to Do
China visa denials are rare for the 30-day visa-free nationalities. For L (tourist) visa applicants, common reasons are: incomplete application, criminal record, prior overstay, or wrong category. Reapplication is usually possible after fixing the issue.