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S1 vs S2 Visa for China: Which One for Your Family?

Both are family visas for relatives of foreigners in China — the difference is how long they stay. Here's how to choose, and the residence-permit step S1 holders can't skip.

China-based · family relocation & residence specialists
The S visa
180 days
is the dividing line
S1 long-term, S2 short
Choosing between the S1 and S2 visa comes down to one thing: how long your family will stay. Both are S visas — for the family of a foreigner living in China — but S1 is for long-term stays over 180 days and S2 for short visits of up to 180 days. An S1 visa gets your relative into China; once there, they must apply for a residence permit within 30 days, and that permit (not the visa) governs how long they can stay. An S2 simply allows a short visit for the period shown. The category that trips people up isn't S1 vs S2 at all — it's S vs Q: Q visas are only for the family of Chinese citizens or permanent residents, so a foreign worker's family belongs in S. Pick the wrong one and you're looking at a refusal and a re-file. This guide makes the choice clear — and where you'd rather we confirm and file it, that's what HCSG does.
The basics

S1, S2 — and why it's not Q

Three quick distinctions settle most cases.

S1 = long-term

Over 180 days

For family joining a foreigner in China for the long term. Enter on the S1, then convert to a residence permit within 30 days.

S2 = short visit

Up to 180 days

For a short family visit. No residence permit — your relative stays for the period the visa allows, then leaves.

Not the Q visa

Foreigners' family only

S is for the family of foreigners; Q is for the family of Chinese citizens or permanent residents. Mixing them up causes refusals.

Side by side

S1 vs S2 vs Q1 vs Q2

The four family categories — choose by who the relative in China is, and how long the visit is.

VisaRelative in China isLengthResidence permit?
S1A foreigner (work/study)Long-term (180+ days)Yes (within 30 days)
S2A foreigner (work/study)Short (up to 180 days)No
Q1A Chinese citizen / PRLong-term (180+ days)Yes
Q2A Chinese citizen / PRShort (up to 180 days)No
The route

How to choose and apply

A short path — HCSG can confirm the category and file it for you.

1

Confirm it's S, not Q

Check the relative in China is a foreigner (not a Chinese citizen/PR) — that puts your family in the S category.

2

Pick S1 or S2 by length

Staying long-term (over 180 days)? That's S1. A short visit? S2.

3

Prepare authenticated documents

Gather the invitation, the relative's China documents, and your notarised, authenticated marriage/birth certificates.

4

Apply, enter, and (S1) register

Apply at the consulate or visa centre; on an S1, apply for the residence permit within 30 days of arrival.

S1 holders: don't miss the 30-day residence permit

An S1 visa is only the entry document. The step that actually lets your family stay long-term is the dependent residence permit, applied for at the local Public Security Bureau within 30 days of arrival. Miss that window and you risk falling out of status. We diarise the deadline and handle the application so it never slips.

We get the category right the first time

Most family-visa delays come from one avoidable error — the wrong category — and from documents that aren't authenticated correctly. A China-based team removes both. HCSG confirms whether your family needs S1, S2 (or, for relatives of Chinese nationals, Q), prepares and checks the authenticated documents, files the application, and handles the residence permit after arrival. One correct application beats a refusal and a re-file.

How we help

How HCSG handles this for you

S-visa applications, confirmed and filed by a team on the ground in China.

Confirm the right category

We check S vs Q and S1 vs S2 so the application is right before it's filed.

Prepare authenticated documents

We make sure marriage/birth certificates are notarised and authenticated the way your consulate requires.

File the application

We assemble and submit the S-visa application with the correct supporting set.

Handle the residence permit

For S1, we lodge the dependent residence permit within the 30-day window after arrival.

The outcome: the correct family visa, filed once, with the residence permit handled on time — no refusals, no re-files.

Good to know

Questions founders ask us

Specific, net-new answers — not a repeat of the guide above.

What is the difference between an S1 and S2 visa?+
Both are family visas for relatives of foreigners in China; S1 is for long-term stays over 180 days and leads to a residence permit, while S2 is for short visits of up to 180 days with no residence permit.
Is the S visa the same as the Q visa?+
No. S visas are for the family of foreigners living in China; Q visas are for the family of Chinese citizens or permanent residents. Choosing Q when you need S is a common reason applications are refused.
How long can my relative stay on an S1 visa?+
The S1 visa gets them into China; the dependent residence permit they apply for within 30 days sets how long they can stay, and it's renewable. So the long-term stay is governed by the permit, not the visa itself.
Do I need a residence permit on an S2 visa?+
No — an S2 is a short-visit visa, so your relative stays for the period shown on the visa and doesn't apply for a residence permit. If they need longer, S1 is the route.
What's the 30-day rule?+
S1 (and Q1) holders must apply for a residence permit at the local Public Security Bureau within 30 days of entering China. Missing it risks falling out of status, so it's a deadline we track and handle.
What documents do we need for an S visa?+
Typically an invitation and the China-based relative's passport and residence documents, plus your authenticated proof of relationship (marriage certificate for a spouse, birth certificate for a child). Requirements vary by consulate, so we confirm yours.
Can my spouse work on an S1 visa?+
Not on the S1 or dependent permit alone — working generally requires separate work authorisation. Let us know if your spouse plans to work and we'll map the route.
Which visa do I choose if I'm not sure how long we'll stay?+
If the plan is to live in China together, choose S1 from the start — it's the long-term route and converts to a residence permit. We'll confirm the best fit for your situation before you apply.
Can HCSG confirm and file the right visa for my family?+
Yes. We confirm S vs Q and S1 vs S2, prepare the authenticated documents, file the application, and handle the residence permit after arrival — so it's right the first time.
In this series

Keep reading

Published by the HCSG Publishing Department. This guidance reflects current China family-visa and residence-permit requirements and HCSG's advisory practice and is general information, not legal advice. For your specific situation, contact our team for a tailored consultation. Reviewed and maintained by the HCSG Publishing Department · Updated June 2026.

Not sure if it's S1, S2 or Q?

Tell us who's in China and how long your family will stay — we'll confirm the right visa and file it correctly the first time.

China-based team · Hainan FTP specialists

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