Philippines to tighten tourist visa rules for Chinese nationals
· 2024-05-10

Philippines to tighten tourist visa rules for Chinese nationals

The Philippines is set to tighten this week its visa requirements for Chinese tourists, amid what the nation’s Department of Foreign Affairs said were a “high number of fraudulent applications” received by the country’s embassy and consulates in China. That is according to the department’s undersecretary for civilian security and consular affairs, Jesus Domingo, as cited in local media outlets.

Mr Domingo was quoted saying at a Thursday news briefing that the Philippines needed to tighten the visa issuance rules due to concerns over past cases of “fraudulently acquired” visas by Chinese applicants in mainland China, as well as criminal groups that targeted some Chinese arrivals to employ them in illegal Philippine Offshore Gaming Operators (POGOs).

“We are urging our [diplomatic] posts to have a renewed tourism drive but we are looking at more quality tourists and not POGO [workers],” said Mr Domingo, as cited by local media outlets.

The stricter visa requirements are intended to “weed out” the “illegitimate and unsavoury” tourists from the legitimate ones, said the official. “We are putting things in motion starting this week,” he added.

The visa tightening terms include requiring visa applicants to present their social security documents issued by the Chinese government.

The Philippines Department of Foreign Affairs would also continue to require visa applications from China to present their employment certificate and bank statements, and to scrutinise them in a “more vigilant” manner, stated Mr Domingo.

The Philippine authorities will also increase the minimum number of visa applicants for Chinese nationals to travel as part of a group to a minimum of 10, from the current three, according to the reports.

The Philippines government had, in August last year, launched a pilot programme for its electronic visa system, for Chinese visitors. This scheme was later suspended in November.

China is one of the top sources of foreign tourists in the Philippines.  The country received just under 2.0 million foreign tourists in the first four months of 2024, up 16.8 percent from a year earlier, according to official data.

China made the top three, providing about 141,153 visitors in the first four months this year; representing about 6.5 percent of all arrivals. The figure was up 104.8 percent from the prior-year period.

Popular articles
Institutional Academy that exceeded expectations marked the opening of GAT CDMX
Online Game
Vietnam’s Controlled Gaming Shift Gains Ground, But Domestic Demand Still Lags
Southeast Asia
GAT CDMX 2025 Institutional Academy: Leaders and Experts Analyze the Present and Future of the Gaming Industry in Mexico and Lat
Sports Game
Brazil Proposes Raising Gambling Tax Rate to 24%, With Revenue Allocated to Social Security and Healthcare
Regulation
Across 6 Cities: HUIDU Invites You to 8 World Cup Parties Redefining High-Value Social Networking
HUIDU Focus
GGC Awards 2026 Shines in Colombo: Honoring Leaders and Innovators in the iGaming Industry
HUIDU Focus
Kazakhstan plans to penalise online casino promotions
Regulation
Indiana online casino bill stalls in House committee
Regulation
B2B Tech Infrastructure Gains Momentum in Philippine Gaming Sector
Southeast Asia
JILI Partners with Cricket Legend AB de Villiers (ABD) to Launch Exclusive Branded Game Series 100% 11
Sports Game
1spin4win grows its Latin American presence by partnering with Fortuna Juegos
Online Game
GAT Expo Puerto Rico Will Pulse with the New Era of Gaming in the Caribbean
Marketing
New Jersey July Gambling Revenue Hits $606M, Sweeps Casinos Banned
Regulation
Vietnam's tightening online gaming policy creates new market opportunities
Southeast Asia
Gaming & Technology Expo Makes a Powerful Entrance in CDMX
Marketing
Home
Game
Cooperation
Find
My