Start Here — Does Your Child Actually Need a China Visa?

Before gathering any documents, confirm whether your child needs a visa at all for your specific trip. The answer depends on two things: the purpose and length of your visit, and whether your child has Chinese heritage.

The Current Visa-Free Policy for US Citizens (Including Children)

As of 2026, US citizens — including children holding US passports — do not need a China visa for stays of 30 days or less for tourism, visiting family, business, or transit. This policy is currently valid through December 31, 2026. No pre-registration, no COVA, no visa appointment. Simply arrive at the border with a valid US passport.

This visa-free policy applies equally to children and adults. A family of four traveling to Beijing for three weeks in the summer of 2026 does not need any of their members to obtain a China visa in advance, as long as no one plans to stay beyond 30 days.

⚠️ When Your Child Still Needs a Visa Even for Short Trips
  • Staying longer than 30 days — the visa-free policy only applies to stays of 30 days or less
  • Children of Chinese descent — may need a visa or travel document regardless of trip length (see full section below)
  • Work, study, or specific purposes — visa-free does not cover employment or enrollment in Chinese schools
  • Policy has changed — always verify the current visa-free policy before traveling, as it is subject to change by the Chinese government

When Your Child Does Need a China Visa

If your child needs a visa — whether because the trip exceeds 30 days, they have Chinese heritage, or the visa-free policy no longer applies — the process runs through the same COVA system used for adult applications, completed by a parent or guardian on the child's behalf. The rest of this guide covers everything you need to complete that process correctly.

The Most Important Question First — Visa or Travel Document?

This is the question that trips up more families than any other aspect of the child China visa process. If your child has Chinese heritage, you must determine whether they need a Chinese Visa or a Chinese Travel Document — these are completely different things with different application processes.

Which Application Does Your Child of Chinese Descent Need?

Apply for a Chinese VISA if:

At the time of your child's birth, one or both parents were Chinese citizens who had already settled abroad — meaning they held a US permanent resident card (green card), US citizenship, or another country's permanent residency. Under China's Nationality Law, children born in these circumstances are not considered Chinese citizens and must apply for a visa to visit China.

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Apply for a Chinese TRAVEL DOCUMENT if:

At the time of your child's birth, both parents were Chinese citizens without foreign permanent residency — meaning neither parent held a green card or foreign permanent resident status. In this case, the child may be considered a Chinese citizen under Chinese law and would need to apply for a Chinese travel document (not a visa) to enter China. This is a separate process handled through the Chinese consulate but different from the visa process.

Not sure which applies? Confirm before applying.

The distinction between visa and travel document is critical — applying for the wrong one wastes time and may delay your travel plans. If you're uncertain about your child's status, email Mandy with your family situation before submitting anything. She can help you determine the correct path or point you to the right resource.

⚠️ Important Legal Note

The determination of Chinese citizenship for US-born children is governed by the Nationality Law of the People's Republic of China, not US law. A child can hold US citizenship and simultaneously be considered a Chinese citizen under Chinese law if the circumstances of their birth meet certain criteria. This has real implications for travel — consult the appropriate consulate if you have any doubt.

Standard Child Visa Application — Complete Document Checklist

For US citizen children without Chinese descent (or children of Chinese descent who have established they need a visa), here is every document required for a China visa application.

Document Requirement Notes
Child's valid US passport Required Must have at least 6 months validity beyond your planned return date. Must have at least one completely blank visa page. Photograph the photo page before mailing.
Completed COVA application Required Completed online at consular.mfa.gov.cn/VISA/ by a parent or guardian. Signed by the parent/guardian in the "on behalf of" section. Must reach "Passport to be Submitted" status before mailing.
Compliant passport photo Required 33×48mm printed. 354–420 × 472–560 pixels digital. JPEG, 40–120 KB. Pure white background. Special rules for infants — see photo section below.
Child's birth certificate Required Original and photocopy. Required for all minors to confirm age and parentage. Essential for first-time applicants especially.
Notarized parental consent letter If applicable Required when only one parent is traveling with the child, or when the child is traveling with a non-parent guardian. Not-traveling parent must sign before a notary. See full section below.
Proof of parental legal status Chinese descent only For US-born children of Chinese descent: copies of both parents' US passports or green cards to document their citizenship/permanent residency status at the time of the child's birth. See Chinese descent section below.
Previous Chinese visa copy If applicable If the child has held a Chinese visa before, a copy of the previous visa sticker may substitute for some additional documents. If the previous visa is in an old passport, include a copy of that passport's data page as well.
Custody/guardianship documents If applicable Required if the child is in the custody of one parent, has a legal guardian, or is in a non-standard family situation. Divorce decrees or custody agreements showing legal authority over the child's travel.
💡 Mandy's Checklist Tip

After you submit your service request at ChinaVisaMail.com/apply, Mandy sends you a personalized document checklist based on your specific family situation. This tells you exactly what to include in the envelope for each family member. Don't guess — wait for the checklist before you seal anything.

Children of Chinese Descent — Additional Requirements

If your US-born child has Chinese heritage — meaning one or both parents are or were Chinese citizens — the consulate requires additional documentation to establish the child's nationality status. This is one of the most frequently misunderstood parts of the China visa process for Chinese-American families.

First-Time Applicants (Child Has Never Had a Chinese Visa)

For a US-born child of Chinese descent applying for their first China visa, you need everything in the standard checklist above, plus:

  • Child's original birth certificate and a photocopy — confirming parentage
  • Copies of both parents' US passports — confirming the parents' citizenship status
  • Copies of both parents' green cards (if applicable) — confirming foreign permanent residency status at the time of the child's birth. This is what the consulate uses to determine whether the child requires a visa (parents had settled abroad) or a travel document (parents had not yet settled abroad)
  • If parents hold naturalization certificates — include copies, as these establish when the parent became a US citizen

Repeat Applicants (Child Has Had a Chinese Visa Before)

If your child has held a Chinese visa previously, the process is simpler. Instead of submitting the birth certificate and parental documents again, you can typically provide:

  • A copy of the most recent Chinese visa sticker in the child's passport
  • If the previous visa is in an expired/replaced passport: a copy of that passport's data page AND the China visa page

Keep copies of every China visa your child receives — they become the key to simplifying future applications.

✅ One Thing That Makes This Easier

ChinaVisaMail regularly handles applications for children of Chinese descent across all 14 Western US states, including bilingual Mandarin-speaking families. If your family situation is complex — mixed citizenship, parents who immigrated at different times, or children with previous Chinese travel documents — email Mandy before starting COVA. Getting this sorted out in advance prevents a rejected application later.

Parental Consent — When You Need It and What It Must Say

A notarized parental consent letter is one of the most searched and least clearly explained aspects of obtaining a China visa for a child. Here is when it is required and what it needs to contain.

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Both parents traveling with child

Parental consent letter generally not required. Both parents' signatures on the COVA form and printed application are sufficient. Both parents' passports will be mailed together with the child's.

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One parent traveling, one parent staying home

Notarized consent letter required from the non-traveling parent. Must authorize the traveling parent to take the child to China. Must include the trip dates, destination, and contact information.

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Child traveling with grandparents or other relatives

Notarized consent letter required from both parents. Must specifically name the adult responsible for the child in China and authorize that person to travel with and supervise the child.

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Child traveling alone (unaccompanied minor)

Notarized consent letter required from both parents. Additionally, airlines have their own unaccompanied minor policies and fees independent of visa requirements. Confirm with the airline separately.

What the Consent Letter Must Include

A parental consent letter for a China visa application should include:

  • Full legal name of the child
  • Child's date of birth and passport number
  • Full name of the non-consenting/non-traveling parent
  • Explicit statement of consent for the child to travel to China
  • Planned travel dates and destination in China
  • Name of the adult accompanying the child (if not both parents)
  • Contact information for the consenting parent
  • Notary public signature, stamp, and date

The letter must be notarized — a notary public's stamp and signature are required. Standard notary services are available at most UPS Stores, banks, and law offices for $5–25. Do not simply have the letter witnessed by a friend or signed without notarization — it will be rejected.

Completing COVA for a Child — What's Different

The COVA online application process for a child is largely the same as for an adult, with a few important differences:

Who Fills Out the Form

A parent or legal guardian completes the COVA application on the child's behalf. You use your own account to complete the child's separate application. All information entered must match the child's passport exactly — not the parent's information.

Who Signs the Form

Per official PRC guidance, visa applicants under 18 have their COVA form signed by their guardian. On the printed form, the parent or guardian signs in the standard signature location AND adds a handwritten signature in the section designated "For person filling in the application on the applicant's behalf." Both signatures are required.

Which Consulate to Select

Select the consulate for your state of residence — not the child's state of birth, not the state you're traveling from. The jurisdiction is based on where the family currently lives. Use our jurisdiction lookup tool to confirm your correct consulate if unsure.

⚠️ Common COVA Mistake for Children's Applications

Parents sometimes accidentally fill in their own information in fields meant for the child. Double-check every field — name, date of birth, passport number, gender — to confirm it matches the child's passport, not yours. A mismatch between the COVA form and the passport will result in rejection at the consulate.

Photo Requirements for Children — Including Babies and Infants

China visa photo requirements for children follow the same technical specifications as adults, with one important exception for very young infants.

China Visa Photo Specifications — All Ages
Printed size
33 × 48mm
Digital pixels
354–420 × 472–560px
Format
JPEG only
File size
40–120 KB
Background
Pure white only
Eyes
Open (infants under 1 yr: exempt)
Ears
Both fully visible
Expression
Neutral, mouth closed

Practical Tips for Children's Photos

  • Toddlers and young children: Getting a toddler to sit still with the correct expression on a white background is genuinely challenging. Go to a pharmacy photo studio (CVS, Walgreens) and specifically request a China visa photo at 33×48mm — they are experienced with wriggling children. Bring a distraction or toy and be prepared to take multiple shots.
  • Babies under 1 year: Babies are not required to have their eyes open — this is the only age-related photo exception. A common technique: lay the baby on a flat white sheet on the floor and photograph from directly above with even lighting. The face must still be fully visible and centered, with a white background visible around the head.
  • Ear visibility for children: Children with long hair must have their hair pinned back so both ears are fully visible. This requirement is enforced equally for children and adults.
  • No accessories: No headbands, bows, or hair accessories that might obscure the forehead or ears. Plain hair only.
  • No glasses: Same rule as adults — remove any eyewear, including children's glasses, before taking the photo.

Mailing Your Child's Passport — How It Works with ChinaVisaMail

One of the most reassuring things about the COVA mail-in system is that children do not need to appear at the consulate in person. A parent or authorized agent can submit the application on the child's behalf — which is exactly what ChinaVisaMail does.

For Family Applications

When applying for multiple family members together, all passports travel in the same envelope. Submit one service request at ChinaVisaMail.com/apply noting the number of applicants. Mandy reviews each passport individually and confirms what supporting documents are needed for each family member before you mail anything.

What to Include in the Envelope for a Child

When Mandy sends your reply with the mailing address and checklist, the child-specific items to include will be clearly listed. In most cases this includes:

  • The child's passport
  • The child's birth certificate (original or certified copy)
  • Notarized parental consent letter (if required for your situation)
  • Any other documents specified in Mandy's checklist

Do not include payment in the envelope. Payment is handled separately via Venmo, Zelle, check, or money order after Mandy confirms receipt.

Before You Mail — Photograph Everything

Before sealing the envelope, photograph every document going into it:

  • Child's passport photo page
  • Any existing China visa pages in the child's passport
  • Birth certificate (front and back)
  • Parental consent letter (if included)

Save these photos to both your phone and a cloud backup. If anything needs to be referenced during processing, these photos give you a complete record without needing to open any sealed envelope.

Processing Times for Children's Applications

Standard processing time for children's applications is the same as adults — with one note: first-time applications for children of Chinese descent may occasionally require additional review time at the consulate due to the nationality determination documents. Build in extra buffer time if your child's application involves the Chinese descent additional requirements for the first time.

Recommended planning timeline for families:

  • Standard service (mainland Western US): Begin 6–8 weeks before travel — allows for COVA review period (4–15 days) plus full mail-in processing (9–12 business days)
  • Express service: Begin 5–6 weeks before travel
  • Hawaii families: Add 1–2 extra weeks for longer USPS transit times — begin 8–10 weeks before travel
  • First-time children of Chinese descent: Add 1 extra week buffer for potential additional consulate review
⚠️ The #1 Family Travel Mistake

Starting the visa process for children too late. Parents often begin their own visa applications first, then remember their children need visas too — by which point the timeline is tight. Start all family members' applications at the same time, submit all passports together, and give yourself more runway than you think you need. Consulate holiday closures — including Chinese national holidays in October and Spring Festival in January/February — can add one to two weeks to processing time.

Special Situations — Adopted Children, Single-Parent Families, Divorced Parents

Adopted Children

For children who were adopted internationally, the consulate may require adoption documents in addition to standard requirements to establish the legal parent-child relationship. Bring certified copies of the adoption decree or final adoption order. If your child was adopted from China specifically, contact Mandy or the consulate before applying — additional considerations may apply regarding the child's original nationality status.

Single-Parent Families

If you are a single parent with sole legal custody, include certified documentation of sole custody or a death certificate if the other parent is deceased. This documentation replaces the consent letter from the non-present parent. A notarized statement from you affirming your sole custody status is often helpful to include proactively.

Divorced Parents — Shared Custody

If parents share custody, the non-traveling parent must provide a notarized consent letter even if a formal custody agreement exists. Include the custody agreement as a supporting document. If the custody agreement specifically includes provisions for international travel, include a copy of those relevant sections. If the non-traveling parent refuses to provide consent, consult a family law attorney — this is a legal matter beyond the scope of a visa service.

Children Traveling With Grandparents

This is a common scenario for Chinese-American families sending children to visit grandparents in China. Both parents must provide notarized consent letters naming the grandparents as the responsible adults in China. The grandparents' contact information in China should be included in the consent letter. Include a copy of the grandparents' Chinese ID or relevant identification as well.

Visa Types for Children Visiting China

China does not issue a separate "child visa" — children apply under the same visa categories as adults, with the visa type determined by the purpose of travel.

  • L Visa (Tourist / Family Visit) — The most common type for children visiting China with family or to see relatives. US citizen children typically qualify for the same 10-year multiple-entry L visa as adult US applicants, though the consulate makes the final determination on a case-by-case basis.
  • Q2 Visa (Short-Term Family Visit) — For children visiting a parent or close relative who is a Chinese citizen residing in China. Required documents include an invitation letter from the family member in China.
  • X1 / X2 Visa (Study) — For children enrolled in Chinese schools or language programs. Requires enrollment documentation from the institution.
  • S2 Visa (Accompanying Family) — For children accompanying a parent who holds a work or residence visa in China.

For most families making a tourist or grandparent-visit trip to China, the L visa is the correct type. The COVA form will ask you to select the visa type — if you are uncertain, email Mandy before submitting to confirm which category fits your child's travel purpose.

Frequently Asked Questions

For stays of 30 days or less for tourism, family visits, or business, US citizen children currently do not need a visa under China's temporary visa-free policy valid through December 31, 2026. For longer stays, for children of Chinese descent regardless of trip length, or for trips after the policy expires, a visa is required. A parent or guardian completes COVA on the child's behalf.
All children need: a valid US passport (6+ months validity, blank visa pages), a COVA application completed and signed by a parent or guardian, a compliant 33×48mm passport photo, and their birth certificate. If only one parent is traveling with the child, a notarized consent letter from the non-traveling parent is required. Children of Chinese descent applying for the first time need additional documents — see the Chinese descent section of this guide.
Yes. For applicants under 18, a parent or legal guardian completes the COVA online application on the child's behalf. On the printed form, the parent signs in the standard signature location and also in the "For person filling in the application on the applicant's behalf" section. The child does not need to be present for application submission.
It depends on the parents' status at the time of the child's birth. If one or both parents were Chinese citizens who had already settled abroad (held a US green card or citizenship) when the child was born, the child needs a Chinese visa. If both parents were Chinese citizens without foreign permanent residency at birth, the child may be considered a Chinese citizen and would need a Chinese travel document instead. Confirm before applying — contact Mandy or the appropriate consulate to determine which applies to your family.
Photo requirements for children are the same as adults: 33×48mm, JPEG, 40–120 KB, pure white background, both ears visible, neutral expression. The one exception: babies under one year old are not required to have their eyes open. For infants, a common technique is to lay the baby on a flat white sheet and photograph from above with even lighting. For toddlers, visit a CVS or Walgreens and specifically request China visa dimensions — they have experience photographing young children.
No. Children are generally not required to appear in person at the consulate. A parent or authorized agent can submit on their behalf. ChinaVisaMail's mail-in service covers children's applications — you mail your child's passport and supporting documents and Mandy handles consulate drop-off and pickup for the whole family.
A notarized consent letter is required when only one parent is traveling with the child, when the child travels with a non-parent guardian, or when the child travels alone. When both parents travel together, a consent letter is generally not required, but both parents' signatures on the COVA form are needed. The letter must be signed before a notary public — not simply witnessed. Notary services are available at most banks, UPS Stores, and law offices.
Yes. ChinaVisaMail handles China visa mail-in applications for minors across all 14 Western US states. Mail your child's passport together with their required supporting documents in the same envelope as your own passport. Submit one service request at ChinaVisaMail.com/apply noting all applicants. Mandy sends a personalized checklist for each family member before you mail anything.
For family tourism and visits to relatives, children typically receive an L visa (tourist/family visit). US citizen children generally qualify for the same 10-year multiple-entry L visa as adult US applicants, subject to the consulate's discretion. For visits to a parent residing in China, a Q2 visa may be more appropriate. The consulate makes the final determination on visa type and validity on a case-by-case basis.
For a first-time application, you need the child's birth certificate (original and copy) and copies of both parents' US passports and/or green cards to document their citizenship or permanent residency status at the time of the child's birth. For subsequent applications where the child has had a Chinese visa, a copy of the previous visa sticker may substitute for these documents. Always confirm current requirements with Mandy before submitting.
Apply at least 6–8 weeks before your travel date. The COVA online preliminary review takes 4–15 business days before you can mail the passport. After mailing, Standard mail-in processing takes 9–12 business days. Hawaii families should allow 8–10 weeks. First-time applications for children of Chinese descent may need extra time — allow a full 10 weeks to be safe.
Yes. ChinaVisaMail regularly processes family applications with parents and children together. Submit one service request at ChinaVisaMail.com/apply noting all applicants. All passports travel in one envelope. Mandy reviews each family member's application individually and provides a complete checklist for the whole family. Contact Mandy directly for families of three or more for customized guidance.

Ready to Apply for Your Child's China Visa by Mail?

ChinaVisaMail handles family applications across all 14 Western US states — parents and children together. Complete COVA for each family member, then mail all passports in one envelope. Mandy handles SF and LA Consulate drop-off, pickup, and tracked return for the whole family. All-inclusive from $449 per applicant, bilingual support, 1 business day reply.