Visa travel questions | |
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Jul 15, 2007 06:14 | |
| Hello All, I am getting ready to return to China in a couple of months, and I have some new questions. This time, I think I want to fly into Hong Kong, stay there for a few days, then go to Zhuhai, on to Shenzhen, Guangzhou, northward to Wuhan, Xiangfan, back down to Zhuhai, and finally back to Hong Kong to catch my plane back to the US. If I am reading my information correctly, I can go to Hong Kong for up to 90 days without a visa. So, my question is, if I go to Hong Kong first, then enter mainland China on my tourist visa, spend some time in the cities I have listed, and then return to Hong Kong, will there be any visa troubles? I know I can only enter mainland China once on my single entry visa, but can I return to Hong Kong to catch my plane back to America? One more question. I understand that Hong Kong, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou are considered high risk areas for malaria and dengue fever. Should I get preventive medications for these before going to those places? Thank you all for your help. |
Jul 17, 2007 03:27 | |
| If you travel according to your schedule mentioned, there is no visa problem. Be sure it is in the valid period of your tourist visa. It seems to me you will travel a lot and it takes some days... When you return to HK for the plane to US, you don't need to re-entre China mainland (it is exit), thus you don't need another entry of the visa. |
Jul 17, 2007 04:40 | |
| Yes there is some risk of malaria and dengue. I am not taking any medication and I don't think many expats do. I have not had much trouble with mosquities but a lot of trouble with small flying insects smaller than a pinhead, strewth, they itch for days, create a hard centre and one went bad...better now! Use personal insect spray and buy some room aerosol and u can reduce the risks. You can also follow the military standard, wear long shirt and trousers from dusk. |
Sep 13, 2007 13:16 | |
| Hello All, I want to go to Chine in 3 weks for 2 weeks. I wish also to visint Hong Kong while I am there. Do I need any extra visa? Thank you for reply. Chris. |
Sep 13, 2007 13:54 | |
| I think that if you go to Mainland China, then HK, and then back into Mainland China for your return flight out, that is two entries into Mainland China, so you need a double entry visa, or else to get another single entry visa while you are in HK for your return leg. |
Sep 14, 2007 12:27 | |
| hello, my name is chris, i also want to go to china via hong kong. i ve found your post interesting so i want to ask you if there is a train service from hong kong to shanghai. how long it takes and how much it costs? how frequent it is? i am polish now in ireland. can you also tell me if i have to apply for both visas in ireland here, or i can apply for visa to china in hong kong. how long i will have to wait? i will appreciate your help. have a good time in china. |
Jan 24, 2008 17:52 | |
| When you exit to Malaysia that is the end of your visa so you will need to get a new one before coming to mainland China. To come to Gz tyou will need to get a visa, presumably a tourist visa in Malaysia or Thailand. You have no problems going to HK (for most nationalities) and you can easily buy a train ticket at Guanzhou East station. In HK you can aply for a Z visa (you cannot change a tourist visa to a Z (working visa). You will need the associated paperwork from your prospective employer - they should know what is required and send it to you. Wouldn't it be easier to have your employer send the paperwork to Bangkok and apply for the Z visa there? Or maybe you want to get the paperwork from the employer in Gz yourself? If you are unsure about Z visa requirements there are several recent threads on the subject. One by JimmyB is a copy of the regulations. |
Jul 24, 2008 06:57 | |
| You don't mention when you will be planning on applying for the visa? If it is after September then you might be ok. I am a British citizen and have got Chinese visa in other countries before. You just need to show proof that you have been out of your own country for more than 90 days (the validity of most standard L visas), meaning it would be impossible for you to do a 12 month trip around the world and visit China in the second half of that trip. However, all of this was before the Olympics restrictions, so I don't know how that will affect you. One thing is for sure, it won't go in your favour? Oh there is another thing for sure - anything you find on a Chinese embassy website won't be the true information - it is just there to confuse you and lead you up the wrong paths. |
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