Plan · Visa & entry
China visa for Romania citizens
Romanian passport holders can enter mainland China visa-free for up to 30 days for tourism, business, family visits and transit. Romania was added under the unilateral visa-free expansion announced in 2024.
Current status (verified July 2026)
Romanian ordinary passport holders are on China's 30-day unilateral visa-free entry list. The entitlement covers tourism, business meetings, family visits and transit through mainland China. Entry is granted on arrival at any open port — no visa sticker or advance approval is required for stays up to 30 days.
The scheme was announced by China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs during the 2024 expansion that brought in several additional Central and Eastern European states. It has been extended into 2026 but remains a unilateral measure that Beijing can vary at short notice.
Diplomatic, service and official passport holders travel under separate bilateral arrangements and should confirm entry conditions with the Chinese Embassy in Bucharest before departure.
What visa-free covers
- Tourism — holidays, sightseeing, independent and group travel
- Business — meetings, trade fairs, contract negotiations, site visits
- Family visits — seeing Romanian relatives resident in China or Chinese in-laws
- Transit — onward travel via a Chinese airport or land port to a third country
Movement within mainland China is otherwise unrestricted, with the standard exceptions: the Tibet Autonomous Region requires a Tibet Travel Permit arranged through a licensed agency, and some border zones in Xinjiang and elsewhere require additional documentation.
What visa-free does not cover
- Paid employment in China — requires a Z visa arranged by the employer
- Study on programmes longer than 180 days — requires an X1 visa
- Journalism and reporting — requires a J visa
- Any stay expected to exceed 30 days on a single entry
The 30-day count runs from the day after entry. Overstaying carries fines and can affect future Chinese visa applications, so plan the exit date carefully.
On arrival
Border officers at Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and other ports typically ask to see:
- A Romanian passport valid for at least six months beyond the intended stay, with at least one blank page
- A return or onward ticket out of mainland China within 30 days
- Proof of accommodation — a hotel booking, host address, or itinerary
- The completed arrival card and health-and-customs declaration, usually via a QR code at the airport
Fingerprints are captured on first entry for travellers aged 14 to 70. Allow extra time at immigration on arrival.
If you plan to stay longer than 30 days
Travel plans exceeding 30 days require an L visa (tourism) or M visa (business), applied for in advance through the China Visa Application Service Centre in Bucharest. Standard requirements include:
- Completed online application form and appointment booking
- Passport valid at least six months, with blank pages
- One recent passport-style photograph meeting Chinese specifications
- Return flight booking and hotel reservations covering the requested stay
- For M visas — an invitation letter from a Chinese business partner
Processing typically takes four working days for standard service. Express and same-day options are usually available at additional cost. Fees are set by CVASC and change periodically — check the current schedule when booking.
Romanian supporting documents in Romanian may need to be presented alongside an English translation; company letters and invitation documents should be on headed paper with clear contact details.
Chinese diplomatic missions in Romania
The Chinese Embassy in Bucharest handles consular affairs for Romania. Visa applications are lodged through the China Visa Application Service Centre rather than at the embassy directly. The CVASC office is in Bucharest and is reachable by public transport from most parts of the city; opening hours are typically weekday mornings for submissions and afternoons for collection.
Bucharest has direct and one-stop connections to major Chinese hubs via European transfer points, which makes the 30-day window practical for most leisure and short business itineraries. Travellers from Cluj-Napoca, Iaşi, Timişoara and other regional cities will usually route through Bucharest, Frankfurt, Istanbul or Vienna.
Things to confirm before flying
China's unilateral visa-free arrangements can be adjusted, suspended or extended with little notice. Verify current eligibility on the Chinese Embassy in Bucharest website or through the official CVASC portal shortly before travel, particularly before booking non-refundable flights or long itineraries.
Related resources
- [Visa decision tree](/tools/visa-decision-tree)
- [30-day visa-free entry](/plan/visa-free-entry)
- [Standard L visa route](/plan/visa)
Embassy: Embassy in Bucharest · CVASC (https://bio.visaforchina.cn/BUH2_EN/)