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Can I use my Chinese passport to enter China after I acquired another citizenship?
I have booked a flight from the USA to China and am a dual national. How do I avoid China getting to know this?What happens to Chinese citizens who are born with dual citizenship?Japan transit visa for a Filipino who has just acquired Canadian citizenship but has no Canadian passportIs it possible to get a Chinese visa if you already possess a valid visa for a different purpose?Which passport to use for airline check-in for dual citizenshipCan I change my citizenship (passport country) after booking a flightDual National exiting Mexico with Expired PassportTravelling back to Indonesia with Dual citizenshipCanada/Chinese dual passport. Currently in the UK as Canadian student. How should I return to China?Traveling between Canada and China using two passportsValid China visa in old passport (British) - Tajikistan to ChinaTraveling with 2 passports due to 3 month validity but visa on a different passport
I've recently changed my citizenship from Chinese to Canadian and I'm planning a short visit to China soon.
Is it possible to enter China with my existing Chinese passport (not expired yet) and then return to Canada with my new Canadian passport.
This becomes complicated since China does not recognize dual-citizenship. So do I need to get a China visa? Any input would be appreciated!
customs-and-immigration china dual-nationality canadian-citizens chinese-citizens
New contributor
|
show 14 more comments
I've recently changed my citizenship from Chinese to Canadian and I'm planning a short visit to China soon.
Is it possible to enter China with my existing Chinese passport (not expired yet) and then return to Canada with my new Canadian passport.
This becomes complicated since China does not recognize dual-citizenship. So do I need to get a China visa? Any input would be appreciated!
customs-and-immigration china dual-nationality canadian-citizens chinese-citizens
New contributor
9
Which part of China are you from? Different rules may apply if you are from Hong Kong or Macau compared to mainland China.
– k2moo4
Mar 24 at 9:50
5
Related question travel.stackexchange.com/questions/66740/…
– Traveller
Mar 24 at 9:52
12
If your Chinese citizenship is indeed no longer recognised, then make sure you are fully aware of the consequences if you are caught.
– async
Mar 24 at 10:52
7
@k2 in English, "China" without qualification normally means the mainland PRC.
– Robert Columbia
Mar 24 at 15:26
4
Worth being aware that China is rather irate with Canada at the moment, and Canadian citizens have been caught in the middle, including one who was sentenced to death for what appear to be political reasons. I... would seriously reconsider entering Chinese jurisdiction as a Canadian citizen for the near future.Late on Monday, Canada’s foreign ministry updated its travel advisory for China to warn citizens about “the risk of arbitrary enforcement of local laws.”
– HopelessN00b
2 days ago
|
show 14 more comments
I've recently changed my citizenship from Chinese to Canadian and I'm planning a short visit to China soon.
Is it possible to enter China with my existing Chinese passport (not expired yet) and then return to Canada with my new Canadian passport.
This becomes complicated since China does not recognize dual-citizenship. So do I need to get a China visa? Any input would be appreciated!
customs-and-immigration china dual-nationality canadian-citizens chinese-citizens
New contributor
I've recently changed my citizenship from Chinese to Canadian and I'm planning a short visit to China soon.
Is it possible to enter China with my existing Chinese passport (not expired yet) and then return to Canada with my new Canadian passport.
This becomes complicated since China does not recognize dual-citizenship. So do I need to get a China visa? Any input would be appreciated!
customs-and-immigration china dual-nationality canadian-citizens chinese-citizens
customs-and-immigration china dual-nationality canadian-citizens chinese-citizens
New contributor
New contributor
edited Mar 24 at 11:35
Traveller
10.6k11744
10.6k11744
New contributor
asked Mar 24 at 9:36
PI IpPI Ip
17123
17123
New contributor
New contributor
9
Which part of China are you from? Different rules may apply if you are from Hong Kong or Macau compared to mainland China.
– k2moo4
Mar 24 at 9:50
5
Related question travel.stackexchange.com/questions/66740/…
– Traveller
Mar 24 at 9:52
12
If your Chinese citizenship is indeed no longer recognised, then make sure you are fully aware of the consequences if you are caught.
– async
Mar 24 at 10:52
7
@k2 in English, "China" without qualification normally means the mainland PRC.
– Robert Columbia
Mar 24 at 15:26
4
Worth being aware that China is rather irate with Canada at the moment, and Canadian citizens have been caught in the middle, including one who was sentenced to death for what appear to be political reasons. I... would seriously reconsider entering Chinese jurisdiction as a Canadian citizen for the near future.Late on Monday, Canada’s foreign ministry updated its travel advisory for China to warn citizens about “the risk of arbitrary enforcement of local laws.”
– HopelessN00b
2 days ago
|
show 14 more comments
9
Which part of China are you from? Different rules may apply if you are from Hong Kong or Macau compared to mainland China.
– k2moo4
Mar 24 at 9:50
5
Related question travel.stackexchange.com/questions/66740/…
– Traveller
Mar 24 at 9:52
12
If your Chinese citizenship is indeed no longer recognised, then make sure you are fully aware of the consequences if you are caught.
– async
Mar 24 at 10:52
7
@k2 in English, "China" without qualification normally means the mainland PRC.
– Robert Columbia
Mar 24 at 15:26
4
Worth being aware that China is rather irate with Canada at the moment, and Canadian citizens have been caught in the middle, including one who was sentenced to death for what appear to be political reasons. I... would seriously reconsider entering Chinese jurisdiction as a Canadian citizen for the near future.Late on Monday, Canada’s foreign ministry updated its travel advisory for China to warn citizens about “the risk of arbitrary enforcement of local laws.”
– HopelessN00b
2 days ago
9
9
Which part of China are you from? Different rules may apply if you are from Hong Kong or Macau compared to mainland China.
– k2moo4
Mar 24 at 9:50
Which part of China are you from? Different rules may apply if you are from Hong Kong or Macau compared to mainland China.
– k2moo4
Mar 24 at 9:50
5
5
Related question travel.stackexchange.com/questions/66740/…
– Traveller
Mar 24 at 9:52
Related question travel.stackexchange.com/questions/66740/…
– Traveller
Mar 24 at 9:52
12
12
If your Chinese citizenship is indeed no longer recognised, then make sure you are fully aware of the consequences if you are caught.
– async
Mar 24 at 10:52
If your Chinese citizenship is indeed no longer recognised, then make sure you are fully aware of the consequences if you are caught.
– async
Mar 24 at 10:52
7
7
@k2 in English, "China" without qualification normally means the mainland PRC.
– Robert Columbia
Mar 24 at 15:26
@k2 in English, "China" without qualification normally means the mainland PRC.
– Robert Columbia
Mar 24 at 15:26
4
4
Worth being aware that China is rather irate with Canada at the moment, and Canadian citizens have been caught in the middle, including one who was sentenced to death for what appear to be political reasons. I... would seriously reconsider entering Chinese jurisdiction as a Canadian citizen for the near future.
Late on Monday, Canada’s foreign ministry updated its travel advisory for China to warn citizens about “the risk of arbitrary enforcement of local laws.”
– HopelessN00b
2 days ago
Worth being aware that China is rather irate with Canada at the moment, and Canadian citizens have been caught in the middle, including one who was sentenced to death for what appear to be political reasons. I... would seriously reconsider entering Chinese jurisdiction as a Canadian citizen for the near future.
Late on Monday, Canada’s foreign ministry updated its travel advisory for China to warn citizens about “the risk of arbitrary enforcement of local laws.”
– HopelessN00b
2 days ago
|
show 14 more comments
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
No, this would be illegal. Voluntarily naturalizing in another country results in automatic loss of Chinese citizenship. You need to contact your local Chinese embassy and obtain the proper visa.
The question mentioned by Traveller provides an overview of how you might or might not get caught trying to sneak back into China with an invalid passport. Don't risk it unless you enjoy the thought of doing time in a Chinese prison, and then being deported or removed.
14
-1 because OP clearly already knows that in China this is illegal and because there is no reference for the claim that one would get prison time for this. One could also ask: "I have been to Israel and got my passport stamped and I want to visit Iran. How can I do it?" If someone answered, "This is illegal in Iran, do not do it. You gave up that right when you visited Israel.", that answer would be downvoted immediately.
– Szabolcs
2 days ago
19
@Szabolcs It's not clear that OP knows that it is illegal. They have a passport that is valid on the surface. You need to look at the exact law to determine exactly when your Chinese citizenship is revoked. Maybe there's a period of transition.
– pipe
2 days ago
17
@Szabolcs Considering that they ask "Do I need a visa?" I'm not convinced the OP already knows it's illegal for them to visit China without one.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
2 days ago
16
"No, you cannot do it" is a perfectly reasonable answer to many questions across many se sites.
– vsz
2 days ago
4
iirc, when OP goes to the consulate to request the visa, the original Chinese passport must be submitted with the rest of the necessary documentation. Said Chinese passport will be returned, but with a hole punched through it or in some other way defaced to it can no longer be used as an official travel document
– NKCampbell
2 days ago
|
show 4 more comments
As Robert Columbia mentioned, voluntarily naturalizing in a foreign country results in automatic loss of Chinese (PRC) citizenship (but not ROC nationality; I'll assume you are talking about the PRC), assuming you are not a resident of Hong Kong or Macau. Since you are no longer a Chinese citizen, you can no longer use your Chinese passport as proof of Chinese citizenship to enter China, even if the passport is unexpired. You must get a Chinese visa to visit China, and usually when you apply for your first Chinese visa, the Chinese consulate will ask for and cancel your Chinese passport.
If you still use your Chinese passport to enter China, you are pretending to be a Chinese citizen when you aren't. Although it probably won't be noticed when you go into China, you will have trouble leaving China. You said you will "return to Canada with my new Canadian passport", but China also has exit checks, so what passport will you use at Chinese exit checks? If you use your Canadian passport, it won't match any entry records since you did not enter China on that passport. If you use your Chinese passport, the Chinese exit checks will ask what document you will enter Canada with, since a Chinese passport is not visa-exempt to Canada. Presumably the only document you can show that will allow you to enter Canada is your Canadian passport, and if you show that, they will investigate how you acquired Canadian citizenship and whether you had already lost Chinese citizenship.
24
A workaround some people use is to depart via Hong Kong. One can go to Hong Kong legally from mainland China, and then take the flight from there using their foreign passport. They count on the HK customs not sharing information with the mainland authorities, which is usually the case. Needless to say this is still illegal and I don't think it's a smart or right thing to do. Also AFAIK there was a crackdown recently where people were forced to hand in their Chinese passport. I just wanted to mention it here as an actual example of how some people managed to do it.
– xji
Mar 24 at 23:26
3
@xji wouldn't it be possible to travel via some third country? Indonesia looks suitable. The whole idea seems too risky, though.
– IMil
Mar 25 at 6:14
add a comment |
There was an article about a year ago in the South China Morning Post regarding people who attempt to benefit from Chinese citizenship when they are no longer entitled.
The government says they will confiscate the documents and deny entry. They've also clawed back some benefits that people have taken advantage of, including seizing a house (the house was provided in compensation for a relocation that foreigners were not entitled to). Other benefits such as schooling at local schools will also be denied, and use of the Chinese health care system as a citizen, tax breaks, easier ability to buy property and so on.
They've noticeably tightened up on information-gathering from entrants over the past couple of years and now collect fingerprints from foreigners at every entry and ask a great number of questions to qualify for a visa. If they have any competence in aggregating and correlating all this data with relatives and so on who have moved abroad they may know more than you think. Apparently they've cancelled the documents of more than a million people in a single year.
add a comment |
nope, that would be illegal, there's no treaty between china and canada about dual citizenship and even if there is, once you become a new citizen of another country you are revoking your old citizenship then you must reapply for it only there is agreement between the two countries, unfortunately for china they do not have such thing.
New contributor
7
It is not universal that acquiring a second citizenship causes the loss of your first.
– Azor Ahai
2 days ago
2
China doesn't recognize dual citizenship with any country, no only Canada.
– Pedro Lobito
2 days ago
4
Citizenship isn't a matter of treaty- it's determined solely by the country involved. In general countries are relatively generous to confer residency (because of taxation and reciprocity) but stingy with citizenship (because it obligates the goverment). Note that the US is pretty much alone in basing taxation in good part on citizenship.There are also some UN initiatives to deal with statelessness, but I don't believe they're widely signed onto at this time. For example this 1961 convention.
– Spehro Pefhany
yesterday
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
No, this would be illegal. Voluntarily naturalizing in another country results in automatic loss of Chinese citizenship. You need to contact your local Chinese embassy and obtain the proper visa.
The question mentioned by Traveller provides an overview of how you might or might not get caught trying to sneak back into China with an invalid passport. Don't risk it unless you enjoy the thought of doing time in a Chinese prison, and then being deported or removed.
14
-1 because OP clearly already knows that in China this is illegal and because there is no reference for the claim that one would get prison time for this. One could also ask: "I have been to Israel and got my passport stamped and I want to visit Iran. How can I do it?" If someone answered, "This is illegal in Iran, do not do it. You gave up that right when you visited Israel.", that answer would be downvoted immediately.
– Szabolcs
2 days ago
19
@Szabolcs It's not clear that OP knows that it is illegal. They have a passport that is valid on the surface. You need to look at the exact law to determine exactly when your Chinese citizenship is revoked. Maybe there's a period of transition.
– pipe
2 days ago
17
@Szabolcs Considering that they ask "Do I need a visa?" I'm not convinced the OP already knows it's illegal for them to visit China without one.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
2 days ago
16
"No, you cannot do it" is a perfectly reasonable answer to many questions across many se sites.
– vsz
2 days ago
4
iirc, when OP goes to the consulate to request the visa, the original Chinese passport must be submitted with the rest of the necessary documentation. Said Chinese passport will be returned, but with a hole punched through it or in some other way defaced to it can no longer be used as an official travel document
– NKCampbell
2 days ago
|
show 4 more comments
No, this would be illegal. Voluntarily naturalizing in another country results in automatic loss of Chinese citizenship. You need to contact your local Chinese embassy and obtain the proper visa.
The question mentioned by Traveller provides an overview of how you might or might not get caught trying to sneak back into China with an invalid passport. Don't risk it unless you enjoy the thought of doing time in a Chinese prison, and then being deported or removed.
14
-1 because OP clearly already knows that in China this is illegal and because there is no reference for the claim that one would get prison time for this. One could also ask: "I have been to Israel and got my passport stamped and I want to visit Iran. How can I do it?" If someone answered, "This is illegal in Iran, do not do it. You gave up that right when you visited Israel.", that answer would be downvoted immediately.
– Szabolcs
2 days ago
19
@Szabolcs It's not clear that OP knows that it is illegal. They have a passport that is valid on the surface. You need to look at the exact law to determine exactly when your Chinese citizenship is revoked. Maybe there's a period of transition.
– pipe
2 days ago
17
@Szabolcs Considering that they ask "Do I need a visa?" I'm not convinced the OP already knows it's illegal for them to visit China without one.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
2 days ago
16
"No, you cannot do it" is a perfectly reasonable answer to many questions across many se sites.
– vsz
2 days ago
4
iirc, when OP goes to the consulate to request the visa, the original Chinese passport must be submitted with the rest of the necessary documentation. Said Chinese passport will be returned, but with a hole punched through it or in some other way defaced to it can no longer be used as an official travel document
– NKCampbell
2 days ago
|
show 4 more comments
No, this would be illegal. Voluntarily naturalizing in another country results in automatic loss of Chinese citizenship. You need to contact your local Chinese embassy and obtain the proper visa.
The question mentioned by Traveller provides an overview of how you might or might not get caught trying to sneak back into China with an invalid passport. Don't risk it unless you enjoy the thought of doing time in a Chinese prison, and then being deported or removed.
No, this would be illegal. Voluntarily naturalizing in another country results in automatic loss of Chinese citizenship. You need to contact your local Chinese embassy and obtain the proper visa.
The question mentioned by Traveller provides an overview of how you might or might not get caught trying to sneak back into China with an invalid passport. Don't risk it unless you enjoy the thought of doing time in a Chinese prison, and then being deported or removed.
edited Mar 24 at 15:27
answered Mar 24 at 11:25
Robert ColumbiaRobert Columbia
4,47932347
4,47932347
14
-1 because OP clearly already knows that in China this is illegal and because there is no reference for the claim that one would get prison time for this. One could also ask: "I have been to Israel and got my passport stamped and I want to visit Iran. How can I do it?" If someone answered, "This is illegal in Iran, do not do it. You gave up that right when you visited Israel.", that answer would be downvoted immediately.
– Szabolcs
2 days ago
19
@Szabolcs It's not clear that OP knows that it is illegal. They have a passport that is valid on the surface. You need to look at the exact law to determine exactly when your Chinese citizenship is revoked. Maybe there's a period of transition.
– pipe
2 days ago
17
@Szabolcs Considering that they ask "Do I need a visa?" I'm not convinced the OP already knows it's illegal for them to visit China without one.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
2 days ago
16
"No, you cannot do it" is a perfectly reasonable answer to many questions across many se sites.
– vsz
2 days ago
4
iirc, when OP goes to the consulate to request the visa, the original Chinese passport must be submitted with the rest of the necessary documentation. Said Chinese passport will be returned, but with a hole punched through it or in some other way defaced to it can no longer be used as an official travel document
– NKCampbell
2 days ago
|
show 4 more comments
14
-1 because OP clearly already knows that in China this is illegal and because there is no reference for the claim that one would get prison time for this. One could also ask: "I have been to Israel and got my passport stamped and I want to visit Iran. How can I do it?" If someone answered, "This is illegal in Iran, do not do it. You gave up that right when you visited Israel.", that answer would be downvoted immediately.
– Szabolcs
2 days ago
19
@Szabolcs It's not clear that OP knows that it is illegal. They have a passport that is valid on the surface. You need to look at the exact law to determine exactly when your Chinese citizenship is revoked. Maybe there's a period of transition.
– pipe
2 days ago
17
@Szabolcs Considering that they ask "Do I need a visa?" I'm not convinced the OP already knows it's illegal for them to visit China without one.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
2 days ago
16
"No, you cannot do it" is a perfectly reasonable answer to many questions across many se sites.
– vsz
2 days ago
4
iirc, when OP goes to the consulate to request the visa, the original Chinese passport must be submitted with the rest of the necessary documentation. Said Chinese passport will be returned, but with a hole punched through it or in some other way defaced to it can no longer be used as an official travel document
– NKCampbell
2 days ago
14
14
-1 because OP clearly already knows that in China this is illegal and because there is no reference for the claim that one would get prison time for this. One could also ask: "I have been to Israel and got my passport stamped and I want to visit Iran. How can I do it?" If someone answered, "This is illegal in Iran, do not do it. You gave up that right when you visited Israel.", that answer would be downvoted immediately.
– Szabolcs
2 days ago
-1 because OP clearly already knows that in China this is illegal and because there is no reference for the claim that one would get prison time for this. One could also ask: "I have been to Israel and got my passport stamped and I want to visit Iran. How can I do it?" If someone answered, "This is illegal in Iran, do not do it. You gave up that right when you visited Israel.", that answer would be downvoted immediately.
– Szabolcs
2 days ago
19
19
@Szabolcs It's not clear that OP knows that it is illegal. They have a passport that is valid on the surface. You need to look at the exact law to determine exactly when your Chinese citizenship is revoked. Maybe there's a period of transition.
– pipe
2 days ago
@Szabolcs It's not clear that OP knows that it is illegal. They have a passport that is valid on the surface. You need to look at the exact law to determine exactly when your Chinese citizenship is revoked. Maybe there's a period of transition.
– pipe
2 days ago
17
17
@Szabolcs Considering that they ask "Do I need a visa?" I'm not convinced the OP already knows it's illegal for them to visit China without one.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
2 days ago
@Szabolcs Considering that they ask "Do I need a visa?" I'm not convinced the OP already knows it's illegal for them to visit China without one.
– Dmitry Grigoryev
2 days ago
16
16
"No, you cannot do it" is a perfectly reasonable answer to many questions across many se sites.
– vsz
2 days ago
"No, you cannot do it" is a perfectly reasonable answer to many questions across many se sites.
– vsz
2 days ago
4
4
iirc, when OP goes to the consulate to request the visa, the original Chinese passport must be submitted with the rest of the necessary documentation. Said Chinese passport will be returned, but with a hole punched through it or in some other way defaced to it can no longer be used as an official travel document
– NKCampbell
2 days ago
iirc, when OP goes to the consulate to request the visa, the original Chinese passport must be submitted with the rest of the necessary documentation. Said Chinese passport will be returned, but with a hole punched through it or in some other way defaced to it can no longer be used as an official travel document
– NKCampbell
2 days ago
|
show 4 more comments
As Robert Columbia mentioned, voluntarily naturalizing in a foreign country results in automatic loss of Chinese (PRC) citizenship (but not ROC nationality; I'll assume you are talking about the PRC), assuming you are not a resident of Hong Kong or Macau. Since you are no longer a Chinese citizen, you can no longer use your Chinese passport as proof of Chinese citizenship to enter China, even if the passport is unexpired. You must get a Chinese visa to visit China, and usually when you apply for your first Chinese visa, the Chinese consulate will ask for and cancel your Chinese passport.
If you still use your Chinese passport to enter China, you are pretending to be a Chinese citizen when you aren't. Although it probably won't be noticed when you go into China, you will have trouble leaving China. You said you will "return to Canada with my new Canadian passport", but China also has exit checks, so what passport will you use at Chinese exit checks? If you use your Canadian passport, it won't match any entry records since you did not enter China on that passport. If you use your Chinese passport, the Chinese exit checks will ask what document you will enter Canada with, since a Chinese passport is not visa-exempt to Canada. Presumably the only document you can show that will allow you to enter Canada is your Canadian passport, and if you show that, they will investigate how you acquired Canadian citizenship and whether you had already lost Chinese citizenship.
24
A workaround some people use is to depart via Hong Kong. One can go to Hong Kong legally from mainland China, and then take the flight from there using their foreign passport. They count on the HK customs not sharing information with the mainland authorities, which is usually the case. Needless to say this is still illegal and I don't think it's a smart or right thing to do. Also AFAIK there was a crackdown recently where people were forced to hand in their Chinese passport. I just wanted to mention it here as an actual example of how some people managed to do it.
– xji
Mar 24 at 23:26
3
@xji wouldn't it be possible to travel via some third country? Indonesia looks suitable. The whole idea seems too risky, though.
– IMil
Mar 25 at 6:14
add a comment |
As Robert Columbia mentioned, voluntarily naturalizing in a foreign country results in automatic loss of Chinese (PRC) citizenship (but not ROC nationality; I'll assume you are talking about the PRC), assuming you are not a resident of Hong Kong or Macau. Since you are no longer a Chinese citizen, you can no longer use your Chinese passport as proof of Chinese citizenship to enter China, even if the passport is unexpired. You must get a Chinese visa to visit China, and usually when you apply for your first Chinese visa, the Chinese consulate will ask for and cancel your Chinese passport.
If you still use your Chinese passport to enter China, you are pretending to be a Chinese citizen when you aren't. Although it probably won't be noticed when you go into China, you will have trouble leaving China. You said you will "return to Canada with my new Canadian passport", but China also has exit checks, so what passport will you use at Chinese exit checks? If you use your Canadian passport, it won't match any entry records since you did not enter China on that passport. If you use your Chinese passport, the Chinese exit checks will ask what document you will enter Canada with, since a Chinese passport is not visa-exempt to Canada. Presumably the only document you can show that will allow you to enter Canada is your Canadian passport, and if you show that, they will investigate how you acquired Canadian citizenship and whether you had already lost Chinese citizenship.
24
A workaround some people use is to depart via Hong Kong. One can go to Hong Kong legally from mainland China, and then take the flight from there using their foreign passport. They count on the HK customs not sharing information with the mainland authorities, which is usually the case. Needless to say this is still illegal and I don't think it's a smart or right thing to do. Also AFAIK there was a crackdown recently where people were forced to hand in their Chinese passport. I just wanted to mention it here as an actual example of how some people managed to do it.
– xji
Mar 24 at 23:26
3
@xji wouldn't it be possible to travel via some third country? Indonesia looks suitable. The whole idea seems too risky, though.
– IMil
Mar 25 at 6:14
add a comment |
As Robert Columbia mentioned, voluntarily naturalizing in a foreign country results in automatic loss of Chinese (PRC) citizenship (but not ROC nationality; I'll assume you are talking about the PRC), assuming you are not a resident of Hong Kong or Macau. Since you are no longer a Chinese citizen, you can no longer use your Chinese passport as proof of Chinese citizenship to enter China, even if the passport is unexpired. You must get a Chinese visa to visit China, and usually when you apply for your first Chinese visa, the Chinese consulate will ask for and cancel your Chinese passport.
If you still use your Chinese passport to enter China, you are pretending to be a Chinese citizen when you aren't. Although it probably won't be noticed when you go into China, you will have trouble leaving China. You said you will "return to Canada with my new Canadian passport", but China also has exit checks, so what passport will you use at Chinese exit checks? If you use your Canadian passport, it won't match any entry records since you did not enter China on that passport. If you use your Chinese passport, the Chinese exit checks will ask what document you will enter Canada with, since a Chinese passport is not visa-exempt to Canada. Presumably the only document you can show that will allow you to enter Canada is your Canadian passport, and if you show that, they will investigate how you acquired Canadian citizenship and whether you had already lost Chinese citizenship.
As Robert Columbia mentioned, voluntarily naturalizing in a foreign country results in automatic loss of Chinese (PRC) citizenship (but not ROC nationality; I'll assume you are talking about the PRC), assuming you are not a resident of Hong Kong or Macau. Since you are no longer a Chinese citizen, you can no longer use your Chinese passport as proof of Chinese citizenship to enter China, even if the passport is unexpired. You must get a Chinese visa to visit China, and usually when you apply for your first Chinese visa, the Chinese consulate will ask for and cancel your Chinese passport.
If you still use your Chinese passport to enter China, you are pretending to be a Chinese citizen when you aren't. Although it probably won't be noticed when you go into China, you will have trouble leaving China. You said you will "return to Canada with my new Canadian passport", but China also has exit checks, so what passport will you use at Chinese exit checks? If you use your Canadian passport, it won't match any entry records since you did not enter China on that passport. If you use your Chinese passport, the Chinese exit checks will ask what document you will enter Canada with, since a Chinese passport is not visa-exempt to Canada. Presumably the only document you can show that will allow you to enter Canada is your Canadian passport, and if you show that, they will investigate how you acquired Canadian citizenship and whether you had already lost Chinese citizenship.
answered Mar 24 at 16:41
user102008user102008
11.8k12352
11.8k12352
24
A workaround some people use is to depart via Hong Kong. One can go to Hong Kong legally from mainland China, and then take the flight from there using their foreign passport. They count on the HK customs not sharing information with the mainland authorities, which is usually the case. Needless to say this is still illegal and I don't think it's a smart or right thing to do. Also AFAIK there was a crackdown recently where people were forced to hand in their Chinese passport. I just wanted to mention it here as an actual example of how some people managed to do it.
– xji
Mar 24 at 23:26
3
@xji wouldn't it be possible to travel via some third country? Indonesia looks suitable. The whole idea seems too risky, though.
– IMil
Mar 25 at 6:14
add a comment |
24
A workaround some people use is to depart via Hong Kong. One can go to Hong Kong legally from mainland China, and then take the flight from there using their foreign passport. They count on the HK customs not sharing information with the mainland authorities, which is usually the case. Needless to say this is still illegal and I don't think it's a smart or right thing to do. Also AFAIK there was a crackdown recently where people were forced to hand in their Chinese passport. I just wanted to mention it here as an actual example of how some people managed to do it.
– xji
Mar 24 at 23:26
3
@xji wouldn't it be possible to travel via some third country? Indonesia looks suitable. The whole idea seems too risky, though.
– IMil
Mar 25 at 6:14
24
24
A workaround some people use is to depart via Hong Kong. One can go to Hong Kong legally from mainland China, and then take the flight from there using their foreign passport. They count on the HK customs not sharing information with the mainland authorities, which is usually the case. Needless to say this is still illegal and I don't think it's a smart or right thing to do. Also AFAIK there was a crackdown recently where people were forced to hand in their Chinese passport. I just wanted to mention it here as an actual example of how some people managed to do it.
– xji
Mar 24 at 23:26
A workaround some people use is to depart via Hong Kong. One can go to Hong Kong legally from mainland China, and then take the flight from there using their foreign passport. They count on the HK customs not sharing information with the mainland authorities, which is usually the case. Needless to say this is still illegal and I don't think it's a smart or right thing to do. Also AFAIK there was a crackdown recently where people were forced to hand in their Chinese passport. I just wanted to mention it here as an actual example of how some people managed to do it.
– xji
Mar 24 at 23:26
3
3
@xji wouldn't it be possible to travel via some third country? Indonesia looks suitable. The whole idea seems too risky, though.
– IMil
Mar 25 at 6:14
@xji wouldn't it be possible to travel via some third country? Indonesia looks suitable. The whole idea seems too risky, though.
– IMil
Mar 25 at 6:14
add a comment |
There was an article about a year ago in the South China Morning Post regarding people who attempt to benefit from Chinese citizenship when they are no longer entitled.
The government says they will confiscate the documents and deny entry. They've also clawed back some benefits that people have taken advantage of, including seizing a house (the house was provided in compensation for a relocation that foreigners were not entitled to). Other benefits such as schooling at local schools will also be denied, and use of the Chinese health care system as a citizen, tax breaks, easier ability to buy property and so on.
They've noticeably tightened up on information-gathering from entrants over the past couple of years and now collect fingerprints from foreigners at every entry and ask a great number of questions to qualify for a visa. If they have any competence in aggregating and correlating all this data with relatives and so on who have moved abroad they may know more than you think. Apparently they've cancelled the documents of more than a million people in a single year.
add a comment |
There was an article about a year ago in the South China Morning Post regarding people who attempt to benefit from Chinese citizenship when they are no longer entitled.
The government says they will confiscate the documents and deny entry. They've also clawed back some benefits that people have taken advantage of, including seizing a house (the house was provided in compensation for a relocation that foreigners were not entitled to). Other benefits such as schooling at local schools will also be denied, and use of the Chinese health care system as a citizen, tax breaks, easier ability to buy property and so on.
They've noticeably tightened up on information-gathering from entrants over the past couple of years and now collect fingerprints from foreigners at every entry and ask a great number of questions to qualify for a visa. If they have any competence in aggregating and correlating all this data with relatives and so on who have moved abroad they may know more than you think. Apparently they've cancelled the documents of more than a million people in a single year.
add a comment |
There was an article about a year ago in the South China Morning Post regarding people who attempt to benefit from Chinese citizenship when they are no longer entitled.
The government says they will confiscate the documents and deny entry. They've also clawed back some benefits that people have taken advantage of, including seizing a house (the house was provided in compensation for a relocation that foreigners were not entitled to). Other benefits such as schooling at local schools will also be denied, and use of the Chinese health care system as a citizen, tax breaks, easier ability to buy property and so on.
They've noticeably tightened up on information-gathering from entrants over the past couple of years and now collect fingerprints from foreigners at every entry and ask a great number of questions to qualify for a visa. If they have any competence in aggregating and correlating all this data with relatives and so on who have moved abroad they may know more than you think. Apparently they've cancelled the documents of more than a million people in a single year.
There was an article about a year ago in the South China Morning Post regarding people who attempt to benefit from Chinese citizenship when they are no longer entitled.
The government says they will confiscate the documents and deny entry. They've also clawed back some benefits that people have taken advantage of, including seizing a house (the house was provided in compensation for a relocation that foreigners were not entitled to). Other benefits such as schooling at local schools will also be denied, and use of the Chinese health care system as a citizen, tax breaks, easier ability to buy property and so on.
They've noticeably tightened up on information-gathering from entrants over the past couple of years and now collect fingerprints from foreigners at every entry and ask a great number of questions to qualify for a visa. If they have any competence in aggregating and correlating all this data with relatives and so on who have moved abroad they may know more than you think. Apparently they've cancelled the documents of more than a million people in a single year.
answered 2 days ago
Spehro PefhanySpehro Pefhany
11.5k2146
11.5k2146
add a comment |
add a comment |
nope, that would be illegal, there's no treaty between china and canada about dual citizenship and even if there is, once you become a new citizen of another country you are revoking your old citizenship then you must reapply for it only there is agreement between the two countries, unfortunately for china they do not have such thing.
New contributor
7
It is not universal that acquiring a second citizenship causes the loss of your first.
– Azor Ahai
2 days ago
2
China doesn't recognize dual citizenship with any country, no only Canada.
– Pedro Lobito
2 days ago
4
Citizenship isn't a matter of treaty- it's determined solely by the country involved. In general countries are relatively generous to confer residency (because of taxation and reciprocity) but stingy with citizenship (because it obligates the goverment). Note that the US is pretty much alone in basing taxation in good part on citizenship.There are also some UN initiatives to deal with statelessness, but I don't believe they're widely signed onto at this time. For example this 1961 convention.
– Spehro Pefhany
yesterday
add a comment |
nope, that would be illegal, there's no treaty between china and canada about dual citizenship and even if there is, once you become a new citizen of another country you are revoking your old citizenship then you must reapply for it only there is agreement between the two countries, unfortunately for china they do not have such thing.
New contributor
7
It is not universal that acquiring a second citizenship causes the loss of your first.
– Azor Ahai
2 days ago
2
China doesn't recognize dual citizenship with any country, no only Canada.
– Pedro Lobito
2 days ago
4
Citizenship isn't a matter of treaty- it's determined solely by the country involved. In general countries are relatively generous to confer residency (because of taxation and reciprocity) but stingy with citizenship (because it obligates the goverment). Note that the US is pretty much alone in basing taxation in good part on citizenship.There are also some UN initiatives to deal with statelessness, but I don't believe they're widely signed onto at this time. For example this 1961 convention.
– Spehro Pefhany
yesterday
add a comment |
nope, that would be illegal, there's no treaty between china and canada about dual citizenship and even if there is, once you become a new citizen of another country you are revoking your old citizenship then you must reapply for it only there is agreement between the two countries, unfortunately for china they do not have such thing.
New contributor
nope, that would be illegal, there's no treaty between china and canada about dual citizenship and even if there is, once you become a new citizen of another country you are revoking your old citizenship then you must reapply for it only there is agreement between the two countries, unfortunately for china they do not have such thing.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 2 days ago
CyberNinjaCyberNinja
93
93
New contributor
New contributor
7
It is not universal that acquiring a second citizenship causes the loss of your first.
– Azor Ahai
2 days ago
2
China doesn't recognize dual citizenship with any country, no only Canada.
– Pedro Lobito
2 days ago
4
Citizenship isn't a matter of treaty- it's determined solely by the country involved. In general countries are relatively generous to confer residency (because of taxation and reciprocity) but stingy with citizenship (because it obligates the goverment). Note that the US is pretty much alone in basing taxation in good part on citizenship.There are also some UN initiatives to deal with statelessness, but I don't believe they're widely signed onto at this time. For example this 1961 convention.
– Spehro Pefhany
yesterday
add a comment |
7
It is not universal that acquiring a second citizenship causes the loss of your first.
– Azor Ahai
2 days ago
2
China doesn't recognize dual citizenship with any country, no only Canada.
– Pedro Lobito
2 days ago
4
Citizenship isn't a matter of treaty- it's determined solely by the country involved. In general countries are relatively generous to confer residency (because of taxation and reciprocity) but stingy with citizenship (because it obligates the goverment). Note that the US is pretty much alone in basing taxation in good part on citizenship.There are also some UN initiatives to deal with statelessness, but I don't believe they're widely signed onto at this time. For example this 1961 convention.
– Spehro Pefhany
yesterday
7
7
It is not universal that acquiring a second citizenship causes the loss of your first.
– Azor Ahai
2 days ago
It is not universal that acquiring a second citizenship causes the loss of your first.
– Azor Ahai
2 days ago
2
2
China doesn't recognize dual citizenship with any country, no only Canada.
– Pedro Lobito
2 days ago
China doesn't recognize dual citizenship with any country, no only Canada.
– Pedro Lobito
2 days ago
4
4
Citizenship isn't a matter of treaty- it's determined solely by the country involved. In general countries are relatively generous to confer residency (because of taxation and reciprocity) but stingy with citizenship (because it obligates the goverment). Note that the US is pretty much alone in basing taxation in good part on citizenship.There are also some UN initiatives to deal with statelessness, but I don't believe they're widely signed onto at this time. For example this 1961 convention.
– Spehro Pefhany
yesterday
Citizenship isn't a matter of treaty- it's determined solely by the country involved. In general countries are relatively generous to confer residency (because of taxation and reciprocity) but stingy with citizenship (because it obligates the goverment). Note that the US is pretty much alone in basing taxation in good part on citizenship.There are also some UN initiatives to deal with statelessness, but I don't believe they're widely signed onto at this time. For example this 1961 convention.
– Spehro Pefhany
yesterday
add a comment |
PI Ip is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
PI Ip is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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9
Which part of China are you from? Different rules may apply if you are from Hong Kong or Macau compared to mainland China.
– k2moo4
Mar 24 at 9:50
5
Related question travel.stackexchange.com/questions/66740/…
– Traveller
Mar 24 at 9:52
12
If your Chinese citizenship is indeed no longer recognised, then make sure you are fully aware of the consequences if you are caught.
– async
Mar 24 at 10:52
7
@k2 in English, "China" without qualification normally means the mainland PRC.
– Robert Columbia
Mar 24 at 15:26
4
Worth being aware that China is rather irate with Canada at the moment, and Canadian citizens have been caught in the middle, including one who was sentenced to death for what appear to be political reasons. I... would seriously reconsider entering Chinese jurisdiction as a Canadian citizen for the near future.
Late on Monday, Canada’s foreign ministry updated its travel advisory for China to warn citizens about “the risk of arbitrary enforcement of local laws.”
– HopelessN00b
2 days ago