How to Obtain China’s Tourism License for Foreign Companies: 2026 Guide
China’s tourism sector is experiencing a powerful resurgence in 2025–2026. International arrivals reached an estimated 65 million in 2025, up 40% from 2024, driven by expanded visa-free policies, a growing middle class across Asia, and China’s aggressive push to reclaim its position as the world’s top travel destination. For foreign companies — whether tour operators, travel technology firms, hospitality groups, or destination management companies — obtaining the correct tourism license is the essential first step to legally operating in this booming market. This comprehensive 2026 guide covers every aspect of the licensing process for foreign-invested enterprises (FIEs).
The Tourism Licensing Framework in China
China’s tourism industry is regulated under a layered legal framework. The cornerstone is the Tourism Law of the People’s Republic of China (2013, with 2018 amendments), which sets the basic principles for travel service operations. This is supplemented by the Regulations on Travel Agencies (promulgated by the State Council) and a series of administrative measures from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism (MCT). For foreign investors, additional restrictions apply under the Foreign Investment Law (2020) and the Catalogue of Industries for Encouraging Foreign Investment (2022 edition, with 2024–2025 supplementary updates).
The regulatory bodies you will interact with include:
- Ministry of Culture and Tourism (MCT) — the national-level authority setting tourism policy and licensing standards
- Provincial/Municipal Culture and Tourism Bureaus — the local bodies that process license applications and conduct inspections
- State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) — responsible for company registration and business scope approval
- Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM) — handles foreign investment filing and approval where required
- Public Security Bureau (PSB) — involved in hotel and accommodation-related tourism operations
Types of Tourism Licenses Available to Foreign Companies
Foreign companies can apply for several categories of tourism-related licenses, each permitting a different scope of business activity:
| License Type | Scope of Business | Foreign Eligibility | Registered Capital (Min.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Inbound Travel Agency License | Organizing tours for overseas visitors coming to China | ✅ Open to FIEs | RMB 500,000–1,500,000 |
| Domestic Travel Agency License | Organizing tours within China for domestic travelers | ⚠️ Conditional — joint venture required in some cities | RMB 300,000–800,000 |
| Outbound Travel Agency License | Organizing tours for Chinese citizens traveling abroad | ❌ Restricted to domestic Chinese companies | N/A |
| Online Travel Platform (OTA) License | Online booking, travel aggregation, and digital travel services | ✅ Open to FIEs (requires ICP license) | RMB 1,000,000–3,000,000 |
| Tourism Consulting License | Travel advisory, planning, and research services (non-booking) | ✅ Freely available | RMB 100,000–300,000 |
| Hotel / Hospitality Permit | Operating accommodation and hospitality services | ⚠️ Requires Hotel Industry Special Permit + tourism license | Variable |
Step-by-Step Application Process for 2026
Step 1: Choose Your Business Structure and Location
The recommended legal vehicle for foreign tourism companies is a Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE) registered as a limited liability company. In 2026, several free trade zones (FTZs) — including Shanghai, Hainan, Guangdong, Tianjin, and Sichuan — offer relaxed capital requirements and expedited processing for tourism businesses. Hainan’s free trade port policies are particularly attractive, offering a 15% corporate income tax rate for encouraged tourism enterprises, compared to the standard 25%.
When choosing your city of registration, consider the following:
- Shanghai FTZ: Streamlined 15-working-day processing, strong international tourism ecosystem, ideal for inbound tour operators
- Hainan: Most favorable tax regime, lower capital requirements, excellent for resort and leisure tourism businesses
- Shenzhen: Fast digital processing, ideal for travel technology startups and OTAs
- Beijing: Strictest review but strategic location for government-facing cultural exchange tourism
- Chengdu / Xi’an: Growing international visitor numbers, supportive local policies, lower operating costs
Step 2: Company Name Pre-Approval
Submit 3–5 proposed company names to the local SAMR office. Each name must follow the format: [Administrative Region] + [Distinctive Name] + [Industry: “Travel” or “Tourism”] + [Company Type: “Co., Ltd.”]. This step takes 3–5 working days. In 2026, 22 provinces now accept online name pre-approval through the National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System.
Step 3: Prepare Your Documentation Package
The tourism license application requires a comprehensive dossier:
- Articles of Association — notarized and apostilled (or Chinese-consulate legalized, depending on your home country)
- Feasibility Study Report — detailing the business plan, target market analysis, revenue projections, and operational strategy for the Chinese market
- Legal Representative Identification — passport copy and a recent photograph of the appointed legal representative
- Shareholder Documents — corporate registry certificates from the home jurisdiction, notarized and translated into Chinese by a certified translator
- Registered Address Proof — a valid lease agreement for dedicated office premises (minimum 50–80 sqm recommended; co-working spaces are generally not accepted)
- Capital Verification Report — issued by a licensed Chinese accounting firm confirming the registered capital has been contributed
- Tourism Business Plan — describing target inbound markets, proposed tour products, quality control procedures, and customer service protocols
- Travel Agency Liability Insurance — minimum RMB 300,000 coverage from a licensed Chinese insurer
- Qualified Personnel Documents — at least 3 employees holding valid National Tour Guide Certificates or Travel Agency Manager Qualifications
- Safety Management Plan — emergency response procedures, travel insurance policies, and risk management protocols
Step 4: Submit the Tourism License Application
File the completed application with the local Culture and Tourism Bureau (municipal level for most cities; provincial level for Beijing, Shanghai, and certain other municipalities). The standard statutory review period is 20 working days, though the MCT’s 2025 efficiency guidelines set a target of 15 working days for complete applications. In practice, expect 20–30 working days if supplementary documents are requested. Priority processing (10 working days) is available in selected FTZs for an additional government fee.
Step 5: On-Site Inspection
Following the document review, inspectors from the Culture and Tourism Bureau will visit your registered premises. The inspection verifies:
- The physical office space matches the registered address (no virtual offices)
- Company signage and branding are displayed
- IT infrastructure, booking systems, and communication equipment are operational
- Safety equipment (fire extinguishers, first aid kits, emergency exit plans) is in place
- Employee contracts, social insurance registrations, and qualification certificates are in order
- Customer service and complaint handling procedures are documented
Failed inspections are the second most common cause of licensing delays. Prepare thoroughly — schedule a pre-inspection with a local consultant to identify and fix issues before the official visit.
Step 6: License Issuance and Post-Registration Steps
Once approved, you receive the Travel Agency Business License (旅行社业务经营许可证), valid for 3 years. Within 60 days of issuance, complete the following:
- Tax Registration — at the local national and local tax bureaus
- Social Insurance Registration — for all PRC-national employees
- Public Security Filing — required under China’s Anti-Terrorism Law for all tourism businesses
- Quality Guarantee Fund Deposit — RMB 200,000 for inbound travel agencies, deposited in a designated bank account. This fund is held as a performance guarantee and is refundable upon license cancellation (minus any claims)
- Travel Agency Management System (TAMS) Registration — mandatory online system for reporting tour itineraries, group information, and compliance data to the MCT
- Stamp and Seal Registration — company seal, financial seal, and legal representative seal registered with the PSB
Post-License Compliance Requirements
Holding a tourism license in China is not a one-time achievement — it comes with ongoing obligations:
Annual Reporting: Licensed travel agencies must submit annual business reports to the MCT by March 31 each year, covering financial performance, customer volumes, complaint statistics, and compliance metrics. Failure to file results in a warning for the first offense and potential license suspension for repeated non-compliance.
Tour Information Reporting: All tour itineraries involving foreign visitors must be reported to the TAMS system at least 24 hours before departure. This includes group composition, itinerary details, accommodation arrangements, and transport bookings. The system is linked to PSB databases for public security screening.
Insurance Renewal: Travel agency liability insurance must be maintained and renewed annually. Lapses in coverage can trigger immediate license suspension.
Personnel Updates: Any change in qualified personnel (tour guides, travel managers) must be reported to the local Culture and Tourism Bureau within 15 working days. The agency must maintain the minimum qualified staff count at all times.
Data Compliance: Under the Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL) and Data Security Law, tourism companies handling Chinese citizen data must:
- Store data on servers located within mainland China
- Obtain explicit consent for data collection and processing
- Implement data breach notification procedures
- Conduct data security impact assessments for cross-border data transfers
Special Considerations for Different Business Models
Online Travel Platforms (OTAs)
Foreign OTAs face the most complex regulatory environment. Beyond the standard tourism license, you will need an ICP License (Internet Content Provider License, issued by MIIT), which typically takes 40–60 working days to process independently. Foreign-owned companies cannot directly hold an ICP license — the common workaround is a Variable Interest Entity (VIE) structure or a joint venture with a Chinese partner. Additionally, OTAs must comply with the E-Commerce Law, which mandates clear refund policies, transparent pricing, consumer dispute resolution mechanisms, and anti-fraud measures. The 2023–2025 regulatory crackdowns on “big data price discrimination” in online travel have made pricing transparency a priority enforcement area.
Medical and Wellness Tourism
Foreign companies entering the medical tourism niche (combining travel with traditional Chinese medicine, wellness treatments, or elective medical procedures) require supplementary permits from the National Health Commission (NHC) and must partner with licensed healthcare providers in China. This segment has grown 60% year-on-year since 2023 and is a strategic priority for the MCT.
Eco-Tourism and Adventure Travel
Outdoor and eco-tourism operators need additional safety certifications for activities such as hiking, climbing, rafting, and wildlife watching. Guides for adventure tourism must hold specialized certifications beyond the standard National Tour Guide Certificate. Environmental impact assessments may be required for operations in nature reserves or protected areas.
Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them
Timeline and Cost Summary
| Stage | Duration | Estimated Cost (RMB) |
|---|---|---|
| Company registration (SAMR) | 10–15 working days | 3,000–8,000 |
| Tourism license application & review | 20–30 working days | No official fee (agency costs: 15,000–40,000) |
| On-site inspection & scheduling | 5–10 working days | — |
| Post-license registrations | 15–20 working days | 2,000–5,000 |
| Quality guarantee fund deposit | Upon license issuance | 200,000 (refundable) |
| Total Estimated Timeline | 2.5–4 months | RMB 250,000–1,050,000 (incl. capital injection and guarantee fund) |
2026 Policy Trends Impacting Tourism Licensing
Several regulatory developments are reshaping the tourism licensing landscape for foreign companies in 2026:
- Visa Liberalization Driving Demand: China’s expanded unilateral visa-free policies (now covering citizens of 38 countries as of mid-2026) and the 144-hour transit visa exemption extension to 72 additional port cities are creating a surge in inbound tourism. The MCT has responded by streamlining license processing for agencies focused on visa-exempt visitor markets.
- Smart Tourism Mandate: All licensed travel agencies must be registered on digital management platforms by end of 2026. The MCT’s “Smart Tourism +” initiative requires real-time digital reporting of tour operations, customer feedback, and safety compliance data. Agencies still using paper-based systems face license renewal challenges.
- Sustainability Reporting: New green tourism guidelines effective January 2026 require licensed agencies to implement sustainable practices — reducing single-use plastics, promoting eco-friendly accommodation, and reporting annual environmental impact metrics. Compliance is now a factor in license renewal decisions.
- Cross-Border Data Flow Pilots: Selected FTZs (Shanghai, Hainan, Beijing) are piloting simplified cross-border data transfer procedures for tourism businesses. If adopted nationally, this could significantly reduce the compliance burden for foreign OTAs handling international booking data.
- Health and Wellness Tourism Promotion: The government’s “Healthy China 2030” strategy is actively promoting health tourism combining traditional Chinese medicine with travel experiences. Special fast-track license pathways are being piloted in Hainan and Guangdong for foreign companies in this niche.
Conclusion
Obtaining a tourism license in China as a foreign company in 2026 is a structured but demanding process that requires careful planning, adequate capitalization, qualified local personnel, and strict attention to regulatory and data compliance. The investment of time and resources is justified by the market opportunity — China’s inbound tourism market is projected to exceed 80 million international visitors annually by 2027, with particularly strong growth in leisure travel, business tourism, and niche experiential travel segments including medical, eco, and cultural tourism.
Foreign companies that invest in proper licensing and compliance — rather than seeking shortcuts or operating in regulatory gray areas — position themselves to capture significant market share in this rebounding sector. Engaging experienced local legal counsel and consulting firms that specialize in tourism industry entry is strongly recommended, particularly for navigating regional policy variations and the evolving digital compliance landscape.
China’s tourism market in 2026 is not just recovering — it is being reinvented. Foreign companies that enter through the proper channels today will be well-positioned to lead in the next phase of growth.
Last updated: July 2026. This guide is for informational purposes and should not be construed as legal advice. Consult qualified legal professionals for advice specific to your situation and target jurisdiction within China.
