
China’s National Immigration Administration (NIA) has unveiled a landmark digitalisation measure that will replace paper Border Management Area Permits with an electronic credential from 15 April 2026. The e-permit will be available through the NIA 12367 mobile-app ecosystem (native app, WeChat and Alipay mini-programs) and can be stored on a smartphone or printed on demand. Residents of mainland China aged 16 and above can apply fully online, while Hong Kong, Macao and Taiwan residents, foreigners, and mainland travellers seeking a one-year validity must still lodge applications in person at designated public-security offices. Border Management Area Permits are mandatory for travel to China’s 2,000-kilometre frontier control belt that spans sensitive zones such as the Pamir Plateau in Xinjiang, sections of Inner Mongolia’s grasslands and portions of Yunnan’s tropical rainforest adjoining Myanmar, Laos and Vietnam. Transitioning to an electronic format is expected to cut processing times from an average of seven working days to as little as 48 hours, according to internal pilot-project data shared with provincial public-security bureaus. For corporates running infrastructure, mining or energy projects in remote border counties, the change removes a long-standing administrative hurdle: expatriate staff will no longer need to courier original passports back and forth for each permit application, reducing both downtime and document-handling risk. Logistics firms anticipate smoother crew rotations for cross-border trucking operations, while adventure-tour operators have welcomed the ability to file bulk applications ahead of peak trekking season.
Companies and individual travellers looking for guidance through the new digital permit landscape can streamline the process via VisaHQ’s dedicated China portal (https://www.visahq.com/china/). The platform’s specialists track every regulatory update, pre-check documents for compliance, and coordinate directly with Chinese authorities, helping applicants secure Border Management Area e-permits—or any other China visa—quickly and with minimal hassle.
The NIA emphasised that previously issued paper permits remain valid until expiry and can be presented alongside the electronic version. Permit holders will show the e-credential’s encrypted QR code plus their Resident ID or passport during spot checks by the People’s Armed Police. An email-delivery option has been set up for applicants in low-connectivity areas, and 12367-hotline agents have been trained to guide foreign users through the English interface. Digitisation of frontier-access documentation aligns with Beijing’s wider “Internet + Government Services” agenda and follows the successful nationwide roll-out of electronic mainland travel permits for Hong Kong and Macao residents last year. Multinational employers with operations in China’s western provinces should update their mobility policies, budget for mobile-device allowances where staff share phones, and brief security teams on verification procedures during on-site inspections.
Companies and individual travellers looking for guidance through the new digital permit landscape can streamline the process via VisaHQ’s dedicated China portal (https://www.visahq.com/china/). The platform’s specialists track every regulatory update, pre-check documents for compliance, and coordinate directly with Chinese authorities, helping applicants secure Border Management Area e-permits—or any other China visa—quickly and with minimal hassle.
The NIA emphasised that previously issued paper permits remain valid until expiry and can be presented alongside the electronic version. Permit holders will show the e-credential’s encrypted QR code plus their Resident ID or passport during spot checks by the People’s Armed Police. An email-delivery option has been set up for applicants in low-connectivity areas, and 12367-hotline agents have been trained to guide foreign users through the English interface. Digitisation of frontier-access documentation aligns with Beijing’s wider “Internet + Government Services” agenda and follows the successful nationwide roll-out of electronic mainland travel permits for Hong Kong and Macao residents last year. Multinational employers with operations in China’s western provinces should update their mobility policies, budget for mobile-device allowances where staff share phones, and brief security teams on verification procedures during on-site inspections.