China
25% (15% for High-Tech Enterprises)
Corporate Tax
3–6 months (WFOE)
Setup Time
No statutory minimum (industry-specific requirements apply)
Min. Capital
100% in permitted sectors (Negative List restrictions apply)
Foreign Ownership
#31
Ease of Business
China is the world's second-largest economy and the most complex jurisdiction for foreign investors. A Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE) provides full foreign ownership in permitted sectors, but the Negative List excludes significant areas, and registration requires approvals from SAMR, local authorities, and potentially MOFCOM. The process takes 3–6 months for a standard WFOE. Corporate tax is 25% standard, with a High-Tech Enterprise rate of 15% for qualifying technology companies. Pilot Free Trade Zones (Shanghai, Shenzhen, Hainan) offer streamlined setup and preferential policies. The real challenge is not tax — it is navigating sectoral restrictions, RMB capital controls, chop culture, and the operating environment itself. China is a full commitment. Half-measures do not work. Budget experienced China legal counsel, genuine local management, and a realistic 3–6 month setup timeline.
- Companies with genuine long-term China market ambitions in permitted sectors
- Technology companies qualifying for High-Tech Enterprise status and the 15% corporate tax rate
- Manufacturers leveraging China's deep supply chains and industrial infrastructure
- Companies willing to commit the resources, time, and local management required for a successful China operation
- Businesses targeting China's 1.4 billion consumers with products or services adapted for the local market
China is a full commitment. A WFOE managed remotely from abroad rarely succeeds. Budget RMB 200,000–500,000+ in setup costs, 3–6 months timeline, experienced China legal counsel, and genuine local management. RMB profit repatriation requires a completed annual audit, corporate income tax settlement, and SAFE clearance — this process can take months and cannot be rushed. The company chops (seals) carry the legal weight of a corporate signature — whoever controls the chops controls the company in practice. Secure custody arrangements for chops are essential.
At a Glance
Available Business Structures
Cost Snapshot
Tax Overview
Banking Reality Check
Timeline: 2–4 weeks
Opening a corporate bank account in China requires the legal representative to appear in person at the bank with the business licence, company chops, and personal identification. Major domestic banks (ICBC, Bank of China, China Construction Bank, China Merchants Bank) and international banks with China licences (HSBC, Standard Chartered, Citibank) all offer corporate accounts. The bank will conduct an on-site inspection of the registered office before opening the account. Foreign currency accounts (for receiving investment and trade payments) and RMB basic accounts are separate — both are needed for a functioning WFOE. SAFE registration is required for foreign exchange transactions and capital account operations.
Visa & Immigration
China does not offer entrepreneur visas, digital nomad visas, or golden visas. Foreign nationals working in China require a Z visa (work visa) sponsored by the employing entity, followed by a Work Permit and Residence Permit. Work permits are categorised into A (high-end talent), B (professional talent), and C (temporary/seasonal workers). The legal representative of a WFOE can obtain a work permit through the company. Business visitors can use an M visa (business visa) for short-term activities such as trade fairs and contract negotiations, but cannot work or generate income. Some cities and FTZs offer facilitated visa processes for qualifying foreign talent.
Free Zones & SEZs
21 free zones available
Common Mistakes
Underestimating the WFOE setup timeline
Fix: A fully operational WFOE — with business licence, bank account, tax registration, Golden Tax System, and all required permits — typically takes 3–6 months. Many founders budget 4–6 weeks and are severely disappointed. Start the process well in advance of your planned market entry date and use the lead time for market research and relationship building.
Ignoring the Negative List before committing to a WFOE
Fix: The Foreign Investment Negative List is updated annually and determines which sectors allow 100% foreign ownership, which require a Joint Venture, and which are prohibited. Internet content, media, education, telecoms, and several other sectors are restricted. Verify your specific business scope against the current Negative List with a Chinese law firm before investing in the setup process.
Poor chop (seal) management
Fix: Company chops in China have the legal weight of a corporate signature. The company chop, financial chop, and legal representative chop can authorise contracts, bank transfers, and government filings. If an employee or partner gains unauthorised access to your chops, they can legally bind the company. Establish strict chop custody procedures, require dual-authorisation for chop use, and store chops in a secure location with access logs.
Assuming profits can be freely repatriated
Fix: China has capital controls. Repatriating profits as dividends requires: completed annual audit, corporate income tax filing and settlement, board resolution approving dividend distribution, and SAFE clearance through the bank. The entire process can take 2–4 months. You cannot simply transfer RMB out of China. Plan your cash flow and treasury management around these constraints.
Frequently Asked Questions
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This content is educational and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Always consult a qualified professional for your specific situation. Data last verified March 2026.