Singapore to Mainland China: Complete Entry Guide for Foreigners (2026)

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Singapore to Mainland China: Complete Entry Guide for Foreigners (2026)

Last Updated: April 2026 | Reading Time: 8 min

Quick Summary: Singapore is one of the best-connected cities to mainland China — direct flights to 30+ Chinese cities in 3–6 hours. Singapore citizens enter China visa-free for 30 days. Most other nationalities need a Chinese visa, which can be obtained efficiently at the Chinese Embassy or CVASC in Singapore (4–7 business days). No land or sea connection to mainland China — flights only.


Key Facts Before You Travel

  • No land or ferry route to mainland China from Singapore — air travel only
  • Singapore Changi Airport (SIN) connects directly to 30+ Chinese cities
  • Singapore citizens: 30-day visa-free entry to mainland China
  • Most other nationalities: Require a Chinese visa — apply in Singapore before departure
  • Entry into mainland China is separate from any Singapore visa — your Singapore visa or PR status does not affect your China entry rights

Do You Need a Visa?

Singapore Citizens: Visa-Free

Singapore passport holders enjoy 30-day visa-free entry to mainland China. No application needed — present your Singapore passport at Chinese immigration on arrival.

Conditions:

  • Passport valid for 6+ months beyond your intended stay
  • Purpose: tourism, business visits, transit, visiting family
  • Does NOT allow working in China

Other Nationalities Flying from Singapore

Your China entry requirements depend on your passport nationality, not where you’re flying from.

Currently visa-free for mainland China (selected examples):

NationalityVisa-Free Days
Singapore30 days
Most EU countries (France, Germany, Italy, Spain, etc.)30 days
Australia, New Zealand30 days
Brazil, Argentina, Mexico15–30 days
Malaysia, Thailand15–30 days
UAE, Saudi Arabia30 days

Require a visa:

  • USA, Canada, UK, India, and many others — must apply before travel

Always verify current status at the Chinese Embassy in Singapore website or the CVASC before booking flights. Visa-free policies change.


Getting a China Visa in Singapore

If your nationality requires a visa, Singapore is a convenient place to apply.

Chinese Visa Application Service Center (CVASC) Singapore

Address: 390 Orchard Road, Palais Renaissance, #04-01
Hours: Monday–Friday, 9:00am–3:00pm (submission), collection 4:00–5:00pm
Website: visaforchina.cn

Processing Times

ServiceTimeApproximate Fee (SGD)
Regular4–7 business daysS$30–60
Express2–3 business daysS$50–90
Rush (1 day)Next business dayS$80–120

Fees vary by nationality due to reciprocal policies. US citizens typically pay more.

What You Need

  1. Completed application form (fill online at visaforchina.cn, print and sign)
  2. Passport (original, valid 6+ months, at least 2 blank pages)
  3. Copy of passport bio page
  4. 1 passport-size photo (white background, 33×48mm)
  5. Proof of Singapore residency (EP, DP, PR card, or long-term pass)
  6. Flight confirmation (to and from China)
  7. Hotel booking or invitation letter
  8. Bank statement (last 3 months)

Visa Types to Apply For

Tourist (L visa): For tourism, visiting friends, short stays. Most applicants get this.

  • Single-entry, 30 days stay: Standard grant
  • Double-entry, 60 days: Request this if you plan to leave and re-enter China

Business (M visa): For business meetings, trade visits. Requires invitation letter from a Chinese company.

Work (Z visa): If you have a job offer in China. Employer initiates the process.

See full visa guide: China Visa Types Guide


Flights: Singapore to Mainland China

Direct Routes from Changi Airport (SIN)

Singapore has extensive direct connections to China:

DestinationFlight TimeAirlinesFrequency
Shanghai Pudong (PVG)~5.5 hrsSingapore Airlines, China Eastern, ScootMultiple daily
Beijing Capital (PEK) / Daxing (PKX)~5.5 hrsSingapore Airlines, Air China, ScootMultiple daily
Guangzhou (CAN)~3.5 hrsChina Southern, Singapore Airlines, ScootMultiple daily
Shenzhen (SZX)~3.5 hrsChina Southern, Shenzhen AirlinesDaily
Wuhan (WUH)~4 hrsChina Eastern, Air ChinaDaily
Chengdu (CTU)~4.5 hrsSichuan Airlines, Singapore AirlinesDaily
Chongqing (CKG)~4.5 hrsChongqing Airlines, Singapore AirlinesDaily
Hangzhou (HGH)~5 hrsChina EasternDaily
Kunming (KMG)~3.5 hrsChina EasternDaily
Xiamen (XMN)~3 hrsXiamen Air, Singapore AirlinesDaily
Nanjing (NKG)~5 hrsChina EasternSeveral weekly

Airlines and What to Expect

Singapore Airlines: Premium service, full-service meals, reliable. Higher price point.

Scoot (SQ’s budget arm): Budget option, point-to-point, buy extras (meals, baggage) separately. Good value for short trips with carry-on only.

China Eastern / China Southern / Air China: Chinese carriers, full-service, competitive pricing. English-language staff varies by route.

Xiamen Air / Sichuan Airlines / Chongqing Airlines: Regional Chinese carriers. Reliable but minimal English service. Fine for experienced travelers.

Booking Tips

Where to book:

  • Trip.com: Best for comparing options with English interface, international card payment
  • Singapore Airlines / Scoot direct: Best prices for their own flights
  • Google Flights: Price comparison, then book on Trip.com or airline direct
  • Skyscanner: Aggregator, good for finding cheaper options

Best booking timing:

  • Regular travel: 3–4 weeks ahead for good economy fares
  • Golden Week (Oct 1–7): 60+ days ahead
  • Chinese New Year (Jan/Feb): 90+ days ahead

Budget flight example: Singapore → Guangzhou on Scoot from S$80–150 one way (booking early, carry-on only)

Changi Airport Tips

  • Check-in opens 3 hours before departure for most China flights
  • Most China flights depart from Terminals 1, 2, or 3 (T4 for some budget carriers)
  • SG immigration exit is fast with Singapore passport (eGates available)
  • Currency exchange at Changi is convenient but rates are slightly worse than money changers in town — exchange enough RMB before heading to the airport

Arriving in China: The Immigration Process

At the Chinese Airport

On the plane: Some airlines distribute arrival/departure cards. Fill these out in advance if given one (name, passport number, flight number, address in China, purpose of visit). Many airports have moved to electronic systems — you may not receive a paper card.

Step 1: Follow signs to 入境 (Entry/Arrivals)

All major Chinese airports have clear English and Chinese signage. Follow 入境/Arrivals → 护照检验 (Passport Control).

Step 2: Choose the right lane

  • 外籍旅客 / Foreigners: Your lane — look for this sign
  • 中国公民 / Chinese citizens: Not your lane

Step 3: At the immigration counter

Hand the officer:

  • Passport open to your visa page (or bio page if visa-free)
  • Arrival card if you filled one out

The officer will:

  • Check your visa/visa-free eligibility
  • Take your fingerprints (both index fingers on the scanner)
  • Take your photo
  • Stamp your passport with entry date and permitted duration

Duration stamp: Check this carefully. It shows how long you can stay. “30D” means 30 days from entry date.

Step 4: Collect your luggage

Baggage claim is immediately after immigration. Check the flight information boards for your carousel number.

Step 5: Customs

Green channel (nothing to declare) for most travelers. Red channel if you’re carrying items above duty-free limits:

  • Tobacco: 400 cigarettes
  • Alcohol: 1.5 liters over 12% ABV
  • Currency: Cash over US$5,000 equivalent must be declared

Typical Processing Times

AirportNon-peakPeak periods
Shanghai Pudong15–30 min45–90 min
Beijing20–40 min60–120 min
Guangzhou15–25 min30–60 min
Wuhan10–20 min25–45 min
Smaller airports10–15 min20–30 min

First Steps After Landing

1. Get Connected

Your Singapore SIM will work in China at international roaming rates. For extended stays, get a local SIM or activate an eSIM.

At the airport: China Mobile, China Unicom, and China Telecom all have counters in arrivals halls. You can get a SIM in 15 minutes with your passport.

See guide: SIM Card for Foreigners in China

2. Turn On Your VPN

Do this before you try to open Google, WhatsApp, or Instagram. All are blocked in mainland China the moment you land. Your Singapore VPN subscription works — just connect to a server (Hong Kong or Taiwan for fastest speeds).

See guide: VPN for China 2026

3. Set Up Mobile Payments

WeChat Pay and Alipay are essential within hours of arrival. Both accept international Visa/Mastercard if you haven’t set up a Chinese bank account yet.

See guides: WeChat for Foreigners | Alipay for Foreigners

4. Get to Your Destination

Most major Chinese airports have direct metro/rail connections to the city center:

AirportCity ConnectionTimeCost
Shanghai Pudong (PVG)Maglev → metro8 min + 20 min¥55 + ¥4
Beijing Capital (PEK)Airport Express20–35 min¥25
Guangzhou (CAN)Metro Line 340 min¥8
Wuhan Tianhe (WUH)Metro Line 250–60 min¥7

DiDi (ride-hailing) is available from all airports — set up the app before arrival or use the international version.

5. Police Registration (if staying privately)

If you’re staying in a private apartment or with friends — not a hotel — register with local police within 24 hours. Hotels handle this automatically.


Singapore vs. Hong Kong as Entry Point to China

If you have the option to fly via Hong Kong or directly from Singapore:

FactorVia Hong KongDirect from Singapore
Visa applicationCVASC HK (faster, 1-day urgent)CVASC Singapore (4–7 days)
Flight timeHK → Shenzhen by MTR (50 min)Direct flights 3.5–5.5 hrs
CostSIN→HK + border crossingOften cheaper direct
ConvenienceMore options, flexibleSimpler, fewer connections

Verdict: Fly direct from Singapore for most destinations. Use the HK route if you need a last-minute visa (1-day processing at CVASC HK) or if visiting Shenzhen/Guangdong area where HK land border is faster.


FAQ

Singapore citizens: Do I need anything other than my passport?

No. Singapore passport + 30-day visa-free. No application, no fee, no form to fill before travel. Just show up.

Can I extend my stay once inside China?

Yes. Visit the local Entry-Exit Administration Bureau (出入境管理局) before your permitted duration expires. Tourist visa extensions of 30 days are generally possible.

What’s the baggage allowance on flights from Singapore to China?

Varies by airline and fare class. Check-in luggage typically 20–23kg economy on full-service carriers. Scoot and budget airlines: carry-on only unless you buy a baggage add-on (usually 20kg for ~S$30–50).

Can I bring food from Singapore into China?

Restricted items: Fresh fruits, vegetables, meat products are generally not allowed. Packaged commercial food products are usually fine. Declare anything you’re unsure about at customs.

Do I need travel insurance?

Highly recommended. Singapore’s MediShield/Medisave does not cover you in China. Buy travel insurance covering medical evacuation — medical bills at international hospitals in China can reach SGD 20,000+ for a serious incident without insurance.

See guide: China Travel Insurance Guide



Last Updated: April 8, 2026