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Oct 22, 2025

China touts new “ASEAN visa” and multiple bilateral waivers at MFA press briefing

China touts new “ASEAN visa” and multiple bilateral waivers at MFA press briefing
At the Foreign Ministry’s regular press conference on 22 October, spokesperson Guo Jiakun highlighted a portfolio of mobility initiatives designed to deepen people-to-people links with Southeast Asia. He confirmed that China has introduced an experimental “ASEAN visa”—a single sticker that will eventually allow citizens of all ten member states simplified entry for business, tourism or family visits. Pilots are already underway for Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand, which, together with Brunei, now enjoy full mutual visa exemption.

Guo framed the policy as part of a broader Plan of Action (2026-2030) under the China-ASEAN Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, which also prioritises supply-chain integration and digital-economy cooperation. The visa facilitation dovetails with hard-infrastructure projects such as the China-Laos Railway and Indonesia’s Jakarta-Bandung high-speed line, both of which have triggered surges in overland passenger flows.

For Chinese businesses expanding into ASEAN, the reciprocal waivers slash lead-times for market visits and after-sales service calls. Thai SME owners told Global Mobility News that drop-in trips to Yiwu have become “as easy as flying to Bangkok,” while Malaysian tech start-ups say the waiver supports dual-country hiring strategies.

However, Guo cautioned that long-term work, study or media activities will still require category-specific permits. He also urged agencies to monitor cumulative-stay rules—typically 90 days within any 180-day period—to avoid inadvertent overstays.

Regional chambers of commerce welcomed the signal, but called for harmonised e-gate systems and trusted-traveller lanes to maximise the benefit. Negotiations on a Code of Conduct in the South China Sea continue in parallel, underscoring the geopolitical backdrop to mobility liberalisation.
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