
Starting today, 11 May 2026, holders of ordinary Chinese passports no longer need a visa for short-term visits to Brazil. The measure—published in Brazil’s Diário Oficial on Monday morning—allows stays of up to 30 days for tourism, business meetings, conferences, cultural events and family visits, and can be renewed once, giving visitors a theoretical maximum stay of 60 days per trip. In return, China has maintained its own unilateral visa-free entry for Brazilians since 1 June 2025. The waiver is the most significant liberalisation of Brazil’s visa regime in more than a decade. Before the pandemic, China was Brazil’s fastest-growing long-haul source market; arrivals more than doubled between 2015 and 2019. The Ministry of Tourism projects the new exemption could push arrivals above the psychological 100,000-visitor threshold this year and inject an additional US$250 million into local economies that rely on inbound tourism—from the Iguazu Falls to the beaches of Bahia. Corporate mobility managers also stand to benefit. China is Brazil’s largest trading partner, accounting for almost 31 % of Brazilian exports in 2025; visa-free entry removes a major administrative hurdle for supplier visits, joint-venture negotiations and post-sale support. Airlines are already reacting: LATAM has applied for an additional weekly São Paulo–Beijing rotation via Madrid from July, while China Southern plans to up-gauge its Guangzhou–São Paulo cargo route to passenger service for Golden Week. Once approved by the National Civil Aviation Agency (ANAC), the extra capacity will give Brazilian corporates a same-day connection to eight secondary Chinese hubs. For travellers, standard entry requirements remain. Chinese visitors must show a passport valid for the entire stay, proof of onward or return travel, evidence of accommodation (hotel booking or invitation letter) and sufficient funds.
Travellers and corporate mobility teams navigating these evolving rules can streamline their planning with VisaHQ. The service’s Brazil portal (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/) consolidates the latest entry policies, offers document-check tools and provides concierge assistance for work, study and residence visas that still require advance authorisation—making it a practical one-stop resource even in a newly visa-free landscape.
Work, study or residence still require the appropriate visas. Border formalities will be handled by the Federal Police at designated airports, seaports and land crossings, and authorities retain the right to refuse entry if documentation is incomplete. Companies should update global mobility policies immediately and review Chinese employee travel trackers to ensure no inadvertent overstay. From a strategic perspective, the waiver underscores Brasília’s pivot toward Asia and reinforces the broader BRICS agenda of easing the movement of people alongside goods and capital. Observers expect the government to use the China deal as a template for negotiations with India and South Africa later this year. In the meantime, relocation firms should prepare for a surge in short-term assignment requests, particularly in agribusiness technology, renewable energy and infrastructure—sectors singled out for cooperation in last year’s Brazil-China Joint Action Plan.
Travellers and corporate mobility teams navigating these evolving rules can streamline their planning with VisaHQ. The service’s Brazil portal (https://www.visahq.com/brazil/) consolidates the latest entry policies, offers document-check tools and provides concierge assistance for work, study and residence visas that still require advance authorisation—making it a practical one-stop resource even in a newly visa-free landscape.
Work, study or residence still require the appropriate visas. Border formalities will be handled by the Federal Police at designated airports, seaports and land crossings, and authorities retain the right to refuse entry if documentation is incomplete. Companies should update global mobility policies immediately and review Chinese employee travel trackers to ensure no inadvertent overstay. From a strategic perspective, the waiver underscores Brasília’s pivot toward Asia and reinforces the broader BRICS agenda of easing the movement of people alongside goods and capital. Observers expect the government to use the China deal as a template for negotiations with India and South Africa later this year. In the meantime, relocation firms should prepare for a surge in short-term assignment requests, particularly in agribusiness technology, renewable energy and infrastructure—sectors singled out for cooperation in last year’s Brazil-China Joint Action Plan.