
China has quietly but decisively upgraded its unilateral visa-free programme by adding ordinary Canadian passport holders to the 30-day waiver that already covers 50 other jurisdictions. According to the notice confirmed by Beijing on 15 February and published in detail by travel-intelligence site Air Traveler Club, the waiver took effect on 17 February and runs through 24:00 (Beijing time) on 31 December 2026. During that window Canadians may enter the Chinese mainland without a visa for tourism, business meetings, family visits, cultural exchanges or simple transit and may do so repeatedly, provided each stay does not exceed 30 consecutive days. The change is more than a symbolic gesture. Until now Canadian visitors faced a C$140 visa fee, in-person appointments at Chinese missions and a lead time of two–three weeks—an obstacle that often derailed last-minute factory inspections or sales calls. The waiver eliminates that friction, opening China’s travel market to a cohort that spent an estimated C$1.3 billion in Asia in 2025. Multiple-entry privileges will also help Canadian executives who shuttle between supplier cities on the mainland and regional hubs such as Hong Kong and Singapore.
For travellers who still need a longer-stay permit, anticipate policy shifts, or simply want professional help navigating Chinese entry rules, VisaHQ offers a fast, online solution. Its dedicated China page (https://www.visahq.com/china/) aggregates the latest requirements, provides document checklists and can submit applications on a client’s behalf—handy backup even in a visa-free era.
From China’s perspective, the move underscores a wider pivot toward Western Commonwealth economies. The United Kingdom obtained an identical waiver in February and Beijing is expected to announce similar arrangements with New Zealand later this year. For Canada, the policy follows Prime Minister Mark Carney’s January visit to Beijing, the first by a Canadian leader since 2017, and is viewed as a confidence-building measure after years of strained relations. Practically, travellers must still complete the standard health-declaration QR code 24–48 hours before arrival and hold passports valid for at least six months beyond entry. Diplomatic and official passports remain excluded.
Immigration lawyers warn that frequent short exits to reset the 30-day clock could raise questions; visitors should keep hotel bookings, meeting invitations and onward-flight receipts on hand. For corporate mobility managers the message is clear: China trips that once required two weeks of paperwork can now be organised overnight. Companies with China-facing supply chains should update their travel policies immediately, while Canadian HR teams may re-evaluate the need for short-term work authorisations that were previously sought only because visas were so onerous.
For travellers who still need a longer-stay permit, anticipate policy shifts, or simply want professional help navigating Chinese entry rules, VisaHQ offers a fast, online solution. Its dedicated China page (https://www.visahq.com/china/) aggregates the latest requirements, provides document checklists and can submit applications on a client’s behalf—handy backup even in a visa-free era.
From China’s perspective, the move underscores a wider pivot toward Western Commonwealth economies. The United Kingdom obtained an identical waiver in February and Beijing is expected to announce similar arrangements with New Zealand later this year. For Canada, the policy follows Prime Minister Mark Carney’s January visit to Beijing, the first by a Canadian leader since 2017, and is viewed as a confidence-building measure after years of strained relations. Practically, travellers must still complete the standard health-declaration QR code 24–48 hours before arrival and hold passports valid for at least six months beyond entry. Diplomatic and official passports remain excluded.
Immigration lawyers warn that frequent short exits to reset the 30-day clock could raise questions; visitors should keep hotel bookings, meeting invitations and onward-flight receipts on hand. For corporate mobility managers the message is clear: China trips that once required two weeks of paperwork can now be organised overnight. Companies with China-facing supply chains should update their travel policies immediately, while Canadian HR teams may re-evaluate the need for short-term work authorisations that were previously sought only because visas were so onerous.
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