
In a signed commentary published by the Irish News and reposted on the Foreign Ministry website on 22 February, China’s Consul-General in Belfast, Li Nan, highlighted forthcoming visa-free entry for British nationals as a flagship deliverable of Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s late-January visit to Beijing. Li noted that tariff cuts on Scotch whisky and £4.5 billion of two-way investment deals had grabbed headlines, but argued that the removal of short-stay visa requirements would have the most immediate impact on people-to-people links. Around 10,000 travellers already move between the two countries daily; tourism boards on both sides expect that number to climb by at least 20 % once the waiver is fully implemented. The article reassures UK companies concerned about travel friction since the pandemic.
For organisations and individual travellers looking for hands-on assistance as the waiver takes shape, VisaHQ’s China specialists can help smooth every step. Through its portal at https://www.visahq.com/china/ the service provides up-to-the-minute regulatory alerts, document checklists and concierge processing for cases that still require traditional visas, giving HR departments and frequent flyers a single, reliable dashboard while the new regime beds in.
Business visas for China currently take 7-10 working days and require an in-person appointment; the waiver slashes that lead time to zero for trips under 30 days. Northern Irish distilleries and renewables firms courting Chinese buyers are tipped as early beneficiaries. For mobility professionals: the visa-free concession applies only to ordinary passports and cannot be used to convert to work or student residence permits. Travellers must present onward or return tickets and proof of accommodation. HR teams should update global-entry policy documents to reflect the change once the exact implementation circular is issued by the National Immigration Administration.
For organisations and individual travellers looking for hands-on assistance as the waiver takes shape, VisaHQ’s China specialists can help smooth every step. Through its portal at https://www.visahq.com/china/ the service provides up-to-the-minute regulatory alerts, document checklists and concierge processing for cases that still require traditional visas, giving HR departments and frequent flyers a single, reliable dashboard while the new regime beds in.
Business visas for China currently take 7-10 working days and require an in-person appointment; the waiver slashes that lead time to zero for trips under 30 days. Northern Irish distilleries and renewables firms courting Chinese buyers are tipped as early beneficiaries. For mobility professionals: the visa-free concession applies only to ordinary passports and cannot be used to convert to work or student residence permits. Travellers must present onward or return tickets and proof of accommodation. HR teams should update global-entry policy documents to reflect the change once the exact implementation circular is issued by the National Immigration Administration.