Passport eligible for 240h transit
PassCanada is on the 55-country 240h list.
240h transit · Canada
Yes for 240h transit, but Canada citizens also have 30-day ordinary visa-free entry, which is usually the better choice. Policy snapshot 2026-05-18.
⚠ Better option for Canada passport
You have 30-day ordinary visa-free entry to China. Unless you specifically need the 240h transit structure (e.g. your trip is part of a multi-country itinerary), use ordinary visa-free: no A→China→B routing requirement, longer permitted stay.
Rule detail
Canada is on the 55-country 240h list.
Shanghai Pudong Intl (PVG, Shanghai) is on the 65-port list.
Calculated stay: about 119 hours (5 days).
YYZ (Canada) → China → ICN (South Korea).
Your route does not involve HK/Macau/Taiwan. (These would count as third regions if used.)
Exit by air to a third country/region — standard 240h exit path.
Planned regions: Shanghai.
No special city-level stay-area caveats for the provinces selected.
Onward leg is outside mainland China — correct.
Airline counter risk
Canada passport holders can use ordinary visa-free entry for this stay. That path is simpler at the airline counter because it does not depend on proving an A → China → B 240h transit route.
I'm entering mainland China under the 30-day ordinary visa-free policy for my passport, not the 240-hour transit route.
Could a supervisor verify the ordinary visa-free entry policy for this passport and stay length?
Recommended next steps
Book a first-night hotel with a usable Chinese address for the Arrival Card, airline counter, and Boarding Kit.
Find hotels on Trip.com →Activate data before takeoff so CDAC, maps, translation, and ride-share work immediately.
Get a China eSIM →Install and test before departure — most VPN download pages are blocked after landing.
Install NordVPN →Sponsored · we may earn a commission if you book.
Example routes that usually qualify
Common China entry ports for Canada travelers: PEK, PVG, CAN.
Routes that fail
Airline familiarity from Canada
What to do at airline check-in
Documented incidents involving Canada travelers
These are isolated incidents, not the norm — but they're why carrying printed proof matters.