China urges easing of travel barriers as Apec tourism ministers meet in Macau
At the 13th Apec tourism ministerial meeting in Macau, China's Minister of Culture and Tourism, Sun Yeli, announced China's commitment to reducing travel barriers for international tourists. Beijing plans to enhance cooperation with other countries to streamline processes such as visa exemptions, customs clearance, cross-border payments, and tax refunds.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedAt the 13th Apec tourism ministerial meeting in Macau, China's Minister of Culture and Tourism, Sun Yeli, announced China's commitment to reducing travel barriers for international tourists. Beijing plans to enhance cooperation with other countries to streamline processes such as visa exemptions, customs clearance, cross-border payments, and tax refunds. Sun emphasized the importance of tourism as a regional economic driver and highlighted "high-quality development of cultural tourism" as a focus in China's 2026-30 five-year plan. The minister stated China's willingness to align policies and introduce measures to improve tourism facilitation. Currently, China has mutual visa exemption agreements with 29 countries and offers visa-free entry to travelers from 48 nations.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedSixty-five entry ports are covered under the 240-hour visa-free transit policy.
By the end of last year, China had established mutual visa exemption agreements with 29 countries and unilaterally offered visa-free entry to travellers from 48 countries.
The high-quality development of cultural tourism is a key area in China's latest five-year blueprint covering 2026-30.
China's minister of culture and tourism called for closer cooperation within the Apec community to promote tourism as a regional economic driver.
China will strengthen coordination with other countries to remove bureaucratic barriers and make travel more convenient for international tourists.