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China Transit Visa 2026: Requirements, Application & Stopover Guide

China Transit Visa 2026: Requirements, Application & Stopover Guide

JAJanieUpdated 14 min read

Guide Tools

Best For

China stopover planning

Core Decision

G visa vs. 240h transit

Key Rule

Third destination required

Easiest Gateway

Shanghai

Main Risk

Wrong route or region

Updated

June 2026

Jump to section+
  1. What Is a China Transit Visa (G Visa)?
  2. China Transit Visa Requirements in 2026
  3. How to Apply for a China Transit Visa
  4. Transit Visa vs. 240-Hour Visa-Free Transit
  5. Who Qualifies for 240-Hour Visa-Free Transit?
  6. Immigration Officer Discretion
  7. Choosing Your Stopover City
  8. Transit City Inspiration
  9. Real Traveler Scenarios
  10. Final Advice Before Booking

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Quick AnswerRead this first - 30 seconds

You need a China Transit Visa, also called a G visa, if your route does not qualify for China's visa-free transit policy. Eligible travelers may use 240-hour visa-free transit only when nationality, route, port, onward ticket, and permitted region rules all match.

Key Takeaways

  • The G visa and 240-hour visa-free transit are different entry paths.
  • A confirmed onward ticket to a third country or eligible region is central to most transit plans.
  • Visa-free transit is regional; domestic travel outside the permitted area can break eligibility.
  • Shanghai is usually the easiest first stopover, while Beijing and Guangzhou work well for specific routes.

China transit rules confuse travelers because the official G visa and China's 240-hour visa-free transit policy are easy to mix up. This guide turns them into a clear decision path for stopovers, airport exits, and short China visits in 2026.

What Is a China Transit Visa (G Visa)?

A China Transit Visa, or G visa, is an official visa for travelers passing through mainland China on the way to a third country or region. It is most useful when you need to leave the airport, stay longer than the visa-free transit limit, or move more freely across China than a regional stopover policy allows.

In practice it suits travelers who do not qualify for visa-free transit, or whose route does not meet the strict stopover rules. It is commonly issued as a single entry, with the allowed stay decided by the visa result, and it is less region-limited than visa-free transit.

China Transit Visa Requirements in 2026

Requirements vary slightly by country, but most G visa applications ask for the same core documents. Prepare these before you book non-refundable travel:

Need To Know

G Visa Document Checklist

PassportPassport6+ months validity and at least one blank visa page
FormApplicationCompleted visa application form and passport photo
OnwardTicketConfirmed onward ticket to a third country or region
ProofEntry proofVisa or entry right for the next destination if required
PlanItineraryHotel booking and simple travel plan strongly recommended
FeeFeeGovernment and service fees vary by country

How to Apply for a China Transit Visa

Applying is straightforward once you confirm your route qualifies. Work through these four steps in order:

  1. Check your nearest Chinese visa channel. Confirm whether your local Chinese Embassy, Consulate, CVASC, or authorized agency handles G visa applications, and what documents are currently required.
  2. Prepare passport, form, photo, and onward ticket. Make sure the passport name and number match every booking, and prepare proof of entry for the next country or region when it is required.
  3. Submit the application and pay the fee. Submit in person or through an authorized agency where permitted. Processing often takes several working days, but timing varies by country and case.
  4. Collect your passport before departure. Do not travel until your passport is returned with the visa result. Recheck visa validity, entry count, and allowed stay before flying.

Transit Visa vs. 240-Hour Visa-Free Transit

The biggest misunderstanding is assuming every China layover automatically qualifies for visa-free transit. The outcome depends on nationality, flight route, transit city, port eligibility, stay length, and whether you remain inside the permitted region.

FactorChina Transit Visa (G Visa)240-Hour Visa-Free Transit
How you get itApply before travel at an embassy or consulateGranted at eligible ports, no advance visa
CostGovernment and service fees applyNo visa fee
Stay lengthFollows the issued visaUp to 240 hours (10 days)
MovementBroader, depending on the visaLimited to designated transit regions
Third destinationRequiredRequired

Who Qualifies for 240-Hour Visa-Free Transit?

Travelers from eligible countries may use 240-hour visa-free transit when they arrive and depart through approved ports, hold a confirmed onward ticket to a third country or eligible region, and stay inside the designated transit area. These examples show how routing decides eligibility:

RouteEligibilityWhy
USA → Shanghai → JapanUsually possibleGenuine third-destination route, subject to port and regional rules
UK → Beijing → Hong KongUsually possibleHong Kong counts separately for transit routing
France → Guangzhou → ThailandUsually possibleSouthern China stopover if port and nationality qualify
USA → Shanghai → USANot eligibleOrigin and destination are the same country
USA → Shanghai → Beijing → JapanNot eligibleDomestic movement between transit regions breaks the rule

Immigration Officer Discretion

Even when you appear technically eligible, the final decision is made at the port of entry. Unclear routing, missing hotels, unconfirmed onward tickets, or an inability to explain the stopover plan can slow down or jeopardize temporary entry.

Choosing Your Stopover City

Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou are the three most common transit gateways, and each suits a different kind of traveler.

Beijing

Beijing is a strong choice for first-time stopovers: immigration staff handle international transit passengers regularly, signage is relatively clear, and major sights fit into short layovers with careful timing.

Time availableSuggested plan
8–12 hoursTiananmen + Forbidden City exterior (needs strong timing and a private transfer)
24 hoursGreat Wall half-day trip, best with early arrival and late departure
48–72 hoursGreat Wall + Hutongs + Temple of Heaven
240 hoursFull Beijing itinerary, can include Tianjin and Hebei within the rules

Shanghai

Shanghai is often the easiest gateway for foreign visitors. Immigration is efficient, English support is stronger, the metro is convenient, and you can pair it with Suzhou or Hangzhou when the regional policy allows.

Time availableSuggested plan
6–10 hoursThe Bund + Nanjing Road
24 hoursYu Garden + French Concession
72 hoursShanghai + Suzhou day trip
240 hoursShanghai + Hangzhou combination

Guangzhou

Guangzhou is a practical gateway for Southeast Asia connections, Canton Fair visitors, and food-focused stopovers. Under applicable transit rules, travelers may stay within Guangdong Province, including Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Foshan, and Zhuhai.

Transit City Inspiration

China transit visa planning documents
Prepare route, visa, hotel, and onward ticket documents
Great Wall near Beijing
Beijing works well for a Great Wall stopover
Shanghai Bund skyline
Shanghai is one of the easiest stopover gateways
Private transfer support in China
Transfers matter when layover time is limited

Real Traveler Scenarios

The wrong return ticket. A traveler booked Paris → Beijing → Paris and assumed it qualified for visa-free transit. Because the origin and destination were the same country, temporary entry was denied and they had to remain airside.

The Shanghai success story. A Canadian couple booked Toronto → Shanghai → Hong Kong and used the 240-hour transit policy to visit Shanghai, Suzhou, and Hangzhou without applying for a regular China visa.

Final Advice Before Booking

  • Verify the exact flight routing before buying tickets.
  • Confirm whether the onward destination counts as a third country or eligible region.
  • Check airport and port eligibility, not just the city name.
  • Stay inside the permitted regional movement area if using visa-free transit.
  • Prepare printed documents for immigration, especially during holiday peaks.
  • Apply for a regular visa or G visa if your route is unclear.

Frequently Asked Questions

5 answers
Can I leave the airport during China transit?
Yes, if you qualify for temporary entry, hold a valid visa, or meet the visa-free transit requirements at that port.
Does Hong Kong count as a third region?
Yes. Hong Kong and Macau are generally treated separately for transit routing, but travelers should still verify current rules before booking.
Can I take domestic flights inside China during visa-free transit?
Only within the permitted transit region. Flying from Shanghai to Beijing during a visa-free stopover usually breaks the route rules.
Is hotel booking required?
It may not be officially required in every case, but confirmed accommodation is strongly recommended because immigration officers can ask about the stopover plan.
Which city is easiest for first-time transit visitors?
Shanghai is generally the easiest and most flexible for first-time stopover visitors, while Beijing is strong for classic culture and Great Wall experiences.

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Traveler Discussions

Questions from travelers

3 discussion starters
Traveler questions are reviewed before publication so the discussion stays useful, accurate, and relevant to trip planning.
CM

Claire Martin

We are flying Paris to Beijing to Hong Kong. Does Hong Kong normally count as the third destination?

YW

Lumi

Your Way Holiday

Hong Kong is generally treated separately for transit routing, so that route may fit the third-destination logic. The next checks are your passport country, airport, onward ticket, and whether your stay remains inside the permitted Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei region.

NB

Nathan Brooks

The Shanghai to Beijing warning helped. I almost booked a domestic connection during a 240-hour stopover.

YT

Yuki Tanaka

For a Guangzhou food stopover, would two nights be enough if we arrive late evening?

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Questions are reviewed by the team before appearing on the page.

Janie

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Janie

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