Last year, the Chinese Service Center for Scholarly Exchange (CSCSE), the official body under China’s Ministry of Education that authenticates foreign degrees updated its list of recognized overseas institutions. In this update, 270 foreign colleges and universities were removed from the official certification list.
📌 What Does This Mean?
CSCSE’s list is the authoritative reference used when evaluating foreign degrees for use in China, whether for work permits, further education, civil service exams, household registration (hukou), or other official purposes. Only degrees from institutions on this list can be authenticated by CSCSE. Authentication is often required for:
- Employment in China, especially in government, state-owned enterprises, large corporations, and regulated professions.
- Work visas (Z visas), when HR departments ask for officially recognized academic qualifications.
- Further education in China, domestic master’s or PhD programs often require certification of previous degrees.
- Civil service or public sector exams, authentication is typically a prerequisite.
- Household registration (hukou), benefits, professional licenses, and relocation services once you return to China.
🎓 Why Were These Institutions Removed?
According to the official update, the changes reflect a quality review and regular management process. Schools were removed either because they hadn’t issued any degree verifications in recent years, failed to meet accreditation standards, or for other administrative reasons.
The official government notice listing the removed institutions was published on the CSCSE website:
https://zwfw.cscse.edu.cn/cscse/lxfwzxwsfwdt2020/xlxwrz32/qtxx/580296/index.html
🌍 Which Countries Are Affected?
The institutions removed span multiple countries, including:
- United States (largest share)
- Canada
- Australia
- United Kingdom
- South Korea
- Russia
and others, including some African countries.
This does not mean all universities from these countries are unrecognized as many remain on the list. However, the update removed those that are inactive in degree verification or deemed low-impact under the criteria used by CSCSE.
🧠 Impact for Future Students and Workers
Here is what this policy means practically for people planning to study or work in China:
❗ If your degree is from one of the 270 removed institutions:
- You cannot get an official degree authentication from CSCSE.
- You may be ineligible to use that degree for work visa processing in some cases.
- Applying for civil sector jobs, state exams, or regulated professions could be more difficult.
- You might be disadvantaged when applying for permanent residency or high-level talent visas.
❗ If your degree is from a currently recognized school:
- You can still get your foreign degree officially authenticated.
- That authentication can be used for visa/work permit requirements, employment verification, and further studies.
For most work visa applications, degrees from recognized schools can typically be authenticated through CSCSE. Some foreign degree holders instead use Apostille (Hague) certification or consular legalization as alternatives for certain processes, but this can vary by employer and local requirements.
📌 What Should You Do?
Here are key actions we recommend before accepting an offer or finalizing your study plan:
1. Check whether your prospective university is on the current CSCSE recognition list.
Use the official certification query tool on the CSCSE service site before committing.
2. If your target school was recently removed, consider alternatives that remain on the recognized list to safeguard future opportunities.
3. Understand your future plans in China (work, employment, visa type, permanent residency) and whether official degree certification is required for those goals. The policies around work visas increasingly rely on vetted credential checks.
4. Learn the difference between degree authentication and Apostille/legalization requirements — these are separate processes and have different implications for use in China.
5. Stay updated. China may update the list periodically, so it’s important to monitor official announcements from CSCSE.
📘 Final Thoughts
Degree recognition may not seem urgent when planning abroad study, but changes like this highlight how important it is for your academic choices to align with Chinese credential standards. Whether you intend to work, live, or further study in China, your degree’s recognition status could have a direct impact on your career path especially for work visas tied to a foreign degree.