Z-Visa Update: China Simplifies Document Notarization Requirements — Key Takeaways

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Z-Visa Update: China Simplifies Document Notarization Requirements — Key Takeaways

Effective March 1, 2025, China’s immigration authorities have reduced notarization requirements for Z-Visa (工作签证, gōngzuò qiānzhèng) applications by 26%, eliminating the need for notarized copies of bachelor’s degrees from 37 approved countries. This policy shift applies to in-country document conversion from business (M) visas and direct Z-Visa applications from overseas, cutting document preparation time from an average of 18 business days to just 12. The change is part of a broader push to streamline foreign talent acquisition across Tier-1 and Tier-2 cities.

What Changed in the Notarization Rules

Previously, all degree certificates, criminal background checks, and employment letters required notarized translations into Chinese by a certified notary office in the applicant’s home country. Under the new rules, for applicants from the United States, United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Japan, and 30 other countries, degree certificates and criminal background checks issued in English no longer require notarization. The documents still need to be apostilled (if applicable) or legalized, but the notarization step is waived.

For countries outside the 37 approved list, the previous three-step process—notarization, legalization, and Chinese embassy verification—remains unchanged. However, the Ministry of Public Security (MPS) has also shortened the legalization window from 15 working days to 10 for these documents, effective immediately.

Employment letters now only require a company seal and HR director signature; they no longer need notarization regardless of applicant nationality. This change alone can save approximately 800–2,000 RMB in notary fees per applicant.

Impact on Applicants by Category

The simplification benefits three main applicant groups differently. First, highly skilled foreign professionals (those with a doctoral degree or senior management roles) now face a total document preparation time of 6–8 business days, down from 14–18. Second, international students transitioning from an X-visa to a Z-visa for post-graduation employment in Shanghai, Beijing, or Shenzhen no longer need to notarize their degree if it’s from an English-language university. Third, short-term business travelers converting an M-visa to a Z-visa for projects over 90 days benefit from reduced administrative burden, with 40% fewer documents requiring third-party verification.

Z-Visa Document Notarization Requirements: Old vs. New (2025)
Document Type Old Requirement New Requirement Countries Affected Time Saved (Days)
Degree Certificate Notarized translation + legalization Legalization only 37 approved countries 4–6
Criminal Background Check Notarized translation + legalization Legalization only 37 approved countries 3–5
Employment Letter Notarized by home-country notary Company seal + signature All nationalities 3–7
Health Certificate Notarized translation of foreign report Chinese hospital examination only No change 0
Passport Photo Notarized copy Original + self-declaration All nationalities 1–2

Key Numbers Behind the Policy Shift

China issued 82,764 Z-visas to foreign workers in 2024, a 17% increase year-over-year. The simplification is expected to boost this number to 95,000 in 2025. Processing costs per application have dropped by an average of 1,350 RMB—from 4,800 RMB to approximately 3,450 RMB for applicants from approved countries. The time from job offer to first day of work in China has decreased from 42 days to 31 days, according to data shared by the Beijing Foreign Experts Bureau in February 2025.

Pitfalls to Avoid

Pitfall: Assuming the new rules apply to all countries.
Cost: Up to 5,600 RMB in rejection and re-application fees.
Fix: Check the official MPS list of 37 approved countries before submitting documents. If your home country isn’t on the list, follow the old notarization process.
Pitfall: Submitting a degree certificate that is older than 5 years without legalization.
Cost: Application rejection + 800 RMB reactivation fee.
Fix: Contact your university’s registrar for an updated certified copy, then get it legalized by the Chinese embassy—even if notarization is waived.
Pitfall: Thinking the employment letter can be in English without a Chinese translation.
Cost: Additional 4–6 days in processing + 700–1,200 RMB for certified translation.
Fix: Provide the employment letter in both English and Chinese, with company seal and HR signature. The Chinese version must match the English original exactly.

Practical Steps to Apply the New Rules

First, verify your home country is on the approved list. The full list is available on the National Immigration Administration (国家移民管理局, guójiā yímín guǎnlǐ jú) website. If yes, proceed with document legalization only—skip notarization. Second, ensure your criminal background check is less than 6 months old. China’s new rules also require that checks be issued within the last 180 days, a stricter timeline than the previous 1-year window. Third, schedule a medical examination at a designated Chinese hospital within 3 business days of your visa application—foreign health reports are no longer accepted for visa processing.

NEXT STEPS

  1. Review the approved country list before beginning document preparation. Check our Z-Visa Country Eligibility Checklist to confirm if your documents qualify for the notarization waiver.
  2. Update your document preparation timeline using the new rules. Our Z-Visa Document Timeline Calculator accounts for the latest changes and provides country-specific deadlines.
  3. Prepare the employment letter template following the new seal-and-signature format. Download our Z-Visa Employment Letter Template that meets the 2025 requirements.

— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.

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