For sightseeing, visiting friends, or family travel to China. We prepare, pre-check, and submit your application so it moves smoothly the first time.
A China Tourist (L) visa is typically issued for stays of up to 60 days per visit. U.S. passport holders are usually granted multiple entries valid for up to 10 years, though the Consulate may issue a shorter validity or a limited number of entries at its discretion — a 10-year visa is never guaranteed. Non-U.S. passport holders are usually issued a single- or double-entry visa valid for 3 to 6 months.
*Not guaranteed — the Chinese Consulate may issue a visa with fewer entries, shorter duration, or shorter validity at its discretion.
Most delays come down to one of these four items being missing or out of spec — start here.
A photocopy of your driver's license, or a recent major utility bill showing your name and address.
If you've held more than one, copy your most recent visa. If it's in a different passport, include a photocopy of that passport's bio page as well.
Tell us the service level you'd like and provide your contact and mailing information. One form covers multiple applicants traveling together.
Start a Service Request| Service level | Review & processing | Shipping | Embassy fee | Service fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Regular (Pre-check + Submission) | 5–6 weeks | 2 days | $140 | From $259* |
| Express (Pre-check + Submission) | 3–4 weeks | 2 days | $165 | From $349* |
| Rush (Pre-check + Submission) | 2–3 weeks | 1–2 days | $165 | From $399* |
*Fees and schedules vary by consulate. Rush service is subject to availability.
Two situations call for extra documentation. Both are quick to check — skip whichever doesn't apply.
Requirements are largely consistent across Chinese Consulates, but each one has a few rules of its own. See the additional requirements for your jurisdiction.
If you're of Chinese descent, some Consulates ask for extra documentation. See the additional requirements — skip this if it doesn't apply to you.
Following these steps closely is the single biggest thing you can do to avoid delays.
Start a Service Request