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I was born in Hong Kong but immigrated with my family to USA when I was a child. I heard that I can obtain a Hong Kong ID that would allow me to travel through out mainland China without the need for an entry visa, which I do need using a US passport. Does anyone know how this process work? I am planning to visit Hong Kong in July and would like to arrange for obtaining the ID. Thanks.

2007-05-22 02:00:09 · 4 answers · asked by Ragboy 2 in Travel Asia Pacific China

4 answers

You need to prove that you were born in Hong Kong, but it'll take about 6 weeks for you to get your ID card. Then after that you can apply for your china card.

2007-05-22 20:05:33 · answer #1 · answered by Colonyhkman 3 · 0 0

A 2-get admission to visa is sufficient in accordance in some time table. BTW, Hong Kong is virtually the least perplexing place to stay with for a China visa. even in the journey that your present visa won't be able to provide help to re-enter China mainland, you may purely re-carry on with for a clean China visa in HK.

2016-12-11 16:58:57 · answer #2 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Yes, there is a card called the "Return China Card". It is a pinkish red card that you can applied at the China Travel Agency. Once you get it, you just have to put your thumb at the custom and the gate will open. No paper work, no visa, nothing.

2007-05-22 02:33:05 · answer #3 · answered by White Shooting Star of HK 7 · 1 0

You will need your HK birth certificate, your HK ID which states that you are of Chinese origin (the 3 stars beside the status), in the form, you need to state which province you (or your father) is from. Lead-time is about a month.

2007-05-22 04:44:15 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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