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Guangzhou airport records over 42% rise in entry-exit visits from ASEAN

BY :China Daily

UPDATED :2025-09-19

Travelers are seen at Guangzhou Baiyun International Airport. (Photo/Xinhua)


According to a statement released by Baiyun Immigration Inspection Station in Guangzhou on September 17, as of September 16, border inspection officers from the airport have inspected and cleared about 1.5 million entry-exit personnel visits from ASEAN countries, a year-on-year increase of 42.6 percent. Among them, tourists accounted for 70.5 percent, representing a year-on-year growth of over 60 percent.


Over the past two years, China has successively implemented mutual visa exemption policies with three ASEAN countries — Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand.


Since the beginning of the year, there have been about 500,000 people visits from ASEAN countries who entered the country through the Baiyun International Airport taking advantage of the visa-free policy. It marks a year-on-year increase of 61.3 percent and accounts for 65.4 percent of the total number of ASEAN arrivals at the airport, the statement said.

 
Among them, passenger flows from Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand came to 291,000, 117,000, and 104,000 person visits, respectively, up by more than 41 percent, 53 percent and 67 percent year-on-year.


Now Baiyun International Airport, an aviation hub of the country, has over 100 regular passenger air routes operating stably to link Guangzhou to ASEAN countries every week, it said.


In response to the overlapping of ASEAN business and exhibition passenger flows during the China-ASEAN Expo in Nanning, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, running from September 17 to 21, Baiyun Immigration Inspection Station said they have scientifically analyzed the passenger flow, dynamically deployed police forces, and gradually promoted "paperless" customs clearance to ensure efficient passage for exhibitors.


Meanwhile, the exit-entry ports have been equipped with enough police officers proficient in foreign languages, including Vietnamese, Thai and Malay, to provide multilingual services.

Editor: Joyce