Back
Jan 31, 2026

Brazil and China take next step toward full reciprocal visa-waiver agreement

Brazil and China take next step toward full reciprocal visa-waiver agreement
Talks between Brasília and Beijing gained momentum on 30 January as officials confirmed they are working on a bilateral accord that would transform China’s current unilateral 30-day visa-free policy for Brazilians into a fully reciprocal arrangement benefiting travellers from both countries. Chinese media reported a five-fold spike in online searches for Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Brasília following the announcement. (br-cn.com)

China has allowed Brazilians to stay up to 30 days without a visa since June 2025, but Brazilian authorities have so far maintained visa requirements for Chinese citizens. Negotiators are now drafting a memorandum that would extend equivalent privileges to Chinese passport holders, potentially as early as mid-2026, provided technical discussions on security vetting and e-visa integration stay on schedule. (br-cn.com)

If you need help navigating the shifting rules, VisaHQ maintains up-to-the-minute guidance and can file applications for both Brazilian and Chinese travel documents on your behalf. Its Brazil resource hub (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/) offers personalised checklists, courier services and compliance alerts—useful whether you’re a leisure traveller chasing Carnival or an HR manager moving staff between São Paulo and Shanghai.

Brazil and China take next step toward full reciprocal visa-waiver agreement


For companies, a reciprocal waiver would shorten assignment lead-times and reduce costs for engineers, executives and tourists shuttling between the two countries’ fast-growing green-energy and agritech sectors. Airlines expect passenger flows to rebound to—or even surpass—pre-pandemic levels once reciprocity is in place, citing the surge in leisure search traffic as an early demand indicator.

HR and travel managers should prepare for mixed-nationality crews: Brazilian assignees may continue to enter visa-free, while Chinese staff will still need visas until Brasília’s side of the agreement is ratified. Employers are advised to review invitation-letter templates and invitee-screening procedures now so they can pivot quickly once a waiver takes effect.

Experts also point to secondary effects: simplified tourism could strain Brazil’s regional consular network as more Chinese visitors seek same-day travel authorisations to neighbouring Mercosur states. Multinationals with multi-country itineraries should monitor regulatory alignment across South America to avoid bottlenecks. (br-cn.com)
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.
Sign up for updates

Email address

Сountries

Choose how often you would like to receive our newsletter:

×