China Visa Requirements for Mexico Citizens (2026)
Visa-Free Transit for up to 10 days. Last verified June 9, 2026.
Quick answer
Mexico citizens are not on China's unilateral visa-free list, but qualify for the 240-hour (10-day) visa-free transit policy at 65 designated ports if onward travel is to a third country. For non-transit tourism, apply for an L-visa. Verified June 9, 2026.
Passport of
Mexico
Max Stay
10days
Status
Transit Visa-Free
Transit
Eligible
240-hour visa-free transit only — tourist visa required for non-transit trips.
240-Hour Transit — eligible regions
You must enter and exit through one of the 65 designated ports across 24 provinces, and your onward ticket must go to a third country or region (not back to your origin). Since the 2025 update, you may move across provincial borders within the 240-hour window — no longer restricted to the entry region. Popular destinations:
You're cleared to enter China
Most visitors connect 2–4 cities by high-speed train. Use the HSR map to plan, or book directly via Trip.com.
Americas travelers and China visa policy
Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Peru, and Uruguay were added to China's visa-free list during the November 2025 expansion, joining a previously thin transit-only group. Canada moved from transit-only to full 30-day visa-free entry on 17 February 2026. The United States and Mexico remain on transit-only status as of mid-2026, eligible for the 240-hour visa-free transit at 65 designated ports if travelers have onward flights to a third country or region — Hong Kong and Macau qualify as third regions for this purpose. Most travelers from the Americas reach China via direct flights from major hubs (New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Toronto, Sao Paulo) with typical flight times of 14–16 hours.
Compare with peers in the same region
Visa application timeline
Pick your target departure date — we work backwards to show when each step needs to happen.
You only need a visa — and this timeline — if your trip is not a simple transit. The 240-hour visa-free entry above covers short stop-overs that continue onward to a third country/region. For a longer stay, a non-transit trip, or moving freely as a tourist, you'll need a Chinese (L) visa. If that's you, plan it backwards from your departure date:
Decide cities & rough dates
60 days before · Tue, Jun 9, 2026Pick your itinerary skeleton (4–5 cities for a 14-day trip is typical). Don't book non-refundable flights yet — you need them booked when you apply, but airlines' 24-hour cancel windows give you flexibility.
Book flights & first hotel
35 days before · Sat, Jul 4, 2026Book your inbound and outbound flights now. Make refundable hotel bookings for the full trip — most consulates require flight + accommodation proof. Cancel/rebook later if needed.
Gather documents & take visa photo
28 days before · Sat, Jul 11, 2026Passport (6+ months valid, 2 blank pages), application form, 33×48mm photo on white background, flight itinerary, hotel bookings, sometimes proof of funds or invitation letter. Use our visa photo creator to get the photo right the first time.
Submit visa application
21 days before · Sat, Jul 18, 2026Visit the Chinese embassy / consulate / Visa Application Service Center. Some accept mail-in. Standard processing is 4 working days; rush is 2–3 days at extra cost. Pay the fee at submission or on collection.
Visa returned
14 days before · Sat, Jul 25, 2026You should have your passport back with the visa. Verify the entry/exit dates and stay-duration printed on the visa. Errors are rare but worth catching now, not at the airport.
Final-week checks
7 days before · Sat, Aug 1, 2026Lock in remaining hotels, set up Alipay/WeChat Pay binding (allow 24–72 hours for verification), buy a China-friendly eSIM, install translation + maps apps, share itinerary with someone at home.
Departure day
Departure dayBring printed flight itinerary + first-night hotel booking; airlines occasionally check. Fill out the China Arrival Card before landing (or via the airport QR code on arrival).
Frequently asked questions
Do Mexico citizens need a visa for China in 2026?
Yes — for tourism, you need a Chinese tourist (L-class) visa, applied for at the nearest Chinese embassy or consulate. However, you can use the 240-hour (10-day) visa-free transit policy if you're connecting to a third country.
How does the 240-hour visa-free transit work for Mexico passports?
You must enter and leave through one of the 65 designated ports, stay within the allowed regional zone for that port, and have a confirmed onward ticket to a third country (not back to your origin). The clock starts at 00:00 the day after arrival.
What does "third country" mean?
Your onward ticket must be to a country/region different from where you flew in from. Example: USA → Beijing → Tokyo qualifies. USA → Beijing → back to USA does not. Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan count as separate regions for this rule, so flights to/from them can qualify.
What if I need more than 10 days?
Apply for a regular tourist (L) visa at a Chinese embassy or consulate before travel. Processing is typically 4–10 working days, and visas come in single-entry, double-entry, or 10-year multi-entry formats.
Does this policy include Hong Kong, Macau, or Taiwan?
No. Hong Kong, Macau, and Taiwan are separate jurisdictions with their own entry rules. This policy applies only to mainland China. Hong Kong and Macau have their own visa-free schemes for many nationalities; Taiwan has a separate Republic of China entry permit system.
What passport validity does China require?
China requires at least 6 months of remaining passport validity from your date of entry, plus at least 2 blank pages. Airlines typically refuse to board passengers who don't meet this — check before you fly.
Compiled from China's National Immigration Administration and major embassy notices, last verified June 9, 2026. Visa rules can change with little notice — verify with the Chinese embassy or consulate of Mexico before travel.