Canadians can now travel to China visa-free

author avatar
Asheesh Moosapeta
Updated: Feb, 17, 2026
  • Published: February 17, 2026

As of February 17, 2026, Canadian passport holders will now be able to travel to China without requiring a visa, for stays of up to 30 days.

This policy will remain effective until at least December 31, 2026.

Per an announcement made by the People’s Republic of China's (PRC’s) Foreign Ministry Spokesperson, Canadians travelling for business, tourism, personal visits, exchange trips, and/or transiting through the PRC will now be able to do so without requiring a visa.

Join the Angus Reid Forum and get $5 in points!

No information has yet been provided as to whether the policy will continue or be reassessed after December 31 of this year.

Canadian citizens will still need to seek visas if they wish to:

  • Take up paid employment or other paid work that would normally require a work visa or residence permit;
  • Enroll in long-term / degree studies; and/or
  • Remain in the PRC for any period of time longer than 30 days.

Passport holders from the United Kingdom will now also benefit from visa-free travel to the PRC under the same conditions.

Until now, the PRC has remained one of the few countries to which Canadians did not have visa-free access, leading to lengthy visa processing times for Canadian nationals wishing to visit the country.

The PRC’s Nationality Laws also do not recognize dual citizenship, meaning that roughly 1.7 million (as of the 2021 census) Chinese-origin Canadian citizens were also previously subject to these newly lifted entry requirements.

Before today’s policy change, Canadians could only travel visa-free, specifically to the special administrative region of Hainan province, for up to 30 days at a time.

The ability of Canadian nationals to remain in China during transit periods has now also been expanded from 10 days (at select ports of entry) to 30 days.

Canada now joins 49 other countries exempt from visa-entry requirements to the PRC:

  • Andorra 
  • Argentina 
  • Australia 
  • Austria 
  • Bahrain 
  • Belgium 
  • Brazil 
  • Brunei* 
  • Bulgaria 
  • Canada 
  • Chile 
  • Croatia 
  • Cyprus 
  • Denmark 
  • Estonia 
  • Finland 
  • France 
  • Germany 
  • Greece 
  • Hungary 
  • Iceland 
  • Ireland 
  • Italy 
  • Japan 
  • Kuwait 
  • Latvia 
  • Liechtenstein 
  • Luxembourg 
  • Malta 
  • Monaco 
  • Montenegro 
  • Netherlands 
  • New Zealand 
  • North Macedonia 
  • Norway 
  • Oman 
  • Peru 
  • Poland 
  • Portugal 
  • Republic of Korea 
  • Romania 
  • Russia** 
  • Saudi Arabia 
  • Slovakia 
  • Slovenia 
  • Spain 
  • Sweden 
  • Switzerland 
  • UK 
  • Uruguay 

Unless otherwise indicated, visa waivers for all the above countries remain effective until December 31, 2026.  

*No expiry date on visa waivers 

**Visa waiver remains effective until September 14, 2026 

A month in the works

The first mentions of visa-free travel for Canadians to the PRC came approximately one month ago, following Prime Minister Mark Carney’s visit to the Asian country to facilitate closer trade ties between the two nations.

As part of a January 16 press conference held during Carney’s visit, the prime minister welcomed the promise of visa-free travel and also touched on the possibility of further paths to collaboration between Chinese and Canadian artists and businesspeople.

Carney’s visit also marked the first time in more than eight years that a Canadian prime minister had made an official trip to the PRC, indicative of a significant shift in Ottawa’s posture towards Beijing.

Join the Angus Reid Forum and get $5 in points!

Share this article
Share your voice
Did you find this article helpful?
Thank you for your feedback.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Did you find this article helpful?
Please provide a response
Thank you for your helpful feedback
Please contact us if you would like to share additional feedback, have a question, or would like Canadian immigration assistance.
  • Do you need Canadian immigration assistance? Contact the Contact Cohen Immigration Law firm by completing our form
  • Send us your feedback or your non-legal assistance questions by emailing us at media@canadavisa.com
Related articles
Canada asks new citizens to hand back their citizenship certificates
An image of the crest of Canada, printed on citizenship certificates.
Canadian citizenship costs Americans less than a Caribbean vacation—and millions already qualify
A Canadian passport hel in the foreground, with multiple other passports in the background.
Josh Duhamel is among the millions of Americans who became Canadian citizens when Canada changed its citizenship law
American actor Josh Duhamel
How to find out if you have Canadian citizenship through the same ancestor as Beyoncé
Beyoncé sitting atop a piano, singing, in Central Park, Manhattan, NYC, for the Good Morning America's Summer Concert Series.
Top Stories
Canada moves to enshrine early access to work permits for asylum seekers
New Brunswick invites over 660 provincial immigration candidates across six draws
Canada just changed what counts as proof of citizenship by descent — here’s the breakdown
Join our free newsletter. Get Canada's top immigration stories delivered to your inbox.
Subscribe
More in Citizenship
Canada just changed what counts as proof of citizenship by descent — here’s the breakdown
A picture of a citizenship certificate on a desk in the foreground, with a laptop in the background.
Canada pauses processing of some citizenship-by-descent applications, clarifies rules for those under review
A man waits disappointedly for his citizenship interview in an empty waiting room, surrounded by empty chairs.
The Bill C-3 paradox: Millions now qualify for Canadian citizenship, but few will apply
A phone sits atop a coffee table showing ancestry results of its owner, with glasses and a cup of coffee to each side of the frame
Canada moved the goalposts for proof of citizenship applicants, lawyers say
Citizenship certificate holders have been instructed to surrender their certificates for having broken rules they were never told.
Link copied to clipboard