After returning to China, the journey to the United States to give birth came to an end, but how to register the baby in China is another problem to be solved.
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > Can Meibao go to a Chinese account? </h1>
As long as it is not overborn, it is reasonable and legal for a U.S.-born baby to be registered.
The conditions for a U.S. baby to be able to apply for a hukou are: they must return home with a travel permit, and the baby's U.S. passport has not been used without a Chinese visa. Babies born abroad must bring the original and copy of the birth certificate issued by a foreign or overseas medical institution and a translation of the birth certificate issued by the translation agency; the "People's Republic of China Travel Permit" or "Passport" issued by our embassies or consulates abroad; the "Resident Household Registration Book", "Resident Identity Card" and "Marriage Certificate" of the baby's father and mother; and the local birth service certificate to the police station for household entry.
First apply for a birth permit in China, and then go through the household registration procedures in China's household registration department, which is the same as the procedures for Chinese citizens to apply for household registration. When applying for a hukou, when in China, the Chinese government recognizes the baby as a Chinese nationality, and does not recognize the baby's American nationality. Because Chinese law stipulates that the Chinese government does not recognize dual citizenship. After leaving the country, the U.S. passport can be used as usual.

<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > is a baby born in the United States a Chinese national? </h1>
Let's take a look at how the laws of our country determine the nationality of the baby.
The Nationality Law of the People's Republic of China stipulates:
1. Both parents or one of the parents is a Chinese citizen, born in China and has Chinese nationality.
2. If both or one of the parents is a Chinese citizen, he or she was born in a foreign country and has Chinese nationality; but if both parents or one of the parents is a Chinese citizen and has settled in a foreign country, and he or she has foreign nationality at birth, he or she does not have Chinese nationality.
3. The parents are stateless or have unknown nationality, settled in China, were born in China, and have Chinese nationality.
As mentioned above, there is a law to rely on for the acquisition of Chinese nationality. Like our families who go to the United States to give birth (most of them), their parents are Chinese and have no foreign green cards, so no matter where the baby is born, they all have Chinese nationality, which is confirmed.
<h1 class="pgc-h-arrow-right" > the Chinese government does not recognize dual citizenship, does it automatically renounce U.S. citizenship? </h1>
This is a mistake! The U.S. citizenship owned by Mabel will not be affected.
According to the U.S. Constitution, a U.S.-born baby has U.S. citizenship. According to Chinese law, babies who do not have a foreign green card Chinese have Chinese nationality. The so-called conflict of non-recognition of dual nationality means that China recognizes only one nationality, that is, Chinese nationality. Therefore, even if the Chinese government does not recognize it, the baby's U.S. citizenship still exists.
In addition, it is not so easy to give up U.S. citizenship, not to lose a U.S. passport and no longer be an American, nor to write a statement of secession from the United States to work, all of which require legal process. Some people returned home to avoid trouble, saying that the baby did not receive a U.S. passport and was not a U.S. citizen. In fact, people who understand it know that the premise of applying for a travel permit for the baby at the Chinese consulate in Los Angeles is to collect the baby's U.S. passport. The fact is that every baby who returns home has a U.S. passport, so even if he is registered, he will not lose his U.S. citizenship.
On the whole: the parents are Chinese, there is no foreign permanent residence, the child returns to China with a travel permit after being born in a foreign country, even if they take a foreign passport, China still recognizes that they are Chinese nationality, and the domestic hukou can still be enrolled. At the same time, don't worry that the U.S. citizenship will be eliminated, unless you fight with the U.S. government, out of China, the U.S. passport can be used.