
In a rare sign of diplomatic thaw, India has quietly removed an additional layer of administrative vetting for short-duration business-visa applicants from China. Senior officials told Reuters on 13 December that the new timeline aims to issue a Business (B) visa within four weeks of application, down from the previous 8- to 12-week cycle that often deterred project managers from travelling.
The move follows Delhi’s decision last month to restore tourist visas for Chinese nationals after a five-year suspension triggered by the 2020 Ladakh border clash. Beijing’s foreign-ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun called the streamlined process a “positive action” that will facilitate people-to-people exchanges, while Indian industry bodies such as CII welcomed the change for its potential to unblock stalled investment proposals in electronics, renewables and auto components.
Businesses and individual travelers looking to capitalise on the faster turnaround can simplify the process even further through VisaHQ. The company’s India portal (https://www.visahq.com/india/) offers step-by-step document verification, real-time application tracking, and dedicated visa specialists who liaise directly with consular officials—helping applicants stay on top of the new four-week window while avoiding paperwork pitfalls.
Practically, applicants will now file only one security-clearance form instead of three, and most interviews will be waived if biometric data are already on file. However, background checks remain stringent for applicants linked to sensitive sectors such as telecom infrastructure. Mobility managers should therefore continue to budget a buffer of at least six weeks until reliability metrics are established.
Chinese firms operating in India—about 170 according to commerce-ministry data—say faster visas could accelerate negotiations for joint ventures and after-sales support. One Shanghai-headquartered EV maker told Global Mobility News it plans to rotate technical teams through its Pune plant every six weeks starting February, something “unthinkable” under the old timelines.
The policy, officials stress, is principle-based and will eventually cover other nationalities, but China stands to benefit first because it accounts for nearly 40 percent of pending business-visa cases.
The move follows Delhi’s decision last month to restore tourist visas for Chinese nationals after a five-year suspension triggered by the 2020 Ladakh border clash. Beijing’s foreign-ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun called the streamlined process a “positive action” that will facilitate people-to-people exchanges, while Indian industry bodies such as CII welcomed the change for its potential to unblock stalled investment proposals in electronics, renewables and auto components.
Businesses and individual travelers looking to capitalise on the faster turnaround can simplify the process even further through VisaHQ. The company’s India portal (https://www.visahq.com/india/) offers step-by-step document verification, real-time application tracking, and dedicated visa specialists who liaise directly with consular officials—helping applicants stay on top of the new four-week window while avoiding paperwork pitfalls.
Practically, applicants will now file only one security-clearance form instead of three, and most interviews will be waived if biometric data are already on file. However, background checks remain stringent for applicants linked to sensitive sectors such as telecom infrastructure. Mobility managers should therefore continue to budget a buffer of at least six weeks until reliability metrics are established.
Chinese firms operating in India—about 170 according to commerce-ministry data—say faster visas could accelerate negotiations for joint ventures and after-sales support. One Shanghai-headquartered EV maker told Global Mobility News it plans to rotate technical teams through its Pune plant every six weeks starting February, something “unthinkable” under the old timelines.
The policy, officials stress, is principle-based and will eventually cover other nationalities, but China stands to benefit first because it accounts for nearly 40 percent of pending business-visa cases.









