Very confused about China visa (American) and the possible 24 and 72 hour exemption rules

Upvote:-2

TL/DR: I think you waaayyy over thinking this.

Getting a 10 Year Multi Entry Chinese Visa is almost trivially easy for US Passports provided you don't have some extraordinary circumstance. You lose nothing by applying. Many passport agencies tell you exactly what to do.

Note, this doesn't exempt you from registering with the local authorities. Many hotels will automatically do this but ask to make sure.

Visa-free transits are limited to connecting/stopover flights originating and terminating outside China.

Upvote:4

You aren't going to be able to do a transit without visa on any of these trips. You need 3 entries (something I have never heard of from China), or else a multi-entry visa.

Since you say you're American my understanding of the current rules (note that they changed in November of 2014, ignore anything from before then!) is that you'll get a 10 year multi-entry visa. The only thing that varies is the days per admission. This was no difficulty for us but we have a long string of visas with no overstays or other trouble and she's China-born which makes for more liberal rules. (As it stands now I have 60 days/entry, she has 90 days/entry even though we only requested 60.)

Edit: I looked this up on TIMATIC which is what the airlines themselves use to check the rules:


TWOV (Transit Without Visa):

Visa required, except for Holders of confirmed onward airline tickets for a max. transit time of 24 hours.

Transit incl. multiple stops within China (People's Rep.), with a total transit time of max. 24 hours, is permitted.

  • Not applicable at Fuzhou (FOC) and Yanji (YNJ).
  • Nationals of USA are not permitted to use the multiple-stop transit within China, if transiting through Tianjin (TSN), Weihai (WEH), Wuhan (WUH), Xi'an (XIY) or Zhengzhou (CGO).

Visa required, except for Nationals of USA holding confirmed onward airline tickets to a third country, provided arriving in and departing from the same city:

  • at Beijing (PEK), Chengdu (CTU), Chongqing (CKG), Dalian (DLC), Guangzhou (CAN), Hangzhou (HGH), Shanghai Hongqiao (SHA), Shanghai Pudong (PVG), Wuhan (WUH), Xi'an (XIY) or Xiamen (XMN) for a max. transit time of 72 hours, starting from 00:01 on the day following the day of entry.

  • at Guilin (KWL), Kunming (KMG) or Shenyang (SHE) for a max. transit time of 72 hours;

  • All transiting passengers are subject to a check by immigration. Passengers in transit must hold passports or passport replacing documents that are accepted for entry into China (People's Rep.).

  • Not applicable at Beijing (PEK) if staying in the international transit area.

  • Leaving the transit area is allowed.


Note that it specifically says "airline tickets". While it is meant for airlines people sometimes connect between airlines and other means of transport, if it was permitted they would say so.

The reason fro the TWOV rules is the visa costs meant people would connect elsewhere rather than in China and that was lost business. People like you aren't going to take other routes anyway, they don't need to offer you TWOV to get you to pass through China.

Also, when you get on the train doesn't matter--the clock would go to when you passed through the border control leaving China. That will either be at the border itself or at least after the last stop the train makes in China.

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