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China widens unilateral 30-day visa waiver to Brazil, Saudi Arabia, New Zealand, Spain and more

Mar 2, 2026
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China widens unilateral 30-day visa waiver to Brazil, Saudi Arabia, New Zealand, Spain and more
China’s National Immigration Administration chose 1 March to confirm the latest batch of countries eligible for its headline 30-day visa-free entry programme. Effective immediately, ordinary-passport holders from Brazil, Argentina, Saudi Arabia, New Zealand, Spain and several other markets can enter mainland China for business, tourism, family visits or transit without applying for a visa in advance. The move extends the waiver list to 48 countries—up from just six little more than a year ago—and dovetails with Beijing’s stated goal of becoming “the world’s most convenient long-haul destination” under the 15th Five-Year Plan. Policy architects say the inclusion of long-haul, high-spend markets such as Brazil and Spain is strategic. Both countries are aviation growth targets for Chinese and foreign carriers: LATAM, Air China and Iberia have all lodged slot applications for extra frequencies to Beijing and Shanghai for the IATA summer season. Tourism boards are equally bullish—Embratur projects a 40 % jump in Brazilian visitor nights this year, thanks largely to the waiver.

China widens unilateral 30-day visa waiver to Brazil, Saudi Arabia, New Zealand, Spain and more


For travellers whose nationalities still fall outside the waiver—or who simply want professional backup as rules evolve—VisaHQ can help. Through its dedicated China portal (https://www.visahq.com/china/), the platform offers real-time entry checks, document review and expedited filing options, ensuring that corporate road-warriors and holidaymakers alike stay compliant and stress-free.

From a mobility perspective, multinational companies now have a powerful tool for last-minute travel. Executives, engineers and auditors from the newly added countries can board a flight with little more than a hotel confirmation, return ticket and proof of funding. The waiver caps each stay at 30 calendar days but permits multiple entries, enabling project teams to rotate specialists without triggering the formal work-visa process—so long as no hands-on work is performed. Immigration lawyers nevertheless urge caution. Visa-free entry does not equal work authorisation. Firms should keep itineraries and meeting agendas on file to demonstrate that activities remain within the permitted scope (meetings, inspections, trade-fairs, etc.). Repeat back-to-back entries can invite extra scrutiny, and overstays incur daily fines of RMB 500 up to a maximum of RMB 10,000 and possible future entry bans. The bigger picture is clear: by unilaterally opening its doors, China is betting that easier access will translate into hard currency, foreign direct investment and soft-power goodwill. Early indicators—airport arrival statistics released the same day—suggest the bet is paying off.

Chinese Visas & Immigration Team @ VisaHQ

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.

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