A New Zealand passport on a desk
Visa & entry · 6 min read

China visa-free for New Zealanders: what's actually changed in 2026

·Updated

For decades, a trip to China started with a visa appointment. Since 1 July 2024, ordinary New Zealand passports have not needed one for short visits. The scheme is confirmed through 31 December 2026 and New Zealand sits on the official visa-free list. Here is what it actually means for planning a trip.

What the scheme actually does

You arrive at a Chinese immigration desk with an ordinary New Zealand passport and a clear travel purpose. The officer may admit you for up to 30 days. There is no online form to complete before flying, no embassy queue, no fee. Compared with the old system, when many travellers paid for a single-entry visa and waited for processing, the simplification is genuine.

The scheme covers mainland China only. Hong Kong and Macau have always been visa-free for New Zealand passports, and they remain on their own separate policies. The New Zealand government source is SafeTravel. The Embassy of the People's Republic of China in Wellington publishes the live wording. We cross-check both regularly.

Sources: SafeTravel China advice · NIA visa-free country list

The edges worth knowing about

Re-entries reset the counter

If you leave the mainland, for example on a side trip to Hong Kong, and come back, you receive a fresh 30 days on re-entry. This makes itineraries that stitch the mainland together with a regional neighbour easier to design than they used to be.

"Up to 30 days" is the ceiling, not a guarantee

Border officers still make the final call. They can ask questions or refuse entry if something looks off: a vague onward ticket, or a purpose outside the visa-free categories. In practice this is rare for ordinary tourist travel. We still recommend arriving with a clearly readable plan: a return or onward flight on file, accommodation for the first night, and a phone number that works on arrival.

Business visits sit on a fine line

The scheme covers tourism, family and friend visits, exchange visits, transit, and short business visits. It does not cover paid work, credentialed journalism, or longer study. A conference and a few meetings may sit inside the scheme. Flying in to install equipment or train staff for a week does not, and a regular visa is still the right path.

What it means for trip design

The practical effect is two things. First, the planning window shortens. There is no visa lead time to plan around, so a decision made one month becomes a trip the next. Second, multi-country routes get easier, since a stop in Hong Kong no longer means new visa paperwork at every leg. With the long flight from Auckland already on the schedule, one longer trip usually makes more sense than two short ones.

What it does not change is how a good trip in China is arranged on the ground: which region in which season, where to base each leg, how to set up Alipay and WeChat Pay before you land. Those are the questions a private trip is for. The route you approve is the route we brief.

Travelling on a different passport? The full China visa guide covers all 51 visa-free countries, the 240-hour transit rule, and who still needs a visa.

Before you go

  1. Check your ordinary New Zealand passport is valid for the whole stay. We still prefer a six-month buffer, because airlines and sudden itinerary changes can be less forgiving than the headline rule.
  2. Take a screenshot of your return or onward flight. Border officers occasionally ask to see it.
  3. If you connect through Hong Kong, remember it is a separate immigration jurisdiction. A flight from Auckland to Hong Kong does not pre-clear you for the mainland; you clear Chinese immigration again on the mainland-side flight.

That is the scheme in full, as last verified on 4 July 2026. For where to go and how long, the rest of our travel guides carry the longer answers, and a private trip from New Zealand is the short one.

Sources

Frequently asked questions

  • For ordinary New Zealand passport holders travelling for an approved short-visit purpose, no advance visa application is required. Border officers still make the final entry decision.

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