Indonesian news agency ANTARA picked up Xinhua’s holiday-traffic figures, emphasizing the 14.7 percent year-on-year rise in visa-free entries and the overall 11.3 million cross-border journeys during the 1–5 May break. The report, published in Bahasa Indonesia, underscores growing Southeast-Asian interest in China as a quick-trip destination now that unilateral 30-day visa exemptions cover Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia’s near neighbours.
To navigate these shifting entry rules, companies can tap VisaHQ’s dedicated China page (https://www.visahq.com/china/), which tracks real-time policy shifts, clarifies eligibility for the new 30-day visa waiver and, when needed, expedites full visa applications. The portal’s concierge support helps travel planners verify documentation, ensuring executives avoid last-minute snags even on rapid-fire business itineraries.
For Indonesian corporates exploring China’s market, the renewed ease of entry could accelerate fact-finding missions and supplier audits. Travel agents in Jakarta report a spike in demand for three-night Shanghai and Shenzhen business packages, with executives attracted by the ability to mix factory visits with retail scouting—visa-free. The ANTARA coverage also reminds mobility managers to watch regional media, as local language outlets often frame China policy changes through a business lens relevant to ASEAN firms. Given Indonesia’s goal of doubling bilateral trade with China by 2030, smoother short-term travel is likely to play a pivotal role. Companies should still brief travellers on China’s ‘purpose-matching’ rule: even under visa-free entry, participants in meetings must stick to agendas declared at immigration and avoid hands-on technical work that could be construed as employment. If demand holds, airlines may up-gauge Jakarta–Guangzhou and Denpasar–Shanghai flights for the northern-summer season, further integrating supply chains.
