Back
Dec 29, 2025

China extends fingerprint-free visa processing at eight high-volume consulates

China extends fingerprint-free visa processing at eight high-volume consulates
China’s foreign ministry has quietly prolonged its fingerprint-collection waiver for short-stay visa applicants at eight of its busiest overseas posts until 31 December 2026, according to consular notices confirmed on 26 December and reported on 28 December. The waiver covers tourist (L), business (M / F), family-visit (Q2 / S2) and short-study (X2) visas of up to 180 days.

Applicants lodging at Chinese Visa Centres in Australia, Canada, Ireland, Macao SAR, New Zealand, the Palestinian Territories, Singapore and the United Kingdom may now submit passports without providing biometric prints. Third-country nationals applying in those locations are also eligible. Consular staff in London and Sydney estimate the exemption saves about three minutes per applicant, translating into roughly 50 staff-hours a week during peak season.

Corporates stand to gain the most: engineers on 60-day troubleshooting trips or film crews on location shoots no longer need a pre-trip visit solely for biometrics, allowing accredited agencies to courier passports on employees’ behalf. Mobility teams should nevertheless remind travellers that Z-work, X1-long study and Q1 / S1 reunion visas still require fingerprints.

China extends fingerprint-free visa processing at eight high-volume consulates


Travellers and programme managers who want to capitalise on the waiver without getting bogged down in paperwork can turn to VisaHQ, whose China desk (https://www.visahq.com/china/) offers end-to-end processing, secure courier pick-up and real-time status tracking, ensuring applications are lodged swiftly even when the applicant never sets foot in the visa centre.

From a risk perspective, Chinese authorities say they are comfortable relying on advance passenger information and post-arrival facial scans for these low-risk cohorts, but consulates reserve the right to summon applicants if watch-list hits emerge. Travellers are advised to carry a printed copy of the waiver notice, as some airlines still ask for proof at check-in.

The extension aligns with Beijing’s wider push to digitise consular services and clear application backlogs before an anticipated inbound tourism boom in 2026.
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.
×