Is it possible to apply for a Chinese visa while travelling outside your home country?

8/21/2013 11:07:00 AM

July 2013:

We successfully got our Chinese visas while in Mongolia (link is to our blog). It took a bit of extra effort and supporting paperwork compared to applying from our home country (UK), but it was cheaper and the Chinese Embassy staff in Ulaanbaatar are very helpful

9/11/2012 6:39:51 AM

Update: It is possible again in Kazakhstan. Uzbekistan also still possible, but more difficult than before.

It’s not possible to get a Chinese visa in Kazakhstan at the moment. It is possible in Uzbekistan and Kyrygzstan. More information available in Caravanistan site.

EDIT: Note – author is affiliated with site.

7/17/2011 4:39:09 PM

It probably depends on the country. I know of people that have gotten Chinese Visa’s in Vietnam and Thailand so it’s certainly possible, really the best thing to do is ask the embassy in question.

As a fallback go to Hong Kong instead, I’ve got several visa’s from Hong Kong for China, you can usually get them in less than a day through a travel agent or about two days through the official office.

7/17/2011 2:01:57 PM

Edward Hasbrouck, a travel writer, has a pair of posts about getting Chinese visas outside of China specifically in Hong Kong. The information is a little dated, but might still be useful.

http://www.hasbrouck.org/blog/archives/001498.html

http://hasbrouck.org/blog/archives/001598.html

7/17/2011 11:50:59 AM

Looking around a little, it seems that you don’t always need to apply for a Chinese visa in your home country, but you generally need to have at least a work permit in the country where you apply. For example, the Chinese Visa Application Service Center in New Delhi “is responsible for receiving visa applications for visit to mainland China from ordinary passport holders who are Indian citizens and citizens of other countries possessing Indian permanent residence or work permits”. The site of the Chinese embassy in Switzerland mentions that “for non-Swiss passports, a residency card is required (or Swiss employer certificate, or Swiss school certificate, etc.)”. This isn’t a definitive answer — you’d need to contact a Chinese embassy to be sure — but there is a presumption that the answer will be no in general.

Looking at non-official sources, it seems that the answer is yes in certain countries (perhaps certain neighboring countries?). For example, a certain travel agency website has fee schedules for non-residents in Kazakhstan and India but not in Georgia. They also claim that a Kazakhstan citizen can apply for a Chinese transit visa in Australia, and that a Georgian can apply for a Chinese visa from Kazakhstan but applying in Georgia requires being a Georgian national or resident.

8/27/2011 3:48:25 PM

I found this site (China Embassy in Kazakhstan Republic, only Russian and Chinese); there it says that you can apply for the China transit visa in this Consulate in the Kazakhstan republic, but I still can’t find official information about it (don’t know Chinese).

Credit:stackoverflow.com

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Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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