240-Hour Visa-Free Transit Policy in China: Everything You Need to Know
All information here has been verified with the China National Immigration Administration and is kept updated; you can fully trust it and look no further.
China has recently extended its visa-free transit policy from 144 hours to 240 hours, providing travelers with up to 10 days of visa-free travel in designated regions. This policy, aimed at encouraging international tourism and business activities, applies to visitors from 55 countries, including the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, and Germany.
In this article, we’ll cover everything you need to know about the new 240-hour visa-free transit policy, including eligible countries, entry points, permitted areas, and tips for maximizing your time in China.
Read Also:
Table of Contents
What Is the 240-Hour Visa-Free Transit Policy?
The 240-hour visa-free transit policy allows travelers to transit through China and stay for up to 10 days without a visa, provided they meet specific criteria. This is a significant upgrade from the previous 144-hour visa-free policy, offering visitors more time to explore China’s diverse culture, history, and landscapes.
Why Should You Use the 240-Hour Visa-Free Policy?
China’s 240-hour visa-free transit allows eligible travelers to stay up to 10 days in select cities while transiting to a third country—no traditional visa required. With a valid passport, onward ticket, and accommodation details, you can enter smoothly and explore highlights like Beijing, Shanghai, and the Great Wall of China—saving both time and money.
Who Is Eligible?

Travelers from 55 countries are eligible for the 240-hour visa-free transit policy, include:
Region | Countries |
Europe (40) | Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Norway, Monaco, Russia, United Kingdom, Ireland, Cyprus, Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine, Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Albania, Belarus |
Americas (6) | United States, Canada, Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Chile |
Asia-Pacific (2) | Australia, New Zealand |
Asia (7) | South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Brunei, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Indonesia |
Requirements to Apply
- Hold a valid passport with at least three months of remaining validity.
- Have a confirmed onward ticket to a third country or region.
- Transit through one of China’s approved entry points (see below).
How and Where to Apply
- Check Eligibility Ensure your nationality is on the list of eligible countries and your travel plan qualifies: you must be in transit to a third country (e.g., U.S. → China → Japan).
- Use an Approved Entry Point The 240-hour policy is currently available in select cities like Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Guangdong region via certain international airports or cruise ports.
- Prepare Documents Have these ready when boarding and upon arrival:
- Valid passport (with 6+ months validity)
- Confirmed onward flight/train ticket to a third country (within 240 hours)
- Completed arrival/departure card
- Inform Your Airline Let your airline know you plan to use the 240-hour visa-free transit. They will notify Chinese immigration on your behalf.
- Apply on Arrival On arrival at a participating airport, proceed to the Transit Without Visa (TWOV) desk. Immigration will review your documents and issue a temporary stay permit stamped in your passport.
- Stay Within the Designated Region You must remain within the permitted area (e.g., the Pearl River Delta for Guangdong) and depart China within 240 hours.
Tip: Always double-check the latest policy with the Chinese embassy or your airline before departure, as rules may change.
Approved Entry Points for 240-Hour Visa-Free Transit
Starting November 5, 2025, five new ports — Guangzhou Pazhou, Hengqin, Hong Kong–Zhuhai–Macao Bridge, Zhongshan, and West Kowloon Station — will be added to China’s 240-hour visa-free transit policy, raising the total to 65 entry ports across 24 provinces.
No. | Province / City | Applicable Port | Authorized Activity Zones |
|---|---|---|---|
1 | Beijing | Beijing Capital International Airport Port | Beijing |
2 | Beijing | Beijing Daxing International Airport Port | Beijing |
3 | Tianjin | Tianjin Binhai International Airport Port | Tianjin |
4 | Tianjin | Tianjin Port (Passenger Transport) | Tianjin |
5 | Hebei | Shijiazhuang Zhengding International Airport Port | Hebei |
6 | Hebei | Qinhuangdao Port (Passenger Transport) | Hebei |
7 | Liaoning | Shenyang Taoxian International Airport Port | Liaoning |
8 | Liaoning | Dalian Zhoushuizi International Airport Port | Liaoning |
9 | Liaoning | Dalian Port (Passenger Transport) | Liaoning |
10 | Shanghai | Shanghai Hongqiao International Airport Port | Shanghai |
11 | Shanghai | Shanghai Pudong International Airport Port | Shanghai |
12 | Shanghai | Shanghai Port (Passenger Transport) | Shanghai |
13 | Jiangsu | Nanjing Lukou International Airport Port | Jiangsu |
14 | Jiangsu | Sunan Shuofang International Airport Port | Jiangsu |
15 | Jiangsu | Yangzhou Taizhou International Airport Port | Jiangsu |
16 | Jiangsu | Lianyungang Port (Passenger Transport) | Jiangsu |
17 | Zhejiang | Hangzhou Xiaoshan International Airport Port | Zhejiang |
18 | Zhejiang | Ningbo Lishe International Airport Port | Zhejiang |
19 | Zhejiang | Wenzhou Longwan International Airport Port | Zhejiang |
20 | Zhejiang | Yiwu Airport Port | Zhejiang |
21 | Zhejiang | Wenzhou Port (Passenger Transport) | Zhejiang |
22 | Zhejiang | Zhoushan Port (Passenger Transport) | Zhejiang |
23 | Anhui | Hefei Xinqiao International Airport Port | Anhui |
24 | Anhui | Huangshan Tunxi International Airport Port | Anhui |
25 | Fujian | Fuzhou Changle International Airport Port | Fujian |
26 | Fujian | Xiamen Gaoqi International Airport Port | Fujian |
27 | Fujian | Quanzhou Jinjiang International Airport Port | Fujian |
28 | Fujian | Wuyishan Airport Port | Fujian |
29 | Fujian | Xiamen Port (Passenger Transport) | Fujian |
30 | Shandong | Jinan Yaoqiang International Airport Port | Shandong |
31 | Shandong | Qingdao Jiaodong International Airport Port | Shandong |
32 | Shandong | Yantai Penglai International Airport Port | Shandong |
33 | Shandong | Weihai Dashuibo International Airport Port | Shandong |
34 | Shandong | Qingdao Port (Passenger Transport) | Shandong |
35 | Henan | Zhengzhou Xinzheng International Airport Port | Henan |
36 | Hubei | Wuhan Tianhe International Airport Port | Hubei |
37 | Hunan | Changsha Huanghua International Airport Port | Hunan |
38 | Hunan | Zhangjiajie Hehua International Airport Port | Hunan |
39 | Guangdong | Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport Port | Guangdong |
40 | Guangdong | Shenzhen Bao’an International Airport Port | Guangdong |
41 | Guangdong | Jieyang Chaoshan International Airport Port | Guangdong |
42 | Guangdong | Nansha Port (Passenger Transport) | Guangdong |
43 | Guangdong | Shekou Port (Passenger Transport) | Guangdong |
44 | Guangdong | Guangzhou Port Pazhou Passenger Terminal | Guangdong |
45 | Guangdong | Zhongshan Port Zhongshan Port Passenger Terminal | Guangdong |
46 | Guangdong | Hengqin Port | Guangdong |
47 | Guangdong | Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge Zhuhai Port | Guangdong |
48 | Guangdong | Guangshen Railway West Kowloon Station Port | Guangdong |
49 | Hainan | Haikou Meilan International Airport Port | Hainan |
50 | Hainan | Sanya Phoenix International Airport Port | Hainan |
51 | Chongqing | Chongqing Jiangbei International Airport Port | Chongqing |
52 | Guizhou | Guiyang Longdongbao International Airport Port | Guizhou |
53 | Shaanxi | Xi’an Xianyang International Airport Port | Shaanxi |
54 | Shanxi | Taiyuan Wusu International Airport Port | Taiyuan, Datong |
55 | Heilongjiang | Harbin Taiping International Airport Port | Harbin |
56 | Jiangxi | Nanchang Changbei International Airport Port | Nanchang, Jingdezhen |
57 | Guangxi | Nanning Wuxu International Airport Port | Nanning, Liuzhou, Guilin, Wuzhou, Beihai, Fangchenggang, Qinzhou, Guigang, Yulin, Hezhou, Hechi, Laibin (12 cities) |
58 | Guangxi | Guilin Liangjiang International Airport Port | Same as above |
59 | Guangxi | Beihai Fucheng Airport Port | Same as above |
60 | Guangxi | Beihai Port (Passenger Transport) | Same as above |
61 | Sichuan | Chengdu Shuangliu International Airport Port | Chengdu, Zigong, Luzhou, Deyang, Suining, Neijiang, Leshan, Yibin, Ya’an, Meishan, Ziyang (11 cities) |
62 | Sichuan | Chengdu Tianfu International Airport Port | Same as above |
63 | Yunnan | Kunming Changshui International Airport Port | Kunming, Yuxi, Chongxiong, Honghe, Wenshan, Pu’er, Xishuangbanna, Dali, Lijiang (9 cities) |
64 | Yunnan | Lijiang Sanyi International Airport Port | Same as above |
65 | Yunnan | Xishuangbanna Mohan Railway Port | Same as above |
Where Can You Travel During the 240 Hours?
The new policy introduces a more relaxed measure, allowing foreign travelers entering China under the visa-free transit policy to travel across provinces within the permitted areas of the 24 provinces (regions and municipalities) mentioned above. This means foreign travelers can move freely within these provinces and choose any open port of entry or exit in China, no longer restricted to a single province or specific region with “same entry and exit,” significantly enhancing convenience and flexibility for foreigners visiting China.
In comparison, under the previous 144-hour visa-free transit policy, foreign travelers entering through Shanghai could only travel within the Shanghai-Jiangsu-Zhejiang region and were unable to visit other provinces, with a very limited activity area. Under the new policy, foreign travelers entering China through Shanghai can travel to 24 provinces, cities, and regions nationwide within 240 hours for tourism, business, and other activities, and choose the nearest port for exit.
What You Will Experience at Immigration
When you arrive under the 240‑Hour Visa‑Free Transit Policy (TWOV) in China, here is what typically happens — and what many travellers report experiencing:
- Go to the special TWOV counter on arrival. After you land, look for signs saying “240-hour visa-free/Transit without visa” (or ask airport staff to direct you). You will need to present: your passport (valid at least 3 months), your onward confirmed flight/train/ferry ticket to a third country (i.e. your exit from China), and your hotel or accommodation booking.
- Fill in the Arrival/Departure card and submit for permit. The immigration officer will process a temporary stay permit which gets stamped (or stickered) into your passport. This permit indicates your allowed stay (240 h) and sometimes the allowed area.
- Time needed — usually just a few minutes to ~30 minutes. According to a traveller in a recent online thread: “very smooth, no issues, just a little bit extra time at immigration but still through in less than 30 minutes each time.” Some others mention up to ~30 minutes extra if airline staff or they themselves first mistakenly queued at the “regular immigration” instead of the TWOV counter — best practice is to head directly to the visa-free transit/immigration area.
- Then collect luggage and pass customs as usual — just like regular arrival. Once your permit is issued, proceed to baggage claim and customs like any normal entry.
- Stay period starts from the next day 00:00. Note: under the 240-hour rule, the 240-hour stay begins from 00:00 of the day after your arrival.
Many travellers appreciate how smooth the process is. For example, one wrote:
“I’ve used it three times since July … very smooth … through in less than 30 minutes each time.” – r/Chinavisa
So long as you have all required documents (passport, confirmed onward ticket out of China, accommodation info), the immigration experience tends to be straightforward and quick — usually no longer than a typical immigration + customs process, sometimes only a few minutes in low-traffic situations.
Tips for Using the 240-Hour Visa-Free Transit
1. Confirm eligibility before you travel
Only citizens of specific countries and only certain airports / ports support the 240-hour TWOV. Always check the latest policy from official immigration sources or your airline.
2. Book a flight / cruise / train that clearly meets “third country” requirements
Your entry and exit points must show: Country A → China → Country B. Returning to the same country usually does not qualify.
3. Keep your onward ticket ready—printed or offline
Immigration officers will check it. Airlines may also check it before boarding your flight to China.
4. Have your accommodation details prepared
Save your hotel confirmation offline. If you stay in an Airbnb/hosted home, prepare your host’s address and contact.
5. Stick to the permitted regions
Your stay is limited to the provinces / cities stated on your permit (e.g., entering via Beijing allows travel within Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei). Don’t plan to visit cities outside the policy zone.
6. Time starts at 00:00 the next day
For the 240-hour policy, your countdown begins at midnight after your arrival—this effectively gives you more actual hours on the ground than you may expect.
7. Avoid tight connections when exiting China
While TWOV is usually smooth, give yourself enough time at the airport for immigration and security when you leave.
8. Bring a translation app and offline maps
Even major airports and hotels may have limited English signage. Offline tools will make your visit much easier.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can I extend my 240-hour visa-free stay?
A: No, extensions are not permitted. You must leave China before the 240-hour period ends.
Q: What happens if I overstay?
A: Overstaying can result in fines, detention, or being banned from re-entering China.
In addition, the National Immigration Administration stated that travelers entering China under the visa-free transit policy who need to stay beyond the permitted duration or travel outside the designated areas due to urgent and reasonable reasons or force majeure must apply for a stay permit in advance at the local public security bureau’s entry-exit administration department.
Q: Can I enter China from Guangzhou and exit from Shanghai, or can I enter from Shanghai and exit from Guangzhou?
A: Both options are possible. The 240-hour visa-free transit policy allows travelers to travel between provinces.
Q: Should I apply for the 240-hour TWOV in advance?
No advance application is needed.
Q: I just apply for the 240 hour visa upon arrival in China?
A: Yes, you apply for the 240-hour visa-free entry upon arrival in China at the airport. You don’t need to apply for it in advance; it’s granted at the immigration counter when you arrive.
At the immigration counter, simply inform the officer that you’re applying for 240-hour visa-free transit and provide necessary documents. If everything is in order, you’ll receive the visa-free entry for the specified time period.
Q: How long does it take to apply the 240 visa free entry at the counter?
Processing time is usually 10–30 minutes, done together with normal immigration.
Q: Is the 240-hour limit for “240-hour visa-free transit” calculated from the time of entry?
A: No, the 240-hour limit is calculated starting from 00:00 on the day following the passenger’s entry. For example, if a passenger enters Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport at 08:00 on January 1, 2025, the visa-free transit period will start from 00:00 on January 2, 2025, and they must exit before 23:59 on January 11, 2025.
Q: If a passenger plans to buy an outbound ticket after entry, can they apply for visa-free transit?
A: According to the policy, to apply for the visa-free transit, passengers must hold a confirmed ticket with a set date and seat to a third country (region) before entering China. Therefore, if the connecting ticket has not been purchased in advance, the passenger cannot take advantage of this policy.
Q: If a passenger has a confirmed return ticket to their departure country within 240 hours, can they apply for this policy?
A: No. According to the policy, the visa-free transit policy is for foreigners who are transiting through China to a third country (region) from China. Therefore, foreigners who are traveling back to their country of departure cannot take advantage of this policy.
Q: I’m a U.S. citizen flying to Guangzhou and have a train or ferry ticket to Hong Kong/Macau within 240 hours. Can I apply for the 240-hour visa-free transit?
A: Yes, you can.
Q: What is considered as “third region”?
A: A “third region” is the next destination after China, different from your origin.
Q: Is the layover country/region counts as a third country/region?
A: The simplest way is to ask your airline to confirm how the route will be listed on your ticket. China’s entry border control determines your departure or destination country/region based on the last country/region you flew from to China. Generally speaking, if a passenger departs from one country and the flight stops in another country or region without going through immigration, the stopover location is not considered the departure or destination point.
Q: Is Hong Kong / Macau considered as “third region” under the 240-hour visa-free transit policy?
A: Yes, both Hong Kong and Macau are classified as “third region” under China’s 240-hour visa-free transit policy, meaning that travelers can plan itineraries that include these locations without needing to obtain a visa for mainland China, as long as they comply with the transit requirements. Therefore, you can take advantage of this by returning to your departure point/country from Hong Kong or Macau. For example: USA – China – USA: doesn’t work; USA – Hong Kong – China – USA: works; USA – China – Macau – USA: works too.
Q: If I fly to China from Country A (with a stopover or transit in Country B), is my departure country considered Country A or Country B?
A: The simplest way is to ask your airline to confirm how the route will be listed on your ticket. China’s entry border control determines your departure country/region based on the last country/region you flew from to China. Generally speaking, if a passenger departs from one country and the flight stops in another country or region without going through immigration, the stopover location is not considered the departure or destination point. This also applies when determining your destination country after leaving China. But we suggest you to confirm this with your airline.
Q: Can I use the 240-hour visa-free transit policy multiple times in a short period? Is there any required time gap between each use?
A: Yes, there is no limit on the number of times you can use the policy, nor is there any required time gap between each use. For example, for a trip from the USA to Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Guangzhou, you can apply for the TWOV twice: once for USA – Shanghai – Hong Kong, and again for Hong Kong – Guangzhou – USA.
Q: If I enter China under the 240-hour TWOV, do all segments of my flights have to be booked with the same airline?
A: No, they don’t have to.
Q: Are round-trip tickets in one booking accepted?
Q: If I enter China under the 240-hour TWOV, can I change my outbound flight and time afterwards? Do I need to report it to anyone in advance?
A: Yes, such changes are allowed as long as they occur within 240 hours and do not require prior reporting. You only need to explain the situation and provide relevant proof to the immigration officer on the day of departure to exit smoothly.
Q: Is there an official number I can call to inquire?
A: Yes, you can call the National Immigration Administration service platform at +86 12367 to ask. Multiple languages are supported.
Plan Your Trip to China Today!
With the 240-hour visa-free transit policy, China has become more accessible than ever. Whether you’re interested in ancient history, modern cities, or breathtaking natural scenery, this policy provides an ideal opportunity to explore the country hassle-free.
Contact us to start planning your dream trip to China today with Travel China With Me! With nearly 20 years of expertise in China inbound tourism and over 3,000 satisfied clients each year, we craft the perfect itinerary and offer the best competitive quote—ensuring you experience a seamless and unforgettable visa-free adventure in China.
Still Have Questions?
We know that one article can’t cover everything, and your situation may be more complex. If so, please leave a comment below, and we will assist you soon with the latest information we have. Other communication channels on the website are for business purposes only, therefore, any inquiries regarding the 240-hour TWOV through them will be IGNORED. Before you leave a comment, please take a look at the comment section as well; perhaps you can find the answer there. MAKE SURE TO READ BEFORE ASKING. We offer the consultation for free, so please show some respect and at least learn to say thank you.
Check Back Before You Go
Visa policies can change quickly, so we’ll keep this article updated with the latest info and add more common questions to the FAQ section. Before your trip, check back here for updates. Save this page’s URL or bookmark us for easy access. If this article helped you, please share it with others or link to it to help those in need.









Hi there. Currently in China using this 240-hrs. Visa. Entered in Jinan, Shandong province, flying in from HK. To everybody planning to use this visa free travel – have all possible documents confirming your hotel stays and transportation within China (esp if you plan to exit through the port other than that of entry). Otherwise no worries.
Still got a question though. I feel like I’ll still have some unfinished business here by the 10th day, so I’m doing to have to exit to Macau and come back again with the ticket to my final destination (Europe). Although you state that there are no specific requirements for the minimum period between two visa-free arrivals, I plan to get back the same day. Should there be any worries about that? How would Chinese immigration look at that? Perhaps somebody from community already had such experience, please share the details. Thanks!
I don’t think there will be any problem, it’s not important how the immigration look at you, you can freely in and out as long as you fit all the rules.
Hi
Great article, would appreciate your help with visa info please?
Plan is ;
Fly Manchester via Doha ..not leaving airport then Shanghai , arrive 16:00 stay 1 night before cruise departure from Shanghai approx 16:00 , 8 nights , Korea and Japan then back to Shanghai
Stay Shanghai 3 nights
Train to Beijing stay 4 nights
Fly home from Beijing via Doha , Dubai or Abu Dhabi not yet booked with a hotel stopover of 2 nights before returning to Manchester , may not stopover, undecided.
Would the time somepent in China be covered under one 240 hour transit , would we need to apply for a second on the return with the Cruise or would we need a visa as total trip is over the 240 hours ?
Thanks in advance
Tracey
Hi Tracey, yes, you need to use 2 TWOVs for this trip, and it will be easy, no worries.
Perfect, thank you for your info, very helpful.
Tracey
Hi!
I am currently planning a trip to East Asia this June and I have (maybe) quite a special question regarding the Chinese 240 h Visa-Free transit system. We will start the trip in Hanoi, Vietnam and we will arrive from Austria via Singapore, but one member of our group will arrive later that day also from Austria but via Beijing (4 hours layover) with Air China – both flights one the same ticket. As I understand, he won’t go through the Chinese immigration and he will go directly to the connecting flight, so he does not have to care about any visa etc. But after a few weeks this guy and the rest of us will arrive from Japan to Tianjin Airport TSN (天津) and will go straight by train to Beijing after our arrival. We will visit just Beijing, The Great Wall and the guy mentioned above will leave after 3 days by plane to Austria with a short layover in Chengdu (3 hours) with Hainan Airlines. The rest of us continue our trip by trains in China (Xian, Chengdu, Kunming) and will leave by train to Laos. But we will spend less than 10 days in China. So I assume in this case we need a Chinese Tourist Visa, right? Or is the 240 transit OK?
So my concerns are – do the immigration count the short layover on our friends connecting international flights to Hanoi as a visa free entry or not? And can this guy enter China visa free via Tianjin (TSN) after a few weeks and leave from Beijing with the short layover in Chengdu? And do the rest of us need a Chinese tourist visa, since we will continue overland to Laos by train or is the 240 h transit visa OK for this journey? I am sorry for such a complicated question, but the info I have found online was not really helpful.
Thanks a lot for Your answer
Regards,
Petr
Hi Petr, yes, it seems you and your friend will be fine. Just grab several key points (you are from Austria, your trip is JP – CN – Laos, you will stay in China no longer than 240 hours), things will not be as complicated as you wrote here, lol. Just read the article carefully again, actually your answers are all there.
Hey, I get it, but I was not sure, because for example in Sichuan and Yunnan you can visit just the cities (in our case Chengdu, Kunming) itself, right? So in that case the travel between cities is fine, even though you leave the permited are during the transport? That´s the biggest question I have – if the transport between the cities and from Kunming to the Laos border by train is OK under this conditions… XD Thanks!
Yes, you can take a high-speed train directly to Laos from Kunming…
Hi,
I am a US citizen. I have a flight from the US in June to Shanghai. (Stay overnight) Then a 5 day cruise to Busan Korea then Fukuoka Japan back to Shanghai. Then stay 2 nights in Shanghai. Total is 8 days. Then fly back to US
US —> Shanghai —> Busan
Fukuoka —> Shanghai —> US
Is this itinerary okay for the 240 TWOV?
Thank you
Hi Janey, I think it will work.
Hello,
We flew from Canada to hong Kong and want to visit bejing and Shanghai. We have a return ticket to Canada on May 12th. We are looking at using the 240 free visa and book tickets to the places mentioned and buy a return ticket to Hong Kong on the same day , couple of hours difference from departing to Canada. We will not be leaving the airport. Is that possible?
No, it’s a round trip.
Hello,
Can I use the 240 hr visa free travel if I am flying into Beijing from Japan. Then is there any issue if i take a bullet train to Chengdu and flying to the US from Tianfu Airport 9 days later?
Hi Bryce, you will be fine as long as you are from one of the eligible countries.
Hi, I’m a Canadian citizen. Would this work for the Visa Free transit? Thanks.
Vancouver – Okinawa, Japan (stay for 5 days)
Okinawa – Shenzhen (lay over in Taipei airport for 2 hours)
Shenzhen – Taipei (stay for 7 days) – Vancouver
Hi Sue, seems good.
Hello, I am UK citizen flying from London to Shanghai( staying 5 nights in Shanghai) and then flying to VietNam. Is this eligible for the 240 hours transit free Visa? Many thanks
Hi Anna, looks good.
Hello I booked Asian trip for the family this summer, we are flying from the UK to Singapore then Hong Kong, and UK. Now we would like to explore China by shorten out stay in Hong Kong so we need to fly from Hong Kong to Shanghai and then back to Hong Kong,staying for two nights before flying back to the UK, do we need Visa or can we use 240 hours visa free?
Yes, you need visa.
Hello, I am UK citizen flying from London to Guangzhou (with a transfer in Amsterdam), staying 4 nights in Guangzhou then flying direct back to London, is this eligible for the 240 hour Visa? Many thanks
Hi Tom, it depends on your airline. China’s entry border control determines your departure country/region based on the last country/region you flew from to China. In your case, if your ticket is from London to Amsterdam to Guangzhou, you can take advantage of the visa-free policy. However, if your ticket is from London to Guangzhou, you won’t be able to use this policy.
Many thanks for your quick reply, much appreciated. I am flying with China Southern Airlines .
I only have an itinerary email so far which shows 2 sepearte flights with different flight numbers on diffrent lines but on the same email; London > Amsterdam and then Amsterdam > Guangzhou.
Does this count as the ticket that I will show to China entry border control? Or do I show them my boarding pass that I will get from the airport in London?
Many thanks
Hi Tom, boarding pass or e-ticket both works, or they will scan your passport to get your departure country, the more important is to show your departure proof to 3rd country/region info.