China visa-free transit checker for 2026 routes

China 240-Hour Transit Visa-Free Calculator

Check whether your itinerary looks eligible for the China 10-day transit visa-free policy by testing nationality, third-country route, Mainland China entry/exit ports, stay timing, and onward-ticket requirements.

Built for queries like china visa free transit, 240 hour visa free china, 10 day visa free china, and visa free transit in china.

Last policy review: 2026-05-24. This is an independent reference tool, not an official immigration decision.

240-hour TWOV route checker
China 240-Hour Transit Visa-Free Calculator
Check whether your passport, route, Mainland China port, timing, and onward-ticket details look eligible for the 10-day transit visa-free policy.

Permitted area preview

Shanghai, Jiangsu, and Zhejiang

What This China TWOV Calculator Checks

The China 240-hour transit visa-free policy is not simply a general China visa-free entry rule. It is a transit route rule. The most important test is whether your trip is shaped as A -> Mainland China -> C, where A and C are different countries or regions, and whether you enter and depart through ports that support the policy.

This tool focuses on the 240-hour transit visa-free policy first because the SERP gap is clear: official pages explain the rule, but travelers still have to manually combine nationality, port, route, timing, and airline check-in requirements. The calculator turns those conditions into a practical result.

Common Route Results

Example routeTool interpretation
United States -> Mainland China -> JapanUsually a clean transit route
United States -> Mainland China -> United StatesNot a third-country transit
United States -> Mainland China -> Hong KongPossible, but confirm with airline and port
Hong Kong -> Mainland China -> MacauNeeds port-specific confirmation

US Citizens: 10-Day Transit, Not 30-Day Free Entry

US ordinary passport holders are included in the 55-country list for the China 240-hour transit visa-free policy. That does not mean US citizens can enter Mainland China visa-free for an ordinary round trip. The usual valid pattern is a confirmed transit route such as United States -> Mainland China -> Japan, South Korea, Hong Kong, Macau, Europe, or another different country/region.

The common invalid pattern is United States -> Mainland China -> United States with no third-country or third-region stop. In that case, the trip is not transit under the 240-hour policy and a Chinese visa is normally required.

Eligible Countries for 240-Hour China Visa-Free Transit

The current 240-hour transit visa-free model covers 55 countries. The list below is used by the calculator for nationality screening, but travelers should still verify it against official sources before booking.

AlbaniaArgentinaAustraliaAustriaBelarusBelgiumBosnia and HerzegovinaBrazilBruneiBulgariaCanadaChileCroatiaCyprusCzech RepublicDenmarkEstoniaFinlandFranceGermanyGreeceHungaryIcelandIndonesiaIrelandItalyJapanLatviaLithuaniaLuxembourgMaltaMexicoMonacoMontenegroNetherlandsNew ZealandNorth MacedoniaNorwayPolandPortugalQatarRomaniaRussiaSerbiaSingaporeSlovakiaSloveniaSouth KoreaSpainSwedenSwitzerlandUkraineUnited Arab EmiratesUnited KingdomUnited States

Ports and Permitted Stay Areas

The policy applies only at designated Mainland China entry and exit ports. The calculator includes common major ports such as Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Chengdu, Xiamen, Hangzhou, and Xian, while still warning users to confirm the official 65-port list for less common or newly added ports.

Permitted areas vary by port and province. Common areas represented in this tool include Beijing, Tianjin, and Hebei, Shanghai, Jiangsu, and Zhejiang, Guangdong, Fujian, Sichuan, Shaanxi, Hainan, Shandong, Liaoning, Hubei, Yunnan, Chongqing. Do not assume you can travel to every Mainland region under TWOV; areas such as Tibet and non-designated regions require separate checks.

Documents to Prepare

  • Ordinary passport from an eligible country, normally with at least 3 months remaining validity.
  • Confirmed onward ticket to a third country or region, with date and seat information where available.
  • Completed arrival card or port-required temporary entry form.
  • Hotel or stay information, even when not listed as a universal formal requirement.
  • Official policy links, especially if your airline check-in agent is unfamiliar with TWOV.

Airline Check-In Help

A recurring traveler problem is not the Chinese border, but airline check-in. Online check-in can fail because the airline system asks for a China visa. If that happens, arrive early, ask for a counter or supervisor check, and explain that you are using Transit Without Visa rather than a visa on arrival. Bring your confirmed onward ticket and official NIA/embassy policy references.

Official Sources Used

China 240-Hour Transit Visa-Free FAQ

  • What is China 240-hour transit visa-free?

    It is a transit-without-visa policy that lets eligible passport holders stay in designated Mainland China areas for up to 240 hours when transiting to a third country or region through approved ports.

  • Do US citizens qualify for China visa-free transit?

    US ordinary passport holders are listed for the 240-hour transit visa-free policy, but they are not covered by the separate 30-day unilateral visa-free entry policy. The route must be a genuine transit to a different country or region.

  • Does Hong Kong or Macau count as a third region?

    Hong Kong and Macau are often discussed as separate regions for transit purposes, but airline check-in and port handling can vary. Treat these routes as manual-confirmation cases and bring official policy references.

  • When does the 240-hour clock start?

    Official FAQs describe the stay period as counted from 00:00 on the day following entry. This tool estimates the deadline from your entered Mainland China immigration-clearance time.

  • Is this an official China visa website?

    No. This is an independent planning tool. Always verify final eligibility with the National Immigration Administration, Chinese embassies or consulates, visa centers, your airline, and the border inspection officer.