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China Expands Digital Tax Refund System for Foreign Visitors

18th May 2026
China is easing its tourist tax refund rules as Beijing looks for new ways to increase spending by overseas visitors and support the recovery of international travel. The new measures, announced jointly by several Chinese government agencies including the Ministry of Commerce, Ministry of Finance and State Taxation Administration, focus on faster refund processing, digital customs verification and wider availability of tax refund services across major retail and tourism hubs. Officials say the changes are intended to reduce delays, simplify refund procedures and encourage more international visitors to shop inside China. Lower-Value Refund Claims Will Face Fewer Physical Inspections From July 1, purchases below 10,000 yuan (around $1,380) will no longer automatically require full physical inspection before tourist tax refunds are approved. Chinese customs authorities will instead apply random spot checks to lower-value claims, while purchases above the threshold will continue to undergo full verification procedures. The change reduces one of the most time-consuming parts of China’s departure refund process, particularly at airports and major international travel hubs where overseas visitors often face long queues before leaving the country. By limiting mandatory inspections for smaller claims, Chinese authorities are attempting to speed up refund processing while still maintaining customs oversight through targeted enforcement checks. The adjustment also carries broader commercial implications for retailers operating in tourism-heavy shopping districts, luxury malls and airport retail zones. Faster processing and shorter verification delays may increase participation in China’s tourist tax refund system, particularly among international visitors who previously viewed the procedure as too slow or inconvenient to complete before departure. China Expands Digital Processing and Instant Refund Services Chinese authorities are digitizing larger parts of the tourist tax refund system as Beijing pushes to reduce delays and simplify cross-border shopping procedures for overseas visitors. Beginning July 1, customs agencies and refund operators will be allowed to verify refund forms and sales invoices electronically, reducing reliance on paper documentation and manual customs review. The government is also expanding its “buy-and-refund-immediately” model, which allows foreign visitors to receive refunds directly at participating stores instead of waiting until departure from China. Under the revised system, tourists who receive instant refunds in one region will be permitted to complete final customs verification at a different departure port elsewhere in the country, giving travelers greater flexibility when leaving through another airport or province. Authorities have also standardized the completion deadline for those procedures at 28 days nationwide. The move creates a more uniform operational system for retailers, customs agencies and refund operators handling cross-regional tourist purchases, while supporting China’s wider effort to modernize tax administration and encourage more international consumer spending. More Tax Refund Stores Planned Across Tourism and Retail Hubs The policy package encourages local governments to expand the number of tax refund outlets across shopping districts, airports, tourist destinations and major transportation hubs used heavily by overseas visitors. Chinese authorities are also planning dedicated refund service zones at large trade exhibitions including the China International Import Expo, the China Import and Export Fair and the China International Consumer Products Expo, where international buyers and business travelers account for significant cross-border spending activity. Cities designated as international consumption centers are being encouraged to improve payment infrastructure, foreign payment access and retail services for overseas visitors as part of China’s wider “Shopping in China” campaign aimed at attracting more international consumer spending. Chinese authorities are also expected to support additional international passenger flights as Beijing attempts to increase inbound tourism, retail spending and business travel. The measures show how tourist tax refund systems are increasingly being tied to broader economic policy goals, particularly in countries competing for luxury shopping, airport retail revenue and high-spending international visitors. China Targets Faster Retail Spending From Overseas Visitors Tourist tax refunds are becoming a bigger part of the competition for international shoppers, especially in luxury retail districts, airport malls and duty-free zones that depend heavily on foreign spending. China’s latest changes focus on speeding up refund approvals and reducing paperwork, while still keeping customs checks in place for higher-value purchases and suspicious claims. For retailers, airports and international brands operating inside China, long refund queues and manual customs inspections have often been one of the more frustrating parts of the shopping experience for overseas visitors. Faster digital verification and fewer mandatory inspections for smaller purchases could make the system easier to use, particularly during busy holiday and travel periods when departure halls become congested. The reforms also arrive as Asian tourism markets compete more aggressively for high-spending travelers whose shopping budgets increasingly shape airport revenue, luxury retail sales and tourism income across the region.

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