
China City News, citing National Immigration Administration (NIA) figures, revealed that 292,000 foreigners entered the mainland visa-free during the three-day New-Year holiday—a 35.8 % increase on the same period last year. Officials say the jump is the clearest evidence yet that a multi-layered ‘inbound-convenience ecosystem’ is now operational nationwide.
The ecosystem fuses policy (unilateral and bilateral visa-waiver expansions), infrastructure (65 airports and seaports authorised for 240-hour transit waivers), and payment innovation. Over 7,000 shops now allow “buy-and-refund-instantly” export tax rebates, and cities such as Hangzhou enable visitors to complete the whole process in under two minutes. In Chengdu, foreign e-wallets plugged into Alipay+ let visitors tap on metro gates exactly as locals do; authorities say more than 910,000 rides have been taken this way.
NIA data show China currently offers full or partial visa-free access to 76 nations, up from 65 a year ago. The most recent additions include Brazil, Argentina, Russia and Sweden.
For travelers whose passports are not yet covered by one of these waivers—or who simply need a different class of permit for work, study or family visits—VisaHQ can streamline the entire application process. The online platform tracks policy updates in real time, pre-fills the correct forms, and provides embassy submission and expedited processing services where available. Details are at https://www.visahq.com/china/.
At the same time, frontier inspection stations have rolled out e-gates that use facial recognition to shorten clearance time by up to 30 %.
For destination marketing organisations—and for corporate mobility planners—the figures matter. Higher arrival volumes improve flight economics, encouraging airlines to reopen or increase frequencies on long-haul routes. Better refund and payment systems reduce on-the-ground friction for expatriates who need to make multiple short visits before committing to longer projects or assignments.
Academics interviewed by the paper caution, however, that the next growth phase depends on synchronising data flows among travel agencies, airports and local tourism boards. Smaller suppliers still struggle to plug into the national platforms that distribute real-time information on events, discounts and transport connections. The NIA plans to address the gap by adding API access to its 12367 information hotline later this year.
The ecosystem fuses policy (unilateral and bilateral visa-waiver expansions), infrastructure (65 airports and seaports authorised for 240-hour transit waivers), and payment innovation. Over 7,000 shops now allow “buy-and-refund-instantly” export tax rebates, and cities such as Hangzhou enable visitors to complete the whole process in under two minutes. In Chengdu, foreign e-wallets plugged into Alipay+ let visitors tap on metro gates exactly as locals do; authorities say more than 910,000 rides have been taken this way.
NIA data show China currently offers full or partial visa-free access to 76 nations, up from 65 a year ago. The most recent additions include Brazil, Argentina, Russia and Sweden.
For travelers whose passports are not yet covered by one of these waivers—or who simply need a different class of permit for work, study or family visits—VisaHQ can streamline the entire application process. The online platform tracks policy updates in real time, pre-fills the correct forms, and provides embassy submission and expedited processing services where available. Details are at https://www.visahq.com/china/.
At the same time, frontier inspection stations have rolled out e-gates that use facial recognition to shorten clearance time by up to 30 %.
For destination marketing organisations—and for corporate mobility planners—the figures matter. Higher arrival volumes improve flight economics, encouraging airlines to reopen or increase frequencies on long-haul routes. Better refund and payment systems reduce on-the-ground friction for expatriates who need to make multiple short visits before committing to longer projects or assignments.
Academics interviewed by the paper caution, however, that the next growth phase depends on synchronising data flows among travel agencies, airports and local tourism boards. Smaller suppliers still struggle to plug into the national platforms that distribute real-time information on events, discounts and transport connections. The NIA plans to address the gap by adding API access to its 12367 information hotline later this year.








