China Residence Permit for Foreigners: How to Apply and Extend (2026)
Last Updated: April 2026 | Reading Time: 10 min
Quick Summary: If you’re staying in China for more than 180 days, you need a Residence Permit (居留许可, jūliú xǔkě) — not a visa. It replaces your entry visa and allows long-term legal stay. This guide covers who needs one, how to apply, required documents, and how to extend it before expiry.
Visa vs. Residence Permit: What’s the Difference?
Many foreigners confuse visas and residence permits. They serve different purposes:
| Visa | Residence Permit | |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Enter China | Stay in China long-term |
| Issued by | Chinese embassy/consulate abroad | Local Public Security Bureau (PSB) in China |
| Duration | Usually 30–90 days per entry | 1–5 years |
| Who needs it | All foreign visitors | Anyone staying 180+ consecutive days |
| Required documents | Passport, application | Passport + employment/study/family documents |
| Where to apply | Before you arrive | After you arrive in China |
Key point: Your visa gets you into China. Your residence permit lets you stay legally beyond the visa period and is what you use for daily life (bank accounts, SIM cards, health checks, etc.).
Types of Residence Permits
China issues residence permits in several categories based on your reason for staying:
| Permit Type | Who It’s For | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Work (工作类) | Foreign employees with a work permit | 1–2 years (renewable) |
| Study (学习类) | Full-time students at Chinese schools/universities | 1 year (renewable) |
| Family Reunion (家庭团聚类) | Spouses/children of Chinese citizens or permit holders | 1–2 years |
| Permanent Residence (永久居留) | Long-term qualified residents | 5–10 years |
| Other (其他类) | Journalists, diplomats, retirees | Varies |
This guide focuses on the most common: Work and Study permits, which cover the majority of expats.
Who Needs a Residence Permit?
You need a residence permit if any of the following apply:
- You’re staying in China for more than 180 days
- You’re working for a Chinese or foreign company in China
- You’re studying full-time at a Chinese educational institution
- You’re joining a spouse or parent who is a Chinese citizen or permit holder
You don’t need a residence permit if:
- You’re visiting for less than 180 days on a tourist/business visa
- You’re transiting through China on a visa-free transit pass
Documents Required
For All Applicants
- Passport (valid for at least 6 months beyond your intended stay)
- Current visa (must still be valid when you apply)
- Completed application form (Application Form for Foreigners’ Residence in China — available at the PSB office)
- Passport photo (standard size, white background — bring 4–6 copies)
- Residence registration certificate — proof you’ve registered with local police (see our Police Registration Guide)
- Application fee payment
Additional Documents by Permit Type
Work Permit Applicants:
- Foreign Expert Certificate (外国专家证) OR Work Permit (外国人工作许可证)
- Employment contract (labor contract with your employer)
- Letter from your employer on company letterhead
- Business license copy of your employer (营业执照)
Student Applicants:
- Admission notice (录取通知书) from your school
- JW201 or JW202 form (issued by your school)
- Physical examination record (体检表) — done at a designated hospital
- Study visa or existing permit
Family Reunion:
- Marriage certificate (if joining a spouse) — may need official translation and notarization
- Birth certificate (if joining a parent)
- Proof of relationship documents
- Spouse/parent’s valid residence permit or Chinese ID
Where to Apply
Applications are submitted at the Exit-Entry Administration Bureau of your local Public Security Bureau (PSB). This is sometimes also called the “Foreigner Police” or 出入境管理局 (chūrùjìng guǎnlǐjú).
In Wuhan:
| Office | Address | Working Hours |
|---|---|---|
| Wuhan PSB Exit-Entry Administration | 206 Jianghan North Road, Jianghan District (江汉区江汉北路206号) | Mon–Fri 8:30am–12:00pm, 2:00pm–5:30pm |
| Wuchang Branch | 1 Zhongbei Road, Wuchang District (武昌区中北路1号) | Mon–Fri 9:00am–5:00pm |
Tips:
- Arrive early — queues form before opening time
- Some offices allow online appointments (check Wuhan PSB WeChat official account: 武汉市公安局)
- Bring all originals AND photocopies of every document
The Application Process
Step 1: Gather Documents (1–2 weeks before applying)
Start collecting documents early. Employment contracts and school documents often take time to obtain. The physical examination (if required) must be done at a designated hospital — ask your employer or school which one.
Step 2: Book an Appointment (Optional but Recommended)
Some PSB offices allow appointment booking via WeChat. Search for the official WeChat account of your local PSB and look for appointment options. Walk-ins are accepted but wait times can be 2–4 hours.
Step 3: Submit Your Application
At the PSB office:
- Take a queue number at the reception
- When called, submit all documents to the officer
- Officer will review documents — if anything is missing, you’ll be asked to return
- If complete, you’ll receive a receipt slip with a collection date
- Pay the fee (see below)
Step 4: Wait for Processing
Standard processing time: 5–15 business days
Expedited processing (加急): Available at some offices for additional fee — reduces to 2–5 business days.
Step 5: Collect Your Permit
Return on the date shown on your receipt with your passport and receipt slip. Your passport will be returned with the residence permit sticker inside.
Fees
| Permit Duration | Standard Fee |
|---|---|
| Less than 1 year | ¥400 ($56) |
| 1 year | ¥400 ($56) |
| More than 1 year | ¥800 ($112) |
Additional fees may apply for expedited processing (¥200–400 extra).
How to Extend Your Residence Permit
You must apply to extend before your current permit expires — overstaying is a serious violation with significant fines.
When to Apply
- Start the extension process at least 30 days before expiry
- Some PSB offices recommend 45–60 days in advance (processing can take longer than expected)
Extension Documents
- Same base documents as original application
- Current residence permit (the one being extended)
- Updated employment contract or enrollment confirmation
- Updated employer letter
- Physical examination may be required again (check with your PSB office)
Extension Process
The process is the same as the original application — submit at PSB, wait 5–15 days, collect.
Duration of extension: Usually matches the duration of your employment contract or school enrollment, up to 2 years per extension.
What Happens If You Overstay
Overstaying your residence permit is treated seriously in China:
| Overstay Duration | Penalty |
|---|---|
| 1–10 days | Warning or fine up to ¥500 |
| 11–30 days | Fine ¥500–2,000 |
| 31+ days | Fine ¥2,000–10,000 + possible detention |
| Serious overstay | Deportation + entry ban (1–10 years) |
There is no grace period. The day your permit expires, you are out of status. Apply to extend well in advance.
Police Registration (Must Do Within 24 Hours of Arrival)
Before you can apply for a residence permit, you must be registered with local police. This is required within 24 hours of arriving at a new address.
- At a hotel: The hotel registers you automatically
- At a rented apartment: You must go to the local police station (派出所) with your landlord
Failure to register can result in fines and complications with your residence permit application. See our Police Registration in Wuhan guide for step-by-step instructions.
Physical Examination (Health Check)
Some residence permit applications require a physical examination done at a PSB-designated hospital. This is typically required for:
- First-time work permit holders
- Some study permit applicants
- Permanent residence applicants
What the exam includes:
- Blood tests (HIV, syphilis, hepatitis B)
- Chest X-ray
- Basic physical check (height, weight, blood pressure)
- ECG (sometimes)
Cost: ¥350–600 ($50–85) depending on hospital and tests required
In Wuhan: The designated examination hospitals are specified by the Wuhan PSB — your employer or school will tell you which one to use. Results are typically ready in 3–5 business days.
Practical Tips
Prepare photocopies of everything. Chinese government offices require copies of every document you submit. Bring at least 2 copies of each.
Keep your documents organized. Use a folder or envelope. Officers process many applications and appreciate organized submissions.
Bring a Chinese speaker if possible. PSB staff are professional but English is not guaranteed. Your employer’s HR department or a Chinese colleague can be invaluable.
Don’t travel internationally near expiry. If your permit expires while you’re abroad, re-entry can be complicated. Renew before taking international trips.
Keep your old permits. Even expired residence permits can be useful for proving your history in China.
Understand your employment relationship. Your residence permit is tied to your employer. If you change jobs, you typically need to update your permit within 10 days.
FAQ
Can I work while on a student residence permit?
No, not without a separate work permit. Student permits allow study only. Part-time work requires employer sponsorship and a separate permit — even for internships.
What if my application is rejected?
PSB officers will explain the reason (usually missing documents). You can reapply once you have the required materials. Rejection is rarely final — it usually means something is missing or incorrect.
Can I travel outside China on a residence permit?
Yes, but you need a re-entry visa if your original entry visa has expired. The residence permit itself is not a re-entry document. Check with your PSB office before international travel.
Do I need to re-register with police every time I move?
Yes. Every time you change your residential address in China, you must re-register with the local police within 24 hours (if renting privately). Hotels do this automatically.
Can freelancers or remote workers get a residence permit?
This is complex. China does not currently have a “digital nomad visa.” Freelancers typically enter on tourist visas and must leave before each visa expires. Some countries’ citizens qualify for visa-free entry for up to 30 days. Long-term legal stay requires employer sponsorship.
Is the process different in different cities?
Yes, slightly. Each city’s PSB has its own procedures, required documents, and processing times. The information in this guide reflects Wuhan and general practice — verify specifics with your local PSB or employer’s HR.
Related Guides
- Police Registration for Foreigners in Wuhan — Required before applying
- Healthcare Costs for Foreigners — Health check costs
- First Week in China Checklist — Everything to do when you arrive
- How to Pay in China — For paying PSB fees
This guide is for informational purposes only. Immigration rules change frequently. Always verify current requirements with your local PSB office or your employer’s HR/legal team before applying.
Last Updated: April 8, 2026