
Malaysia Airlines (MH) has reinstated its non-stop Kuala Lumpur–Chengdu service, operating up to seven times per week with Airbus A330-300 aircraft. The relaunch, highlighted in Aviation Week’s 12 January routes update, restores a key component of the carrier’s Greater China network, now back to seven destinations.
Timing is strategic: from 1 December 2025 Malaysia and China began a mutual 30-day visa-free arrangement for ordinary passport holders. Travel-search data from Skyscanner show Kuala Lumpur–China searches up 110 % since the waiver took effect, with Chengdu ranking second only to Shanghai among Malaysian users.
The restored route shaves roughly four hours off one-stop itineraries via Bangkok or Hong Kong and offers overnight southbound schedules that suit business travellers connecting onto Australia and New Zealand. Malaysia Airlines is also courting the growing Chinese outbound segment heading for Malaysian beach resorts and Islamic tourism packages.
Travellers whose nationality falls outside the Malaysia–China visa-free corridor, or who need additional documentation for multi-country itineraries, can save time by using VisaHQ’s digital application service. The portal (https://www.visahq.com/china/) offers step-by-step Chinese visa processing, courier options and compliance alerts, making cross-border planning straightforward for both leisure and corporate passengers.
For companies with operations in both Sichuan and Malaysia’s Klang Valley electronics corridor, the daily service simplifies engineer rotation and supply-chain audits. Logistics managers note that belly-hold capacity on the A330 adds 30 tonnes per flight, a boost for high-value semiconductor components that require short transit windows.
Chengdu’s Tianfu International Airport, which opened in 2024, has positioned itself as western China’s gateway for ASEAN trade. More ASEAN flag carriers are expected to follow Malaysia Airlines’ lead as visa-free travel removes a major demand dampener.
Timing is strategic: from 1 December 2025 Malaysia and China began a mutual 30-day visa-free arrangement for ordinary passport holders. Travel-search data from Skyscanner show Kuala Lumpur–China searches up 110 % since the waiver took effect, with Chengdu ranking second only to Shanghai among Malaysian users.
The restored route shaves roughly four hours off one-stop itineraries via Bangkok or Hong Kong and offers overnight southbound schedules that suit business travellers connecting onto Australia and New Zealand. Malaysia Airlines is also courting the growing Chinese outbound segment heading for Malaysian beach resorts and Islamic tourism packages.
Travellers whose nationality falls outside the Malaysia–China visa-free corridor, or who need additional documentation for multi-country itineraries, can save time by using VisaHQ’s digital application service. The portal (https://www.visahq.com/china/) offers step-by-step Chinese visa processing, courier options and compliance alerts, making cross-border planning straightforward for both leisure and corporate passengers.
For companies with operations in both Sichuan and Malaysia’s Klang Valley electronics corridor, the daily service simplifies engineer rotation and supply-chain audits. Logistics managers note that belly-hold capacity on the A330 adds 30 tonnes per flight, a boost for high-value semiconductor components that require short transit windows.
Chengdu’s Tianfu International Airport, which opened in 2024, has positioned itself as western China’s gateway for ASEAN trade. More ASEAN flag carriers are expected to follow Malaysia Airlines’ lead as visa-free travel removes a major demand dampener.






