
Citing diplomatic sources in Moscow, industry outlet Tourism Review reported on 13 April that China has notified Russia of its intent to roll the bilateral 30-day visa-waiver forward to September 2027. The scheme, launched experimentally in December 2025, already allows ordinary-passport holders to enter each country for tourism, family visits and short business trips without prior paperwork. Russian arrivals to China jumped 27 % in 2025 and are on track for a triple-digit hike in 2026, fuelled by Hainan’s beach resorts and burgeoning cross-border e-commerce ventures in Heilongjiang. Travel companies welcome the signal: many group packages for the 2026/27 winter season were on hold pending clarity on entry rules beyond the current expiry next September.
Should itineraries spill beyond the 30-day exemption, VisaHQ can step in to streamline the paperwork: its China portal (https://www.visahq.com/china/) consolidates current requirements and offers online processing for Z, M and other visas, giving travellers and mobility managers a single point of contact when the waiver stops short.
Chinese negotiators reportedly prefer annual renewals to an open-ended waiver, citing the need to monitor overstays. Nevertheless, analysts see the presumed extension as a confidence-building step that dovetails with the countries’ burgeoning rouble–renminbi settlement corridor and joint infrastructure projects along the Heihe–Blagoveshchensk bridge. For mobility managers the practical takeaway is that, absent last-minute political friction, visa processing for trips under 30 days should remain unnecessary through at least Q3 2027. Longer assignments will still require Z or M visas, and travellers should be briefed on payment hurdles: Chinese digital wallets remain difficult to top up with Russian cards, so cash or UnionPay-branded plastic is advised.
Should itineraries spill beyond the 30-day exemption, VisaHQ can step in to streamline the paperwork: its China portal (https://www.visahq.com/china/) consolidates current requirements and offers online processing for Z, M and other visas, giving travellers and mobility managers a single point of contact when the waiver stops short.
Chinese negotiators reportedly prefer annual renewals to an open-ended waiver, citing the need to monitor overstays. Nevertheless, analysts see the presumed extension as a confidence-building step that dovetails with the countries’ burgeoning rouble–renminbi settlement corridor and joint infrastructure projects along the Heihe–Blagoveshchensk bridge. For mobility managers the practical takeaway is that, absent last-minute political friction, visa processing for trips under 30 days should remain unnecessary through at least Q3 2027. Longer assignments will still require Z or M visas, and travellers should be briefed on payment hurdles: Chinese digital wallets remain difficult to top up with Russian cards, so cash or UnionPay-branded plastic is advised.