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Is it visa-free to go to Dubai with an Australian passport?

A few days ago, the official WeChat account leaked the news that "China passport is officially visa-free". However, the Australian Visa Application Center told Chengdu Business Daily that China residents still need to submit visa applications to Australia.

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The passport of the People's Republic of China is a document for People's Republic of China (PRC) citizens to enter and leave the country and prove their nationality and identity abroad. Passports of the People's Republic of China are divided into diplomatic passports, official passports, ordinary passports and SAR passports. Official passports are divided into official passports and ordinary official passports. SAR passports are divided into Hong Kong SAR passports and Macao SAR passports. Diplomatic passports, official passports and ordinary official passports are collectively called "official passports", and ordinary passports are commonly called "personal passports".

China citizens with ordinary passports do not need to apply for visas in China to travel to the following countries and regions.

China citizens are granted visa-free entry unilaterally.

List of countries or regions that unilaterally allow visa-free entry for China citizens (12)

Asia (2): Indonesia, South Korea (Jeju Island and other places)

Africa (1): French reunion island

America (6): Antigua and Barbuda, Haiti, South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands (British Overseas Territories), Turks and Caicos Islands (British Overseas Territories), Jamaica and Dominica.

Oceania (3): American Northern Mariana Islands (Saipan, etc.). ), Samoa and French Polynesia [2-3]?

Unilaterally allowing China citizens to apply for visas on arrival.

List of countries and regions that unilaterally allow China citizens to apply for visas on arrival (34)

Asia (18): UAE, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Timor-Leste, Laos, Lebanon, Maldives, Myanmar, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Turkmenistan, Brunei, Iran, Jordan, Vietnam, Cambodia and Bangladesh.

Africa (1 1): Egypt, Togo, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Comoros, C? te d 'Ivoire, Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritania, Tanzania and Uganda.

America (2): Guyana, St. Helena (British Overseas Territory)

Oceania (3): Palau, Tuvalu, Vanuatu [3]?

Visa-free ordinary passports with China.

San Marino [4], Seychelles [4], Mauritius [5], Bahamas [2], Fiji [6], Grenada [7] and Ecuador.

Visa-free, relevant requirements of landing visa countries.

More than 50 destinations have different air tickets, cash, ports and deadlines. San Marino, for example, is surrounded by Italian territory, although it is visa-free to China. To go there, you need to enter Italy first, but in fact you need to apply for a visa.

Some designated must enter the country from the international airport, such as Jeju Island in South Korea, and need to take an international flight with a stay period of 30 days; Maldives applies for entry registration card, return or third-country air ticket, hotel order or travel permit from Male International Airport, valid for 30 days. Some require invitations or letters of guarantee. For example, in Brunei, with the visa approval of the local travel agency approved in advance by the Brunei Immigration Bureau, the stay period is 14 days.

In addition, although some countries and regions allow China tourists to "landing visa", it does not mean that citizens with private passports can leave the country by purchasing air tickets. According to China's entry and exit laws and regulations, if you want to travel to some landing visa countries, you must join a tour group organized by a qualified travel agency, such as Thailand. If Chinese mainland citizens do not complete their entry visas to Thailand in advance in China, they must join a tour group if they need to apply for visas on arrival at their destination.

At the same time, every country has different requirements for China citizens to go through entry formalities on the spot after arriving at the border of the destination country. The most common situation is that the immigration offices in most countries have the right to check the amount of cash carried by foreign tourists, and the state has the right to repatriate tourists who do not have enough travel reserve funds within the scope recognized by the state.