Planning your dream trip to China in 2026? The good news is that the online application process through the China Online Visa Application system (COVA) has been streamlined, with reduced fees making it more accessible than ever. This comprehensive guide walks you through every detail as if you're sitting with a visa specialist, tailored for tourists seeking the L visa.
Who Needs a China Tourist eVisa in 2026?
Not everyone requires a visa anymore, thanks to expanded policies. Ordinary passport holders from over 40 countries, including Australia, New Zealand, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, the UK, Canada, Japan, South Korea, Brazil, Argentina, and many more, can enter China visa-free for up to 30 days for tourism, business, family visits, or transit until December 31, 2026. This unilateral policy, extended specifically for 2026, covers nations like Sweden (added recently), Russia (until September 2026), and Middle Eastern countries such as Saudi Arabia and the UAE. If you're from Melbourne, Australia, check your nationality first—Kiwis and Aussies qualify for this free entry without any application.
However, if your nationality isn't on the list (e.g., US citizens, Indians, Bangladeshis, or most South Asians), or you plan a stay longer than 30 days, multiple entries, or visits to restricted areas, you'll need the L tourist visa. The "eVisa" refers to the fully online COVA form filling and upload process, which generates a barcode for in-person submission—it's not 100% digital issuance yet, but it's free to start online and faster with 2026 updates like waived fingerprints for short-term visas.
Key Benefits of the 2026 Tourist eVisa Program
China's push to boost tourism means reduced visa fees extended through 2026—often called "practically free" compared to pre-2025 rates. For Australians applying in Melbourne, single-entry L visas dropped to around AU$56 (plus service fee), a 50% cut. Processing skips biometrics for many, and standard turnaround is 4 working days. Multiple-entry options up to 10 years are available for US/UK citizens at fixed low rates. Mobile-friendly COVA works seamlessly on phones, saving drafts for iterative filling.
Eligibility Criteria for China Tourist L Visa 2026
Your passport must have at least 6 months validity remaining and 2 blank pages. No minimum income proof is required, but strong ties to home (job, property) help approvals. Minors need parental consent; former Chinese citizens must submit old passports. Australians in Victoria apply via Melbourne CVASC—no nationality restrictions for submissions there. Group tours get easier processing at AU$24 per person.
Gather these before starting COVA—scans must be clear, under 5MB each.
For Melbourne applicants: Proof of residence like driver's license. No invitation needed if strong itinerary.
The core is free—log in at cova.cs.mfa.gov.cn or visaforchina.cn for your center (Melbourne: bio.visaforchina.cn/MEL3_EN).
1. Register and Access the Portal
Visit https://cova.cs.mfa.gov.cn. Select "Australia - Melbourne" (for VIC/TAS/WA/SA residents). Register with email/password—use Gmail for reliability. Verify via code. Log in, click "New Application."
2. Fill Personal Information Section
Enter full name (exactly as passport, no nicknames), DOB, nationality, passport number/expiry. Gender, marital status, occupation. Upload passport scan here. Tip: Use English or Chinese; auto-translates.
3. Select Visa Type and Travel Details
Choose "L" for tourist. Intended entry date, stay duration (30/60/90 days), addresses in China (hotels fine). Previous China visits? List all. Transit? Add onward ticket.
4. Work, Education, and Family Sections
Current job: Company, position, salary, duration. Education: Highest degree, school. Family: Spouse/parents' details, even if unrelated—helps security checks. Be honest; inconsistencies flag rejections.
5. Previous Travel and Other Info
List all countries visited last 10 years. Criminal record? Declare truthfully (minor issues ok if disclosed). COVID history if asked (rare in 2026).
6. Review, Upload, and Submit Online
Preview all 9 pages. Upload photo/documents. Confirm fee (shows 0 for online part). Hit "Submit"—get Application ID and barcode PDF. Save ID religiously. Status: "Submitted Successfully."
Print the confirmation page (with barcode)—your lifeline.
7. Book Appointment at Melbourne CVASC
Post-submission, book at bio.visaforchina.cn/MEL3_EN. Slots fill fast—book 4-6 weeks ahead. Address: Ground Floor, 570 St Kilda Rd, Melbourne VIC 3004. Hours: Mon-Fri 9AM-3PM, check holidays.
8. Attend Submission and Pay
Arrive 15 mins early with: Passport original, printed barcode page, all docs originals + copies. No biometrics needed for most L visas in 2026. Pay fees (cash/card): AU$56 single-entry + AU$40 service fee. Get receipt.
9. Track and Collect
Track via portal with ID. Standard: 4 days; express +AU$30 (2 days). Collect in-person or courier (extra fee). Passport returned with visa sticker—valid 30-90 days entry, stay as approved.
Reduced through Dec 31, 2026:
Processing: Regular 4-5 days; peak seasons (summer) 7-10. 98% approval if docs perfect.
Common Pitfalls and Pro Tips from a Visa Expert
Over 2 million tourists used this in 2025; 2026 expects more with Olympics buzz.
Fee waivers extended, fingerprint-free for L visas, mobile COVA v2.0 with AI checks. Hainan 30-day visa-free for all nationalities. Shanghai/Beijing transit without visa up to 144/240 hours.
Final Checklist Before Applying
You're set for hassle-free China adventures—Great Wall hikes, panda cuddles, neon Shanghai nights. Safe travels!