China has extended its visa exemption for Saudi citizens through December 31, 2026, allowing short stays without prior paperwork as it seeks to draw more visitors and deepen ties with key partners. The decision, confirmed on November 4 by Beijing, means Saudi travelers holding ordinary passports can enter China without a visa for trips of up to 30 days for business, tourism, family visits, exchange activities, or transit.
The change matters immediately for would-be visitors planning trips in late 2025 and throughout 2026. The current phase of the policy began on June 9, 2025 and was originally due to end on June 8, 2026. Officials have now pushed the end date to the final day of 2026, giving an extra six months of visa-free access. The Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs said:
“China has announced the extension of its unilateral visa-free entry policy for citizens of 45 countries until December 31, 2026, as part of its continued efforts to boost inbound travel and international engagement.”
The attribution to the ministry follows the quote.

For Saudi citizens, the offer is clear and specific. They can enter China without getting a visa in advance if they hold an ordinary Saudi passport and their trip fits one of the permitted purposes: a business visit, a holiday, seeing family, taking part in an exchange, or traveling through China in transit. Each stay can last up to 30 days. The Chinese Visa Application Service Center in Jeddah set out the core terms when the visa exemption took effect last summer:
“From June 9, 2025 to June 8, 2026, citizens of Saudi Arabia holding ordinary passports visiting China for business, tourism, family visit, exchange visit and transit purposes, are exempted from Chinese visa and can stay for no more than 30 days.”
Beijing has now kept that arrangement in place through the end of 2026 for Saudi passport holders.
The visa exemption is unilateral, meaning China opened its border for these short visits without seeking reciprocal access from the other side. It applies to Saudi Arabia as one of 45 countries named by Beijing, a grouping that also includes Oman, Kuwait, Bahrain, most members of the European Union, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Brazil, and others. Chinese authorities say the move is designed to reduce friction for travelers, widen people-to-people contact, and encourage deals and tourism. In the government’s words, it is part of a wider push to:
“revive tourism, attract investment, and rebuild trust with key trading partners.”
Attribution follows the quote.
The extension arrives as China reports a rebound in inbound travel after several years of tight pandemic-era controls. In an update citing official border figures, the ministry said:
“China’s inbound travel sector… recorded over 23 million foreign entries in the first half of 2025, a year-on-year increase of nearly 130 percent, according to data from the National Immigration Administration.”
By locking in visa-free access through December 31, 2026, Beijing is signaling it wants that trend to continue into next year.
Saudi citizens still have to satisfy standard border checks when arriving in China. Officials say travelers must hold a valid passport and may be asked to show proof of onward or return travel. Border officers can request hotel bookings or evidence of funds to support the visit. As with any entry process, final admission remains at the discretion of Chinese immigration authorities at the port of entry. Travelers who meet the rules can proceed without applying for a visa in advance, but those who cannot show their plans or meet the conditions may be refused.
The policy’s scope is also tightly defined. It does not cover paid work, long-term study, journalism assignments, or residency in China. A Saudi citizen planning to take a job, enroll in a degree program, work as a reporter, or relocate would still need to apply for the appropriate visa ahead of travel and receive the correct permit. Chinese officials warn that overstaying past 30 days or breaking the terms of visa-free entry can lead to penalties, including fines, detention, or deportation. The message for Saudi travelers is to align their trip with the permitted categories, keep within the 30-day limit, and carry documents that match the purpose of their stay.
Only holders of ordinary Saudi passports are eligible for this visa exemption. Diplomatic or service passports may be subject to different arrangements that are handled separately through official channels. For most Saudi visitors, the ordinary-passport rule is the default, and the guidance is straightforward: if the purpose is business meetings, tourism, seeing family, short exchanges, or transit, the visa exemption can be used, provided the stay does not exceed 30 days on any single entry. The extension through December 31, 2026 does not change the permitted reasons or the length of stay; it simply keeps the door open for longer.
Practicalities matter at the border, and Saudi travelers are advised to prepare papers that reflect the specific purpose of their visit. For a business trip, that might include a company invitation or meeting schedule. For tourism, a hotel booking and a return ticket help. Those visiting relatives could carry contact details and an address. Transit passengers should keep onward flight confirmations ready to show. None of these documents replace the need to comply with Chinese health and customs rules, but they can help answer basic questions from immigration officers. The core advantage is that no advance visa application is required if the visit fits the policy.
The extension places Saudi Arabia alongside a broad set of countries now benefiting from streamlined entry to the Chinese mainland. It is part of a calibrated approach China has taken since early 2025, when it began rolling out visa-free access for select nationalities to spur travel. The inclusion of Gulf states such as Oman, Kuwait, and Bahrain alongside Saudi Arabia highlights a regional focus that aligns with trade and investment links. The presence of most EU countries, as well as Australia, New Zealand, Japan, and Brazil, points to a wider effort to draw visitors and business partners from markets with strong outbound travel and investor interest.
Saudi travelers considering longer stays should be aware that the 30-day clock is firm. Those who need more time or whose plans fall outside the allowed categories must seek a visa before they travel. Chinese authorities underscore that visa-free entry is not a workaround for employment or study. The boundary is clear: the visa exemption is designed for short visits that are limited in time and purpose. Anyone shifting from a short visit to a longer-term activity, such as taking up a job or enrolling in a course, would need to switch to the correct status through the standard application process and cannot rely on the visa-free entry to cover that change.
The policy has been framed as part of a wider attempt to make trips simpler at a time when China is trying to draw back visitors, reconnect supply chains, and host more in-person meetings. Officials point to the jump in inbound entries in the first half of 2025 as evidence that looser entry rules, along with increased flight capacity and clearer border procedures, are drawing people back. While the numbers cover all foreign entries, Saudi citizens are now positioned to take advantage of an environment where the administrative steps for short stays are fewer than they have been in recent years.
Travelers should also keep in mind that border checks can vary by airport and that officers can ask follow-up questions to confirm the purpose of a visit. The expectation is not to produce an extensive dossier but to show enough to demonstrate the trip fits one of the permitted categories, that there is a plan to leave within 30 days, and that accommodation is arranged. China’s policy places the initial burden on travelers to present what is needed and then leaves the final decision to the officer at the counter. For most short-stay visitors, having clear documents and a trip plan should be sufficient.
The extended timeline gives Saudi companies and families a longer runway to plan. Business delegations can schedule meetings into late 2026 without factoring in consular visa slots. Tourists can set itineraries around holidays or school breaks. Relatives can arrange visits timed to family events. While the rules are narrow in terms of purpose and duration, they remove a key obstacle—the need to apply for a visa—and replace it with a set of entry checks at the border. For many travelers, especially those on repeat short trips, that tradeoff is appealing.
As with any border policy, the fine print matters, and the authorities have spelled it out. The visa exemption for Saudi citizens is valid through December 31, 2026. Each visit can last no more than 30 days. Only ordinary passports are covered. No advance visa is needed if the visit is for business, tourism, family visits, exchange, or transit. Work, long-term study, journalism, and residency are excluded and still require visas before travel. Overstaying or violating the terms can lead to fines, detention, or deportation. Entry remains at the discretion of Chinese border officials, who may ask for proof of return or onward travel, hotel bookings, or funds.
Beijing’s notice highlights the scale of the broader opening and situates Saudi Arabia within that larger group of 45 eligible countries. Policymakers link the move to a broader agenda to stimulate travel and business flows. As the ministry put it in its November 4 announcement:
“China has announced the extension of its unilateral visa-free entry policy for citizens of 45 countries until December 31, 2026, as part of its continued efforts to boost inbound travel and international engagement.”
That message sits alongside the travel rebound described earlier:
“China’s inbound travel sector… recorded over 23 million foreign entries in the first half of 2025, a year-on-year increase of nearly 130 percent, according to data from the National Immigration Administration.”
Together, the two points underscore the policy’s goals and the context in which it has been extended.
For official confirmation and any updates, travelers can consult the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China, as well as local points of contact such as the Chinese Embassy in Saudi Arabia or the Chinese Visa Application Service Center in Jeddah. The center’s earlier statement set the template for the exemption in 2025 and 2026, and the extension now carries that framework forward through year-end 2026. With the visa exemption in place, Saudi citizens eyeing short visits to China can plan around the 30-day limit, prepare basic documents, and travel without the consular step that used to come first.
This Article in a Nutshell
China extended its unilateral visa-free entry policy for Saudi ordinary passport holders through December 31, 2026, allowing stays up to 30 days for business, tourism, family visits, exchanges, or transit. Announced November 4, the measure began June 9, 2025, and is part of a wider effort to boost inbound travel after a strong rebound in H1 2025. The exemption excludes paid work, long-term study, journalism, and residency; travelers still must pass border checks and provide proof of onward travel, funds, or hotel bookings as required.
