
President Lee Jae-myung arrived in Beijing on 4 January for a four-day state visit aimed at rebooting economic and cultural ties. His 200-strong business delegation—featuring the heads of Samsung, SK Group and Hyundai—is expected to discuss streamlined travel corridors, digital-visa pilots and coordinated promotion of inbound tour groups with Chinese counterparts.
Chinese officials see tourism as a low-hanging fruit to revive post-pandemic growth: South Koreans were China’s second-largest visitor cohort in 2019 but numbers remain at roughly 65 percent of pre-Covid levels. Negotiators are therefore exploring a mutual expansion of flight slots, simplified e-payment onboarding for tourists, and joint marketing for the 2026 Beijing-Seoul Culture Year.
Companies and individual travelers looking to stay ahead of these policy shifts can tap VisaHQ for practical help right now. The firm’s China desk (https://www.visahq.com/china/) handles everything from single-entry tourist visas to multiple-entry business permits, offering online applications, live status updates, and dedicated account managers for corporate delegations. That support can shorten lead times for engineers, executives, and holidaymakers alike while the two governments iron out the details of new “green lanes” and fee waivers.
For multinationals, the symbolism matters. Faster visa processing and additional air capacity would shorten lead times for engineers and executives shuttling between the two manufacturing powerhouses. Supply-chain managers—in sectors from batteries to biopharma—are lobbying both governments to include “green-lane” work permits that allow technical staff to stay up to 90 days.
Geopolitical headwinds remain, not least North Korea’s latest missile launch hours before Lee took off, but analysts say concrete mobility deliverables would provide early proof that Beijing and Seoul can compartmentalise business from security frictions.
A joint communiqué outlining travel facilitation measures is expected after Lee meets President Xi Jinping on 6 January. Mobility teams should watch for language on reciprocal visa-fee waivers, multiple-entry business visas, or expansion of the 15-day visa-free regime to individual (non-group) travellers.
Chinese officials see tourism as a low-hanging fruit to revive post-pandemic growth: South Koreans were China’s second-largest visitor cohort in 2019 but numbers remain at roughly 65 percent of pre-Covid levels. Negotiators are therefore exploring a mutual expansion of flight slots, simplified e-payment onboarding for tourists, and joint marketing for the 2026 Beijing-Seoul Culture Year.
Companies and individual travelers looking to stay ahead of these policy shifts can tap VisaHQ for practical help right now. The firm’s China desk (https://www.visahq.com/china/) handles everything from single-entry tourist visas to multiple-entry business permits, offering online applications, live status updates, and dedicated account managers for corporate delegations. That support can shorten lead times for engineers, executives, and holidaymakers alike while the two governments iron out the details of new “green lanes” and fee waivers.
For multinationals, the symbolism matters. Faster visa processing and additional air capacity would shorten lead times for engineers and executives shuttling between the two manufacturing powerhouses. Supply-chain managers—in sectors from batteries to biopharma—are lobbying both governments to include “green-lane” work permits that allow technical staff to stay up to 90 days.
Geopolitical headwinds remain, not least North Korea’s latest missile launch hours before Lee took off, but analysts say concrete mobility deliverables would provide early proof that Beijing and Seoul can compartmentalise business from security frictions.
A joint communiqué outlining travel facilitation measures is expected after Lee meets President Xi Jinping on 6 January. Mobility teams should watch for language on reciprocal visa-fee waivers, multiple-entry business visas, or expansion of the 15-day visa-free regime to individual (non-group) travellers.











