address:
Service points are available in Shenzhen, Hong Kong, Japan, Boten, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, and the United States.
microsoft
zj2017122
Phone:
13902458366
For business inquiries or to obtain the latest industry quotes, please scan the QR code or add the WeChat ID below. We will provide you with one-on-one exclusive service.

this paper is directed atSurrogacy abroadFor babies born in China, we provide a hands-on guide to the entire process of returning to China, from determining the route of return (Travel Permit vs. Chinese Visa), strategies for filling in the Chinese Consular App (especially avoiding the pitfalls of the "Mother's Information Field"), proof of paternity (including the key points of the DNA judicial sampling chain), to returning to China and entering the country.Returns and Replacements SOP and Travel Permit Expiry/Expired Processing Ideas. We hope that this will be helpful to families who are about to carry their children back to their home countries or who are about to prepare to embark on the path of surrogacy in the United States!
If you're in a period of anxiety about "just getting your birth certificate" or "getting ready to go home," remember these three phrases:
| dimension (math.) | Route A: China Travel Permit | Route B: Chinese visas |
|---|---|---|
| Common Objectives | Most families want to go this route | Some families may be passively triggered |
| Key Variables | Nationality Determination Logic + Verifiable Chain of Paternity Evidence | Visa policy and case documentation requirements (subsequent closure of the status loop is often more complex) |
| dominance | It is usually more favorable to close the domestic identity loop after returning home (e.g., settlement/study, etc., depending on the actual local requirements). | Entry routes are more dependent on visa policies and may temporarily avoid some nationality determination disputes, but are not necessarily simpler |
| difficulty | Audit more important: consistency of documents, proof of paternity, explanatory legal documents | Wide variation in visa types, higher complexity of renewal/residence arrangements, case-by-case assessment required |
A lot of parents worry about the question "Can I do it?". I suggest that instead of understanding the question as a "can/can't" choice, you should understand it as:
The structure of the documents you currently have in your possession + the chain of evidence of paternity + the caliber of the territorial areaThe most common consequence of taking the wrong route is not "leaving a record", but rather, the consequence of taking the wrong route. The most common consequence of taking the wrong route is not "leaving any records", but ratherRepetitive materials, increased number of replacement parts, overall cycle time passively lengthenedThe
In the case of an ordinary birth, the birth certificate often covers a lot of information. But what surrogates are most sensitive to is not "where they were born," but ratherHow paternity is recognized, how it is proved, and whether the documents are self-consistent with each otherThe embassy or consulate will usually check the "chain of identity" and "chain of evidence of parentage". Embassy and consulate audits are usually centered on the "chain of identity" and the "chain of evidence of paternity".
It is a roadmap to "just do it". The underlying logic in the case of surrogacy in one sentence:The legal validity and consistency of the material is usually greater than your verbal explanationsThe following are common routes. The following are common routes, which may be adjusted in different consular districts:
| move | What are you going to do? | key point | Maximum pit point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Step 0 | Confirmation of territoriality and acceptance | Determine which consular district you belong to; check whether the acceptance is by APP/postal/on-site, etc. | Inter-consular submission is a high-frequency return point (unless genuine, verifiable proof of residence can be provided) |
| Step 1 | Preparation of birth certificate chain | Original birth certificate + possible translation/notarization/certification/Hague certification (whichever is required by the consular district) | "Thinking you don't need a certification/translation" leads to a critical mass of paperwork and a collapsed timeline. |
| Step 2 | APP Fill in the form / make an appointment | Focusing on the consistency of fields such as "mother's information field" with legal documents | Guess-filling for the sake of submission leads to a direct return of the first review |
| Step 3 | Submission and preliminary examination | Clear photographs/scans, consistent information, complete key certificates (to the strictest standards) | First review returned → Modify → Re-queue |
| Step 4 | Audit/Replacement/Certification | Supplementary documents as notified; surrogacy cases may be more likely to trigger video verification or supplementary proof of paternity | Repeated patches, missed video connections, material non-compliance |
| Step 5 | Depositions and travel preparations | Paper+electronic backup; prepare documents as required by the airline/outbound country | High Cost of Interim Interpretation at Airports |
| Step 6 | Re-entry | Answer according to the facts of the document, without falsification; make the oral presentation consistent with the material | Fighting between claims and materials |
The first thing you need to do is not to "do a lot of work", but to check the territory and the way of acceptance. Common routes are:APP online submission → preliminary examination → (possible) video verification → mailed/submitted according to notificationSome jurisdictions may require you to be present at the event, so please refer to the APP notification and the instructions of the jurisdiction.
The birth certificate is the foundation. Whether and to what extent certification/translation/notarization is required is ultimately subject to the requirements of the consular district.
Recommendation:Allow time for processing according to the "strictest standards" and don't leave your tickets until the last day of certification.
One of the easiest fields for surrogate families to get stuck on is the "Mother Information". You may find that the system fields feel like they are forcing you to pick one answer, but there may be more than one "mother role" in the surrogacy structure.
Three principles for filling out the form (recommended to keep in mind):
Key Sentence:Failure to pass the preliminary examination often means "return-revise-re-queue". The first review stage is the most important:
Cases related to surrogacylikelihoodEasier to trigger video verification or retroactive documents; individual cases may require one or both parents to cooperate in appearing on camera, whichever is notified at the time. Don't rely on guessing for replacement documents, just read this articleAppendix A SOPProcessed according to the table.
Please make at least two sets of backups: one paper and one scanned set (cloud drive and local). Please prepare the documents according to the requirements of the airline company and the country of departure, and don't just listen to the "one-sentence experience on the Internet".
If asked about a child-related situation, there is only one principle:Answer on the facts of the document without falsification; do not voluntarily expand on details unrelated to the question, but do not make false statements either.. Make what you say, what you turn in, and what you write on your materials, all three are consistent.
Two folders are recommended:A ClipPut all the people you need;B ClipPut surrogate HF plus match (by the strictest standards).
The following three categories are the most common and easy to "save the timeline" kits in surrogacy cases:
The purpose is to explain: why the birth certificate is signed by the intended parents, why the mother's signature is missing, how the parental authority/custody structure is established, etc. Try to use an official, verifiable copy (as required by the consular district).
When one of the parties is unable to be present, many jurisdictions will require documents such as power of attorney/statement of consent to fill in the gap. Requirements vary greatly from one jurisdiction to another, so it is recommended to prioritize the preparation of the template or written requirements of the jurisdiction.
One word of advice:It is better for you to keep a buffer than to push your schedule to the limit; once a surrogacy case is filled, the most painful part is often the "queuing time".
Don't panic when you encounter return/replacement, first check the problem performance, and then follow the action to make up all at once:
| Performance of the problem | Most common causes | Immediate remedial action | timing effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| Failed/returned at first instance | Inconsistency of information with documents (including mother field) | Return to "legal document consistency takes precedence"; additional clarification to explain the logic of the document; calibrate to consular calibre, if necessary | Commonly ranges from a few days to a few weeks (including the risk of re-queuing) |
| Failed in the first instance | Photo/scanning non-compliance | Reshoot/rescan to ensure clarity and formatting; use PDF or high quality originals wherever possible | few days |
| Request for additional materials | Insufficient proof of paternity | Follow the testing path of the judicial sampling chain; submit/deliver as required by the consular district | Commonly a few weeks |
| Request for additional materials | Insufficient legal documentation to explain birth certificate naming/signature logic | Supplementary court documents/parentage documents and necessary translations; speaking in documents | few weeks |
| Video verification failures/missed connections | Network/notification/time slot issues | Test your network ahead of time, keep notifications on, and follow the guidelines for rescheduling; don't look for a signal on the fly! | Subject to scheduling |
General idea: consult with the local immigration authorities and apply for the correspondingOne-time entry/exit pass type document(The specific name, validity period and material requirements are subject to the information provided at the local window), and then apply to the embassy or consulate abroad for the replacement/reissuance of the travel certificate after departure.
Reminder:Individual regions may have additional material or procedural requirements, so be sure to consult your local immigration window in advance for an official response.
General idea: take the "exchange/renewal" route. Since you already have a previous document, many of the documents may be reusable, but it is still subject to the requirements of the current consular district (case by case variations exist).
The feasibility of third-country processing varies very much with the caliber: whether you can switch consular districts, whether you can make a successful appointment, and whether you can reuse your documents are all subject to actual requirements.You must make a successful reservation before you can actThe
A word of caution:Submission across consular districts may be easily returned/requested for additional proof of residency; please make sure to submit your application in writing.The latest consular districts on the official websites of embassies and consulatesSubject to change (subject to change in territorial area).
The official main entrance (recommended for bookmarking):
Embassy in the U.S.: Consular Districts and Links to Embassy Websites |
Announcement of Collar Adjustment (2024-06-29) |
DFA Consular Services: U.S. Embassy and Consulate Information
| The museum you're looking for. | Territory (by state/territory) | official link |
|---|---|---|
| Chinese Embassy in the United States (Washington, D.C.) (Temporarily covering the former Houston Territory) |
Washington, D.C., Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, Delaware; Acting in loco parentis for the former Houston Territorial District:Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Texas, Puerto Rico |
Official website of the Embassy in the United States |
| Consulate General of China in New York | Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Vermont, Rhode Island | New York Consular District Overview |
| Consulate General of China in San Francisco | Alaska, Northern California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Washington, Wyoming | San Francisco Consular District |
| Consulate General of China in Los Angeles | Southern California, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, Colorado, Hawaii, Pacific Islands | Los Angeles Consular District Overview |
| Chinese Consulate General in Chicago | Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Wisconsin, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota | Chicago Consular District Boundaries and Links |
Tip:If you are "out of the area" but want to make a hard vote, you will usually need to submitproof of residence(Driver's license/utility bill, etc.) to prove that you actually live in the area; otherwise it's easy to get stuck at the top of the list.
Let's get the principle out of the way first:"Chinese Consular App"Order Status TermsThere may be slight variations in different territories, but there is only one logic - theOnly follow the actions that the app/consulate notification tells you to do, don't jump the gun on mailings!.. The public note from the embassy in the U.S. clearly states "Please do not send the materials after the order status has changed to "under review".".
| Common APP statuses/tips (example) | What are you going to do? | Common snags in surrogacy cases |
|---|---|---|
| Submitted/pending review/in preliminary review | Keep app notifications turned on; be ready to make up materials/change photos as prompted. Do not mail at this stage(Unless the APP explicitly says "please mail/please ship"). |
Photos, consistency of information (birth paper/passport information page) are most likely to be called back. |
| Additional material/return for revision | You should fill in the blanks in the order of "what is missing": first fill in those that affect the eligibility (parent-child/residence/consular district), then fill in the format (photos/scanned documents). | It is common to be pressed for PBO/parental rights documentation, chain of evidence of paternity, and logic of mother's information. |
| Video verification/video meeting required | Make an appointment and get in on time; have "Birth Paper + PBO/DNA + Parent's ID" ready to show on camera; have a stable internet connection. | Surrogacy cases are more likely to require appearances by both parents or additional explanations of the logic of the material. |
| Review in progress (example of embassy in the United States) | This is a common node for "materials can be mailed according to the list".(Subject to APP prompts). Embassy of the United States of America public note: Mail the documents as soon as possible after the status of the order changes to "under review", and do not mail them in advance. |
If you are asked to make up DNA/verify the original, the timeline will be significantly longer. |
| Pending deposition/pending mailing/certified | Follow the rules of the consular district and wait for the return mail/collection at the embassy; pay attention to the logistics of the return envelope; and check Tracking in time. | Most of the time when documents are slow to come back, it's not "stuck", it's the mail/holidays/queues. |
Press below."Read the app notification first → Bag according to the list" logic. The exact number of copies/whether original documents are required or not is subject to the notification of the consular district to which you belong.
Last sentence:Different consular districts will state "mailing address/list of documents/number of copies/whether original documents are required" in the app notification. You just have to do it:On Notice + No Rush + Document Consistency Pulled Full CircleThis will minimize the "probability of returns".
A: It is not recommended to use the term "absolutely necessary" to summarize all cases. If the child has been verified as having Chinese nationality by the consular district to which he/she belongs, many families will use the travel permit as one of the main entry/exit document options; whether or not a visa is issued and whether or not to change to the visa route will ultimately depend on the results of the consular district's review.
A: The expiration date is based on the labeling of the actual document issued. See "Appendix B" above for disposition of expired documents.
A: In many surrogacy cases, DNA planning is done in advance on a "high probability of readiness" basis to minimize the loss of control of the timeline due to backdating. The key is to go through the Legal Chain of Custody and follow the form and delivery method of the report required by the consular district (direct mail/sealed or not, etc.).
A: Three principles are followed: consistency of legal documents is prioritized; truthfulness and accuracy are not to be guessed; in case of conflict between mandatory items of the system and the structure of the document, priority will be given to processing according to the guidelines of the consular district, and supplementary notes will be used to explain the "logic of the document and its legal basis".
A: The core is still "consistent with legal documents". If the system fields are not naturally consistent with the documents, do not guess and suggest that they be handled in accordance with the consular district's caliber, and prepare legal documents and proof of paternity that can explain the mother's lack of information/parental authority structure (DNA is triggered in a number of cases).
A: In many cases, it is possible to move forward, but it is usually necessary to fill in documents such as the power of attorney/statement of consent, etc., and the scrutiny will be more detailed. It is recommended to prepare in advance according to the template or written requirements of the consular district, do not wait for the replacement and then make up temporarily.
A: The principle is: answer according to the facts of the document, without falsification; do not voluntarily expand on irrelevant details, but do not make false statements either. Issuance usually depends more on whether the nationality determination and the chain of evidence of paternity can be verified and whether the material is consistent.
A: The most common causes are "inconsistent information" (especially in the parental information fields), photo/scanning irregularities, and key certificates not being submitted in the form required by the consular district. It is most efficient to remedy this directly against the SOP form in Appendix A.
A: Sufficient in many cases, but it still depends on whether the consular district requires translations, supporting documents or additional instructions. The safest course of action: the current list of documents in the consular district will prevail.
A: Prepare both paper and electronic backups in advance, and bring the documents according to the requirements of the airline company and the country of departure; don't just listen to the "one-sentence experience on the Internet". When you are questioned, explain according to the facts of the document and maintain consistency.