
Beijing’s Spring Festival diplomacy produced another visa-liberalisation surprise on 15 February, with China announcing 30-day visa-free entry for British and Canadian passport-holders until 31 December 2026. The move means the United States is now the lone Five Eyes member still required to apply for a visa. Australia and New Zealand were granted similar access in mid-2024.
From a global-mobility perspective the decision further simplifies North Asia routing for Australian multinationals that use London or Toronto as hub offices; project teams can now stage meetings in Shanghai without advance Chinese visas, streamlining regional itineraries. Travel agencies report a spike in multi-city bookings that combine Beijing client calls with week-end stops in the UK or Canada, leveraging the mutual visa-waiver convenience.
Business travellers keen to seize these new opportunities—or to handle paperwork for countries where waivers are still not in place—can turn to VisaHQ for fast, reliable assistance. Through its Australian portal (https://www.visahq.com/australia/), the platform offers up-to-date entry guidance, electronic application tools and expert support, helping companies keep multinational itineraries compliant while saving valuable time.
The announcement also signals China’s sustained bid to rebuild inbound business travel after pandemic-era shutdowns. Britain and Canada sent a combined 1.1 million visitors to China in 2019; tourism authorities hope the waiver, together with earlier Australian access, will restore those numbers by 2027. Australian exporters may benefit indirectly as additional UK and Canadian trade missions pass through Chinese ports where Australian firms already have logistics operations.
Airlines are expected to respond quickly. China Southern is reviewing whether to reinstate daily Guangzhou–London flights suspended in 2020, while Air Canada has hinted at capacity increases on Vancouver–Shanghai. Qantas, which returned to Shanghai last October, could leverage code-share traffic from the UK and Canada to bolster load factors on its own routes.
From a global-mobility perspective the decision further simplifies North Asia routing for Australian multinationals that use London or Toronto as hub offices; project teams can now stage meetings in Shanghai without advance Chinese visas, streamlining regional itineraries. Travel agencies report a spike in multi-city bookings that combine Beijing client calls with week-end stops in the UK or Canada, leveraging the mutual visa-waiver convenience.
Business travellers keen to seize these new opportunities—or to handle paperwork for countries where waivers are still not in place—can turn to VisaHQ for fast, reliable assistance. Through its Australian portal (https://www.visahq.com/australia/), the platform offers up-to-date entry guidance, electronic application tools and expert support, helping companies keep multinational itineraries compliant while saving valuable time.
The announcement also signals China’s sustained bid to rebuild inbound business travel after pandemic-era shutdowns. Britain and Canada sent a combined 1.1 million visitors to China in 2019; tourism authorities hope the waiver, together with earlier Australian access, will restore those numbers by 2027. Australian exporters may benefit indirectly as additional UK and Canadian trade missions pass through Chinese ports where Australian firms already have logistics operations.
Airlines are expected to respond quickly. China Southern is reviewing whether to reinstate daily Guangzhou–London flights suspended in 2020, while Air Canada has hinted at capacity increases on Vancouver–Shanghai. Qantas, which returned to Shanghai last October, could leverage code-share traffic from the UK and Canada to bolster load factors on its own routes.










