
🇨🇳China
Documents required
- ·Passport valid 6+ months with blank pages
- ·Completed visa application form
- ·Recent passport photos (per consulate spec)
- ·Detailed travel itinerary
- ·Hotel bookings for the full stay
- ·Bank statements (usually last 3 months)
- ·Employment letter or proof of ties to home country
- ·Travel insurance with adequate medical coverage
Entry requirements
- ·Valid visa sticker or label in passport
- ·Return or onward ticket
- ·Proof of funds for the entire stay
- ·Travel insurance (often mandatory)
- ·Invitation letter where applicable
Book your consulate appointment early — slots can be weeks or months out in peak season. Details shown are general guidance for visa required entry — always confirm current requirements on the destination's official government portal before booking travel.
Refusal rates trend higher for lower-mobility passports. Expect detailed scrutiny of finances, ties to home, and travel history.
Common rejection reasons
- ·Insufficient proof of funds for the duration of stay
- ·Weak ties to home country (no stable employment, property, or family)
- ·Incomplete or inconsistent application paperwork
- ·Unclear or unrealistic travel itinerary
- ·Previous overstay, refusal, or immigration violation on record
- ·Suspected intent to work or remain beyond the visa's purpose
Risk factors
- ·Lower-mobility passport — consulates apply higher scrutiny by default
- ·Low or irregular declared income relative to trip cost
- ·Short employment history or recent job change
- ·First international trip / sparse travel history in passport
- ·Travelling alone with no confirmed accommodation or host
Difficulty is a planning guide based on the destination's published refusal posture and your passport's mobility ranking — not a prediction of your individual application. Always check the consulate's current guidance before applying.
Immigration officers in China
China runs one of the world's most rigorous border regimes, with broad officer discretion to refuse entry even with a valid visa.
Required proof at entry
- ·Passport valid 6+ months beyond your departure date
- ·Visa, eVisa, ETA or VOA approval (printed copy recommended)
- ·Confirmed return or onward ticket within the permitted stay
- ·Hotel reservation or host's full address and contact details
- ·Cash and/or recent bank statement showing funds for the trip
- ·Travel insurance certificate covering the full stay
- ·Detailed itinerary, employment letter, and proof of ties to home (lease, payslips, family)
Border experience is a planning guide — individual officers have wide discretion. When in doubt, carry more documentation than you think you'll need.
Source: MFA China
Overstay, refusal & deportation in China
Overstay fines
China typically charges a per-day overstay fine payable on departure. Short overstays may be waived at officer discretion, but the published amount is set by the immigration authority.
Visa rejection consequences
A refusal or denied entry can usually be re-attempted later with stronger documentation, but it must be disclosed on future visa forms that ask.
Re-entry bans
Re-entry bans are uncommon for short overstays settled at departure, but repeat or long overstays can trigger multi-year bans.
Deportation risks
Formal deportation is reserved for serious overstays, illegal work, or criminal offences — most overstayers simply pay the fine and leave.
Penalties change frequently and vary by circumstance — treat this as a planning guide, not legal advice. Settle any overstay or status issue with the local immigration authority before departure where possible.
Current penalties and ban tariffs: MFA China
Extensions & visa runs in China
China balances tourism with immigration control; intent and documentation drive the outcome.
How many times?
Extensions to a China short-stay visa are rare and usually require proving force majeure (illness, missed flights). Plan to leave on time.
Visa run rules (leave & re-enter)
Brief exits and re-entries are generally tolerated for genuine tourism, but each new entry is at the officer's discretion — not an automatic right.
Border discretion is real — even when extensions are technically allowed, individual officers can refuse. For stays beyond a few months, switching to a proper long-stay, student, or remote-work visa is almost always safer than repeated runs.
Current extension rules: MFA China




