The S visa for your spouse and children, the S-vs-Q mix-up to avoid, the documents to authenticate, and the residence permit after arrival — and how HCSG handles it all.
Sort these and the rest of the process is straightforward.
Because you're a foreign worker or student, your family applies under the S category. The Q visa is only for relatives of Chinese citizens or permanent residents.
S1 is for long-term family stays (over 180 days) and leads to a residence permit; S2 is for short visits. Choosing wrong means leaving and reapplying.
An S1 visa gets your family into China; a residence permit, applied for at the local police within 30 days, is what lets them stay long-term.
Pick by who you are (foreigner vs Chinese citizen/PR) and how long your family will stay.
| Visa | For whose family | Stay | Residence permit? |
|---|---|---|---|
| S1 | Family of a foreigner in China | Long-term (over 180 days) | Yes — apply within 30 days of arrival |
| S2 | Family of a foreigner in China | Short visit (up to 180 days) | No — stay per the visa |
| Q1 | Family of a Chinese citizen / PR | Long-term (over 180 days) | Yes |
| Q2 | Family of a Chinese citizen / PR | Short visit (up to 180 days) | No |
The order that keeps it smooth — HCSG can run any step, or the whole relocation, for you.
Your family's S visa depends on your status, so you need your work (Z) visa and residence permit in place first.
Have your marriage certificate (for a spouse) and birth certificates (for children) notarised and authenticated in your home country.
Your spouse and children apply for S1 (long-term) or S2 (short) at the Chinese embassy, consulate or visa centre that serves them.
With the S1 visa, your family travels to China — the visa lets them enter; the residence permit (next step) lets them stay.
Within 30 days of arrival, apply at the local Public Security Bureau for each family member's dependent residence permit.
It's the most common family-visa error: a foreign worker's spouse applies for a Q visa because it's “the family visa,” and the application is refused — because Q is only for relatives of Chinese citizens or permanent residents. If you're a foreigner in China on a work or study permit, your family belongs in the S category. Getting this right from the start saves a rejection, a re-file, and weeks of delay. When in doubt, ask us before anyone applies.
For African families the paperwork — not the visa form — is the slow part. A few realities to plan around; we manage them for you.
Marriage and birth certificates need notarisation and authentication before China accepts them. China now accepts an apostille from member countries — but many African countries, including Nigeria, Kenya and Ghana, are not yet in that system, so full consular legalisation still applies. Start early; it's the long pole.
If children are joining, school places and the documents they need should be lined up alongside the visa, not after. We help coordinate enrolment.
Your work permit and residence permit come first; the family's S visas and dependent permits follow. We keep the order and timing aligned.
An S visa and a dependent residence permit let your family live in China — they don't, on their own, authorise your spouse to take a job. To work, a dependent generally needs their own work authorisation (a work permit and the right visa/permit). Children can usually enrol in school on a dependent permit. If your spouse plans to work, tell us early and we'll map the route.
Your family's move to China, handled end to end — from authenticated documents to residence permits in hand.
We prepare and lodge each dependent's residence-permit application after arrival, within the deadline.
We assemble and submit your spouse's S-visa application with the right supporting documents.
We handle children's visas and dependent permits so the whole family is covered together.
We help line up school places and the paperwork they require, in step with the move.
We track and renew family permits so no one's status lapses while you're settled in China.
The outcome: your family legally settled in China — right category, documents authenticated, residence permits issued on time — while we carry the process.
Specific, net-new answers — not a repeat of the guide above.
Tell us your situation — we'll confirm the right visas, authenticate the documents, and handle the residence permits so your family settles smoothly.
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