Entry Rules
China 240-Hour Visa-Free Transit: When It Works, When It Backfires
Visa-free transit is useful only when nationality, port, onward ticket, stay area, and route logic all match the current rule.
What this guide should look like in practice


The Short Version
China’s 240-hour visa-free transit can be excellent for a Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Chengdu, Xi’an, or regional stopover, but it is not a general tourist visa. The key word is transit. You must be traveling from one country or region to a third country or region, enter through an eligible port, stay inside the allowed area, and leave within the permitted time.
If your China plan is a simple round trip, if you want full flexibility across provinces, or if your onward ticket is not confirmed, apply for a visa instead. If your itinerary is Tokyo to Shanghai to Singapore, or London to Beijing to Seoul, the policy can save time and money.
Use It Only If These Four Things Are True
| Requirement | What It Means | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Eligible nationality | Your passport country is on the current eligible list | Lists change; verify before booking |
| Third-country transit | Origin and next destination are different countries or regions | Round trips usually fail |
| Confirmed onward ticket | You can show flight, train, or ship details out of China | Open-ended plans are risky |
| Allowed region | You stay inside the permitted provincial or city area | Crossing into the wrong region can break the exemption |
Good Itineraries For 240 Hours
Shanghai plus Suzhou or Hangzhou: strong for first-timers who want city food, water towns, museums, and short rail day trips while staying in an easier arrival region.
Beijing plus the Great Wall: good if your onward flight is confirmed and you focus on Forbidden City, hutongs, Summer Palace, and one Wall section instead of trying to add Xi’an.
Guangzhou and Shenzhen: useful for travelers connecting through Hong Kong, Southeast Asia, or the Greater Bay Area, but verify the permitted ports and movement rules before crossing borders.
Bad Itineraries For 240 Hours
Do not use visa-free transit for a multi-province grand tour unless every province and port in your plan is clearly allowed under the current rule. Do not use it if you want to improvise after landing. Do not rely on it for remote scenic areas that need domestic flights across regions.
Documents To Have Ready
- Passport valid for your trip.
- Confirmed onward ticket to a third country or region.
- Hotel address in English and Chinese.
- Arrival card or digital entry details if requested.
- Printed backup of the policy page or airline confirmation if your airline check-in staff is uncertain.
Where Travelers Get Caught
The most common problem is airline check-in before China, not immigration after landing. If staff are unsure about the policy, they may ask for proof that your route qualifies. The second problem is geography: travelers assume 240 hours means all of China, then book a domestic side trip outside the permitted area. The third problem is onward travel: a ticket back to the same country may not count as transit.
Practical Checklist
- Verify current eligibility on official Chinese government or immigration channels before buying tickets.
- Keep the China stop compact: one gateway city plus nearby day trips.
- Book hotels that can register foreign guests.
- Do not change your onward flight casually after entry.
- When in doubt, get a visa and buy flexibility.