
New data released on 1 March by Malaysia’s Business Today, citing China’s National Bureau of Statistics, reveals just how quickly recent visa-free initiatives are reshaping inbound travel. Foreign nationals entered China 30.08 million times without a visa in 2025—a 49.5 percent year-on-year jump. The count aggregates travellers using three channels: the 30-day unilateral visa-waiver (now extended to 50 countries), the long-standing 144-hour transit-without-visa scheme and the nationwide 240-hour variant introduced mid-2025.
Europe remained the largest source region, led by France, Germany and Italy, but Asia-Pacific markets like South Korea and Japan delivered the fastest growth. Shanghai’s two airports alone processed 452,000 visa-free entries in the first eight weeks of 2026, signalling continued momentum.
Need guidance on whether a waiver covers your trip or if a traditional visa is still required? VisaHQ’s China resource center (https://www.visahq.com/china/) tracks the latest exemption lists, transit rules and extension options, and can process any necessary visas entirely online—giving mobility planners and travellers a single point of truth before departure.
For mobility managers the implications are clear. Short-notice site inspections, trade-fair visits and troubleshooting missions now face fewer scheduling bottlenecks because staff can skip consular appointments. At the same time, compliance teams must reinforce over-stay monitoring: visa waivers do not authorise paid work, and penalties for misuse start at RMB 500 per day.
Airlines and airports are already capitalising. Chinese carriers have requested more than 80 additional weekly international frequencies for the summer timetable, while Beijing Daxing plans to reopen two security channels dedicated to 15-day and 30-day waiver passengers. Industry forecasters expect visa-free arrivals to climb another 20-25 percent in 2026, provided slot approvals keep pace.
Europe remained the largest source region, led by France, Germany and Italy, but Asia-Pacific markets like South Korea and Japan delivered the fastest growth. Shanghai’s two airports alone processed 452,000 visa-free entries in the first eight weeks of 2026, signalling continued momentum.
Need guidance on whether a waiver covers your trip or if a traditional visa is still required? VisaHQ’s China resource center (https://www.visahq.com/china/) tracks the latest exemption lists, transit rules and extension options, and can process any necessary visas entirely online—giving mobility planners and travellers a single point of truth before departure.
For mobility managers the implications are clear. Short-notice site inspections, trade-fair visits and troubleshooting missions now face fewer scheduling bottlenecks because staff can skip consular appointments. At the same time, compliance teams must reinforce over-stay monitoring: visa waivers do not authorise paid work, and penalties for misuse start at RMB 500 per day.
Airlines and airports are already capitalising. Chinese carriers have requested more than 80 additional weekly international frequencies for the summer timetable, while Beijing Daxing plans to reopen two security channels dedicated to 15-day and 30-day waiver passengers. Industry forecasters expect visa-free arrivals to climb another 20-25 percent in 2026, provided slot approvals keep pace.