
China's 240-Hour Visa-Free Transit in 2026: How to Stop Over for 10 Days Without a Visa
China's 240-hour visa-free transit policy lets citizens of 54 countries, including the United States, Canada, the UK, and Australia, pass through China for up to 10 days without a visa, as long as they are heading to a third country and enter through a designated port. Since the December 2024 expansion you can now move freely across 24 participating provinces rather than being stuck in a single city. It is a transit rule, not a tourist visa, so the routing matters.
I have used the older 144-hour version twice, and the jump to 240 hours genuinely changes what a China stopover can be. Ten days is enough to actually see a place rather than just nap in an airport hotel. The catch is that the rules are specific, and a single wrong assumption about your onward ticket can get you turned away at the desk. Here is how the policy works in plain terms for 2026.
*Images are illustrative and may differ from actual airport facilities. Immigration policies, port lists, and eligible-country lists change frequently. Always verify the latest rules directly with the National Immigration Administration of China or your nearest Chinese embassy or consulate before you travel.
What the 240-Hour Transit Policy Actually Is
On December 17, 2024, China's National Immigration Administration announced that its visa-free transit window, which used to be 72 or 144 hours depending on the city, would be extended to a single nationwide standard of 240 hours, or 10 full days. The policy is designed for travelers who are connecting through China on the way somewhere else, which is why it is called a transit policy rather than a visa. You can read the official framing on the National Immigration Administration of China site.
The headline benefit is time. Ten days is long enough to base yourself in one city and take a couple of day trips, or to split your stay between two regions. The second, quieter benefit from the 2024 expansion is geographic freedom: where older versions confined you to the city or small region you landed in, the current rule lets you travel across any of the participating provinces during your 240 hours.
Who Qualifies: The 54 Eligible Countries
Citizens of 54 countries are eligible. The list covers most of Europe's Schengen states, plus the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, South Korea, and a number of others across the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. Eligibility is tied to your passport, not your residence, so what matters is the nationality of the travel document you present at the border.
The eligible-country list has been adjusted more than once, so if your nationality is not one of the obvious big names, confirm it against the current official list before you book. If your country is not on it, you need a regular Chinese visa even for a short connection.
The Third-Country Rule That Trips People Up
This is the single most misunderstood part of the policy, so it is worth being precise. To use visa-free transit you must be traveling from one country or region to a different third country or region, with China in the middle. You cannot fly out and back to the same place.
- United States to China to South Korea: valid, because South Korea is a different third country.
- United States to China to United States: not valid, because you are returning to your point of departure.
- Canada to China to Thailand, then later home: valid, as long as the next leg out of China goes to the third country.
One detail that opens up a lot of itineraries: Hong Kong and Macau are treated as separate regions for this purpose. That means a routing like London to mainland China to Hong Kong qualifies, and so does Hong Kong to mainland China onward to a third place. If you have always wanted to pair a few days in Shanghai or Beijing with a Hong Kong leg, that combination works. For the lounge side of such a trip, our guide to the best airport lounges in Asia is a useful companion.
You will need to show a confirmed onward ticket to that third country, departing within the 240-hour window, when you arrive. A vague plan is not enough. Border officers want to see the booked flight, train, or ferry that takes you out of China to the qualifying destination.
Where You Can Enter and How Far You Can Roam
Entry has to be through one of the designated ports of entry, of which there are now more than 60 spread across roughly 24 provinces, autonomous regions, and municipalities. These include the obvious international gateways like Beijing Capital PEK, Beijing Daxing PKX, Shanghai Pudong PVG, and Guangzhou Baiyun CAN, alongside many regional airports and several seaports.
The participating regions include Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei, Liaoning, Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Anhui, Fujian, Shandong, Henan, Hubei, Hunan, Guangdong, Guangxi, Sichuan, Chongqing, Yunnan, Shaanxi, Shanxi, and Hainan, among others. As long as your travels stay inside the participating provinces, you are free to move between them during your stay. You do still have to enter and exit through ports located in eligible regions, so plan your in-and-out airports with that in mind. If you want to browse facilities at a specific hub, our full airport directory covers each one.
How the 240 Hours Are Counted
The clock does not start the moment you land. The 240-hour count begins at 00:00, meaning midnight, on the day after you arrive. So if you clear immigration at 3 p.m. on a Monday, your countdown starts at midnight going into Tuesday, and you effectively get the rest of Monday for free. You must leave China before the 240 hours run out, so build in a comfortable margin and do not cut your departure to the final hour.
When you arrive, you apply for the visa-free transit stay at the border by presenting your passport, your onward ticket, and the arrival paperwork. Officers issue a temporary entry permit. There is no online application to file in advance for the transit permit itself, although you should always check whether any separate arrival declaration or health form is in effect at the time of your trip.
Register Your Accommodation
Within 24 hours of arrival you are expected to register your place of stay with the local police. If you check into a hotel, the front desk normally handles this for you automatically as part of check-in, which is the easy path. If you stay in a private home or short-term rental, you are responsible for registering yourself at the nearest police station. It is a quick administrative step, but skipping it can cause problems, so keep proof of your registration with you.
Turning a Long Layover Into a Comfortable Break
If your stopover is on the shorter end, or you have a few hours to kill before clearing the city, China's big hubs have strong lounge options. Domestic networks like DragonPass have particularly deep coverage across Chinese airports, and many travelers find it complements Priority Pass and LoungeKey well in this part of the world. If you are weighing which network to carry for an Asia-heavy trip, our Priority Pass vs LoungeKey vs DragonPass comparison breaks down where each one shines.
A premium travel card is often the simplest way to unlock these lounges without buying day passes at each airport. Our roundup of the best cards for airport lounge access shows which ones bundle Priority Pass or broad network membership. And if your transit involves a long wait either side of your China days, our piece on the art of the long layover and our guide to surviving the busiest airports are worth a read before you fly.
240-Hour Transit vs a Regular Tourist Visa
If your trip is a simple round trip from home to China and back, or you want to stay longer than 10 days, or you plan to move outside the participating provinces, the transit policy will not cover you and a standard tourist visa is the right call. The transit route is best when China is a genuine stop on a longer journey to somewhere else, because the third-country requirement is non-negotiable. For many travelers, a Beijing or Shanghai stopover wedged between two other destinations is exactly the kind of trip the policy rewards.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Booking a round trip back to your departure country and assuming transit applies. It does not.
- Arriving without a confirmed onward ticket to the third country. Officers want to see it.
- Entering at a port that is not on the designated list. Confirm your specific airport qualifies.
- Planning to travel to a province outside the participating regions during your stay.
- Forgetting to register your accommodation within 24 hours when staying outside a hotel.
- Cutting your departure flight too close to the 240-hour deadline with no buffer.
The Bottom Line
The 240-hour visa-free transit policy is one of the most generous stopover programs anywhere, and for travelers from the 54 eligible countries it makes a China visit genuinely easy to slot into a bigger trip. Get the third-country routing right, enter at a designated port, keep your onward ticket handy, and register where you stay. Do those four things and you have 10 days to enjoy. Then lean on your lounge access to make the connections either side comfortable.
Information is reviewed periodically and was accurate at the time of writing. Immigration rules, eligible-country lists, and port lists can change at short notice. Always verify the current policy with the National Immigration Administration of China or your nearest Chinese embassy or consulate, and confirm lounge access policies before travel.

