how to get china travel card for new born

beachedwhale

Registered User
Hello!

I am carring a permanent HKID, while my husband is a British citizen w/HKID (resident).

Would you please let me know if I could get the china travel card for our new born baby? How long does it take to get one?

Do I need to get HKID card for the baby first? Then, apply for the china travel card?

Please kindly let me know. Thanks!

:thanks
 
Are u of Chinese Origin? Or do u have a SAR Passport?
Babies dont get HK ID cards till their 11 years old
 
My son got his China card at the beginning of the month. Since I was born in UK, my son got a British Passport but this cannot be used to apply for a Re-entry permit card (回鄉證).

You need to apply for a HKSAR Passport and HKID first (these goes together) and then apply for a Re-entry permit card after receiving it. With our son, the passport took around 10 working days and the Re-entry permit card 5 days. Go into this link for info on HKSAR passport and re-entry permit card. All done at China Travel Services.

http://www.gov.hk/en/residents/immigration/index.htm
 
Agree with Neha - babies do not need to apply for ID cards till they're 11.

Is your baby going to be travelling to China frequently? Would a normal visa not do?
 
My toddler does not go up to China often but having a china card is for conveniency should we suddenly decide to go.

A normal visa is one where you can apply single or multiple trips with an expiry or upto 3mths I think so there is a hassle of reapplying again. The china card last for 5 years. With a visa you need to go via the foreign passport custom which takes longer - I used to have this before I had kids and it took 40mins as there were lots of foreign travellers. With the china card it took around 5mins as they have lots of counters.
 
Applying for a HKSAR passport means you must apply for a HKID card for the child as well, they cannot have a passport otherwise.
Obviously to get this one of the child parents must be a Chinese citizen. Once you have this then off to CTS and apply for the back home pass.
 
Just to clarify - babies DO get a HKID card if they have a HKSAR passport. If no HKSAR passport, then they don't get a HKID card until they are 11 years old.

To get the China home pass, the baby must have a HKSAR passport and at least one of the parents must be chinese.
 
Question: Can the child have a HKSAR passport and also be a passport holder of another country--for example, USA? Our son was born in the USA. He has US citizenship and holds a US passport but he also has permanent residence in Hong Kong because his father was born and raised in Hong Kong.
 
HK allows dual nationality

Okay, so without even dealing at all with nationality--is it possible to obtain a HK passport for your child without actually changing our child's nationality? US does not allow dual citizenship.
 
How can u get the passport of one country without becoming its citizen? To get HK passport u have to declare that u are becoming Chinese citizen.
 
But how does that actually work as China doesn't allow dual citizenship and neither does the US? Maybe it's just impossible in this case. I've read that some people hold multiple passports but are not necessarily citizens of multiple countries. For example, my old roommate was a Korean citizen who held and traveled on a Korean passport. When she moved to the States she was only a resident but obtained a US passport--depending on where she planned to travel she could use the passports interchangeably--when she became a US citizen, however, she was required to give up her Korean passport (or stop using it).

Anyone had any experience with this?
 
My kids are American/Australian/HK and both of them holds US passprt, Australian passport and HKSAR passport(with a HKID).

As you all aware, Australia do allow dual citizenship but they are require by US law to make their choice of citizenship when they turn 18. As I was born in HK, so they are also eligible for the re-entry permit to China. But some of my friends told me that they do need a Chinese name on the HKSAR/birth certificate/HKID card, otherwise the China official will refuse their application.
 
Back to beachedwhale's original question (if you haven't already sorted it out), I am a Perminent HKID holder of Chinese origin (with 3 stars on the HKID card) and we applied for my son to have a British passport when he was born (Hubby is British). We haven't got him a HK passport yet but to get the China travel card, we had to give my son a Chinese name first. This has to appear on his birth certificate which is used to apply for a Hong Kong re-entry permit (it's a thin red booklet), and then use that to apply for the China travel card. I think it took us 2 to 3 weeks to sort it out (especially with the annoying queueing/quota system they use at Immigration and China Travel Services).
 
HI

I am a Perminent HKID holder of Chinese origin (with 3 stars on the HKID card) and my hubby is British. I got a HK ID card, SARS passport and the China travel card for my daughter. But I didnt have my daughter's Chinese name on her birth certificate, it's only on her China travel card.

When I apply the SARS passport for her, it's only because for her to return to HK.

eyt: Where do you live in Yuen Long? I'm also live in Pat heung(yuen Long).
 
Is my new born baby eligible to apply for China travel card?

Both my husband and I are US passport holders and Chinese race (born and brought up in mainland China). I am going to deliver a baby in HK in 10 days. I wonder what documents are required (simpliest to get) to bring our new baby to mainland China.

The official at HK Travel Document Issuing Office said if the parents are of Chinese race, the baby is eligible to apply, but she can not give us concrete ideas on how to show our Chinese race.

Any idea?

Also, is China travel card also called re-entry permit? Which is the one I should use to bring my baby to mainland China?
 
My toddler does not go up to China often but having a china card is for conveniency should we suddenly decide to go.

A normal visa is one where you can apply single or multiple trips with an expiry or upto 3mths I think so there is a hassle of reapplying again. The china card last for 5 years. With a visa you need to go via the foreign passport custom which takes longer - I used to have this before I had kids and it took 40mins as there were lots of foreign travellers. With the china card it took around 5mins as they have lots of counters.

You can get a year-long Chinese visa with multiple entries for your child if the parent is a HKID holder (and maybe if not--but our situation is the former)--application is not difficult and reapplication is also not difficult. Very straight-forward. If you're traveling with a baby and both parents have HKID's and/or a China ID card (as is my husband's case) they will not make you stand in the "visitor's line" just because your child is traveling on a passport and visa--no way! Actually, even before I had a HKID card, I could go into the HKID line with my husband even though I was traveling on a passport--never had any issues with it at all. So, I'd say, especially for younger children who cannot even receive a HKID card yet, getting a visa in their passport is probably a less stressful way of going to China--and it only needs to be renewed once a year!
 
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