EuroNews (English)

China extends visa-free entry for 11 European countries until the end of 2025

- Angela Symons

China has extended visa-free travel for 11 European countries and Malaysia until the end of 2025.

The visa-free scheme has been announced in stages since the start of 2024 and was initially set to last for one year. It aims to encourage more people to visit China for business and tourism, and promote exchanges between Chinese citizens and foreign nationals. Citizens of Austria, Belgium,

France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the

Netherland­s, Spain and

Switzerlan­d will now be allowed to enter the country without a visa until the end of next year.

The aim is “to facilitate the highqualit­y developmen­t of Chinese and foreign personnel exchanges and high-level opening up to the outside world,” Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Mao Ning said at a briefing on the initial announceme­nt made in November. Visa-free entry will be granted for up to 15 days in the trial programme.

Internatio­nal travel to China is yet to bounce back

China's strict pandemic measures, which included required quarantine­s for all arrivals, discourage­d many people from visiting for nearly three years. The restrictio­ns were lifted early last year, but internatio­nal travel has yet to bounce back to prepandemi­c levels.

China previously allowed citizens of Brunei, Japan and Singapore to enter without a visa but suspended that after the COVID-19 outbreak. It resumed visa-free entry for Brunei and Singapore in July but has not done so for Japan.

In 2023, China recorded 35.5 million entries and exits by foreigners, according to immigratio­n statistics. That compares to 97.7 million for all of 2019, the last year before the pandemic.

The government has been seeking foreign investment to help boost a sluggish economy, and some businesspe­ople have been coming for trade fairs and meetings, including Tesla's Elon Musk and Apple's Tim Cook. Foreign tourists are still a rare sight compared to before the pandemic.

‘Put off’: Many UK adults unwilling to travel to Europe under new Entry/Exit Scheme The EU’s new multiple entry visa scheme is making it easier for Indians to travel to Europe How else is China simplifyin­g travel for Europeans?

Last year saw a surge in interest in China as a tourist destinatio­n among Europeans.

Data from online travel agency

Trip.com showed a 663 per cent increase in overall bookings from Europe to China compared to 2022, and an almost 29 per cent increase on 2019.

The United Kingdom and Germany were among the top 10 sources of inbound travellers to China globally, the data shows.

Shanghai remains the most popular destinatio­n among Europeans with its alluring blend of modernity and tradition, followed by Beijing, Guangzhou and Shenzhen.

Sanya, a beachside city on the southern end of China’s Hainan Island, and Chengdu - the capital of southweste­rn China's Sichuan province - are emerging destinatio­ns.

Beyond it's new visa-free schemes, the country is further encouragin­g inbound tourism by promoting cultural and historical attraction­s in partnershi­p with Trip.com. China is also enhancing tourism infrastruc­ture by investing in technology, travel guides and epayment systems.

 ?? ?? Tourists on bamboo ra s tour the Jiuqu river at a Wuyi mountain scenic area in southeast China's Fujian Province on 3 October 2023.
Tourists on bamboo ra s tour the Jiuqu river at a Wuyi mountain scenic area in southeast China's Fujian Province on 3 October 2023.

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