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Oct 23, 2025

Chinese Visa Centre to Open in Belfast on 23 October, Easing Access for Northern Ireland Travellers

Chinese Visa Centre to Open in Belfast on 23 October, Easing Access for Northern Ireland Travellers
The Chinese Visa Application Service Centre (CVASC) announced that its new Belfast branch would open its doors on 23 October 2025, giving businesses and universities in Northern Ireland a local option for submitting Chinese visa paperwork. The facility, located in the city centre, will accept tourist, business, work-permit and study applications and promises standard processing times of four working days, with an express two-day service at a surcharge.

Until now, visa applicants from Northern Ireland had to travel to London, Manchester or Edinburgh—a logistical hurdle that added both cost and delay to China-bound trips. Belfast’s universities, which together send more than 2,500 students to China each year for Mandarin study and exchange programmes, have lobbied for a local centre since 2019.

Corporate mobility managers also welcomed the move. Pharmaceutical and aerospace companies clustered around Belfast International Airport frequently rotate engineers to joint-venture plants in Suzhou and Tianjin. Having a local CVASC means expats can file biometric data and collect passports without overnight stays in Britain’s mainland cities, shaving at least £300 off each assignment’s administration cost.

The centre will operate on an appointment-only basis, issuing queue numbers between 09:30 and 10:00 each business day. Officials reminded applicants to bring original passports, photocopies of prior Chinese visas, and—where applicable—proof of former Chinese nationality. Mobility practitioners should note that the Belfast office falls under the London Chinese Embassy’s consular district; visa policy interpretations will therefore mirror those in England and Wales.

Industry analysts expect the Belfast launch to be a template for additional “Tier-2” CVASCs in cities such as Leeds and Bristol, part of Beijing’s broader strategy to decentralise consular services and stimulate inbound travel in advance of the 2026 World University Games in Chengdu.
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