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Oct 29, 2025

Beijing Unveils Plan for Dedicated Hi-Tech Talent Immigration System

Beijing Unveils Plan for Dedicated Hi-Tech Talent Immigration System
China took another step toward easing inbound mobility for foreign experts on 29 October 2025, when the Communist Party released the outline of its 15th Five-Year Plan pledging to “establish an immigration system for hi-tech talent.” The document explicitly calls for attracting top global researchers and engineers and building “internationally influential centres for education, science and talent.”

Policy planners are building on this month’s launch of the new K-visa – a fast-track permit that lets recent overseas STEM graduates enter, reside and work in China without first securing an employer sponsorship. The K-visa addresses a long-criticised gap in China’s work-permit framework, which historically made it difficult for junior foreign researchers to take up internships or post-doctoral placements on the mainland. Officials believe a dedicated visa class will help Chinese laboratories compete with R&D hubs in the United States, Singapore and the European Union.

In practice, the coming immigration system is expected to merge the current R-class (“high-level talent”) work authorisation with the new K-visa into a single points-based pathway. Early drafts seen by policy advisers propose multi-year residence permits, spousal work rights and a clearer route to permanent residence for foreign scientists who meet salary or publication thresholds. Local governments in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen have already begun mapping provincial incentives, including tax breaks and subsidised housing, to complement the national scheme.

For multinational companies the reforms could be game-changing. Faster on-boarding of graduate researchers will reduce project lead times, while simplified residence rules should lower compliance costs. Universities running joint laboratories with overseas partners say they will finally be able to offer PhD candidates uninterrupted research cycles. HR teams, however, should prepare for more rigorous reporting on research outputs, as authorities are likely to link visa renewals to measurable performance targets.

The next milestones will be draft regulations, expected in early 2026, followed by pilot processing in selected science parks. Businesses intending to hire foreign graduates in China should begin reviewing internal mobility policies, budgeting for supplementary benefits and liaising with local Foreign Expert Bureaus to stay ahead of procedural changes.
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