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Dec 17, 2025

India Cuts Business-Visa Processing for Chinese Professionals to Four Weeks

India Cuts Business-Visa Processing for Chinese Professionals to Four Weeks
New Delhi has quietly removed an additional home-ministry security layer for Chinese nationals applying for Indian business (B) visas, dropping average approvals from several months to “around four weeks,” according to India Briefing and officials quoted by Reuters.

The policy shift, formally effective 16 December, follows the October resumption of direct passenger flights and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s August visit to Beijing—the first top-level trip since the 2020 border standoff. Indian think-tanks estimate electronics manufacturers alone lost US$15 billion in output over the past four years because Chinese engineers and quality-assurance staff could not enter plants on time.

Under the streamlined rules, visa applications submitted via India’s e-Visa platform will be fast-tracked when supported by an invitation from an Indian-registered company and evidence of specialised technical skills. The foreign ministry emphasised the change is “reciprocal in spirit”: China in November extended unilateral 30-day visa-free entry to Swedish passport holders and prolonged existing exemptions for 40+ nations.

India Cuts Business-Visa Processing for Chinese Professionals to Four Weeks


Chinese applicants who want to capitalise on the new four-week target can simplify the process further through VisaHQ, which offers end-to-end support for India’s e-Visa system, document preparation, and courier logistics. The platform’s dedicated China page (https://www.visahq.com/china/) provides Mandarin- and English-language checklists, ensuring that business travellers submit complete applications and avoid last-minute delays.

For multinationals with China–India supply chains the improvement reduces project-delay risk and offers a clearer timeline for dispatching installation teams or executives. However, immigration advisers caution that the four-week target currently applies only to short-term business assignments and not to employment (E) visas, which still require security clearance.

Observers view the move as part of India’s broader investment-courtship strategy amid escalating U.S. tariff pressures: alongside visa relief, Delhi is reviewing FDI caps, tariff concessions on capital goods, and a new semiconductor incentive aligned with Chinese equipment makers.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
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