
The Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs has unilaterally waived visas for holders of mainland Chinese passports visiting for up to 14 days, effective 16 January 2026. The trial scheme applies to arrivals at Manila Ninoy Aquino and Cebu Mactan airports and will run for an initial year. Travellers must hold six-month passport validity, proof of accommodation and a return or onward ticket; in-country extensions and status changes are forbidden.
The move aligns Manila with Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore, which already offer Chinese tourists visa-free stays. Before the pandemic China was the Philippines’ second-largest tourism market at 1.7 million arrivals in 2019, but numbers slumped to 262,000 in 2025. Cebu Pacific and Philippine Airlines say they will add frequencies to Shanghai, Guangzhou and Chengdu if demand rebounds.
For Chinese corporates, a two-week window simplifies short project kick-offs and due-diligence visits in the Philippines’ booming renewable-energy and construction sectors. Mobility managers must, however, remind employees that any paid work beyond 14 days still requires an Alien Employment Permit and 9(g) work visa.
To make the most of the waiver without overlooking any fine print, business travellers can tap VisaHQ’s dedicated China portal (https://www.visahq.com/china/). The platform automates document checks, pushes real-time alerts on regulation changes, and even schedules courier pick-ups so HR teams can concentrate on project deliverables rather than paperwork.
Security advisers note that South-China-Sea tensions persist; firms should pair the entry ease with updated risk briefings and robust travel insurance. The trial will be reviewed in Q4 2026, at which point Manila may extend, modify or scrap the waiver based on arrival data and border-security assessments.
VisaHQ’s China portal has updated its checklists and can courier supporting documents—for example, proof of funds or electronic arrival cards—for travellers who prefer belt-and-braces compliance despite the simplified regime.
The move aligns Manila with Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore, which already offer Chinese tourists visa-free stays. Before the pandemic China was the Philippines’ second-largest tourism market at 1.7 million arrivals in 2019, but numbers slumped to 262,000 in 2025. Cebu Pacific and Philippine Airlines say they will add frequencies to Shanghai, Guangzhou and Chengdu if demand rebounds.
For Chinese corporates, a two-week window simplifies short project kick-offs and due-diligence visits in the Philippines’ booming renewable-energy and construction sectors. Mobility managers must, however, remind employees that any paid work beyond 14 days still requires an Alien Employment Permit and 9(g) work visa.
To make the most of the waiver without overlooking any fine print, business travellers can tap VisaHQ’s dedicated China portal (https://www.visahq.com/china/). The platform automates document checks, pushes real-time alerts on regulation changes, and even schedules courier pick-ups so HR teams can concentrate on project deliverables rather than paperwork.
Security advisers note that South-China-Sea tensions persist; firms should pair the entry ease with updated risk briefings and robust travel insurance. The trial will be reviewed in Q4 2026, at which point Manila may extend, modify or scrap the waiver based on arrival data and border-security assessments.
VisaHQ’s China portal has updated its checklists and can courier supporting documents—for example, proof of funds or electronic arrival cards—for travellers who prefer belt-and-braces compliance despite the simplified regime.







