What taxes apply to foreign capital in China?

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What taxes apply to foreign capital in China? (Top 7 Taxes Explained)

Foreign capital in China, typically structured as a 外商独资企业 (Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise, WFOE, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) or a joint venture, is subject to 7 core tax categories ranging from income taxes to transaction levies. The most significant is the Corporate Income Tax (CIT, 企业所得税, qǐyè suǒdé shuì) at a standard rate of 25%, but value-added tax, dividend withholding tax, and stamp duties also apply. Misunderstanding these layers can increase costs by up to 15% of operating revenue.

1. Corporate Income Tax (CIT) — The largest tax burden

All foreign-invested enterprises (FIEs) pay CIT on global net profits at a standard rate of 25%. Compare this to Small and Thin-Profit Enterprises (STPE) which enjoy a reduced rate of 20%, and High and New Technology Enterprises (HNTE) at 15%. However, nearly 60% of FIEs pay the full 25% rate because they don’t qualify for these incentives.

The taxable base is calculated after deducting legitimate business expenses, depreciation, and previous years’ losses. FIEs must file quarterly provisional returns and an annual settlement within 5 months after year-end. Interest on overdue payments is 0.05% per day, a common pitfall that adds 18.25% per annum.

2. Value-Added Tax (VAT) — Service & goods levy

VAT applies to almost every revenue-generating transaction. The current rates are:

  • 13% — standard rate on goods, processing, and repair services
  • 9% — transportation, construction, real estate, and agricultural goods
  • 6% — modern services (tech, consulting, financial) and intangible assets
  • 3% — small-scale taxpayers (annual revenue under 5 million RMB)

The key distinction for foreign capital: exports of services between related parties (e.g., royalties, management fees) often qualify for zero-rating or exemption. Over 40% of WFOEs overpay VAT by not properly documenting cross-border service contracts for exemption.

3. Dividend Withholding Tax (DWT) — Profit repatriation tax

When a WFOE distributes after-tax profits to its overseas parent, a 10% withholding tax is levied on the gross dividend amount. This is reduced to 5% under tax treaties with Hong Kong, Singapore, and 30+ other jurisdictions if the beneficial owner meets treaty conditions (e.g., 25% shareholding for 12 months). Common scenario: A US parent pays 10%, while a Hong Kong holding company can reduce it to 5% — a saving of 5% on every profit distribution.

For a WFOE distributing 10 million RMB of profit, the DWT range is 500,000 RMB (5%) to 1,000,000 RMB (10%). Many foreign firms lose the lower rate by not filing the treaty benefit application in advance.

4. Other transaction taxes

Stamp Duty on contracts & capital

Leases, loan agreements, and technology transfer contracts are subject to stamp duty at rates from 0.005% to 0.1%. The registered capital of a WFOE triggers a one-time stamp duty of 0.025%. For a 5 million RMB capital injection, this equals just 1,250 RMB — but failing to stamp contracts invalidates them for tax deduction purposes.

Urban Maintenance & Construction Tax + Education Surcharge

These are surcharges on VAT paid, totaling 10-12% of the VAT amount (7% urban + 3% education + 2% local education). For a service company paying 100,000 RMB VAT, this adds 12,000 RMB. Only applicable to domestic transactions.

5. Double Taxation & Treaty Relief

China has signed 111 double taxation avoidance treaties (as of 2025). For active business income, the foreign credit method applies — you deduct Chinese tax paid from home-country tax. However, for passive income (dividends, interest, royalties), treaties can reduce rates by up to 50%. A German parent paying 25% CIT in China can credit nearly all of it against German tax, while a Japanese parent may face Japanese top-up tax.

FAQ: Common questions from foreign investors

Q: Do foreign employees pay different tax? No. All residents (≥183 days in China per year) pay progressive Individual Income Tax (IIT) at 3-45%, the same as locals. Non-residents pay only on China-sourced income.

Q: Are there tax holidays for foreign capital? Not specifically — 100% foreign-owned firms have no default holidays. But 15% HNTE rates apply equally to Chinese and foreign-owned high-tech firms. Western China and certain pilot free trade zones offer 15% for specific industries.

Q: Can I avoid tax by pricing goods low (transfer pricing)? No. Chinese tax authorities audit transfer pricing aggressively, especially for related-party transactions above 20 million RMB. Adjustments and penalties can reach 30% of the tax underpaid.

Summary Table: Core Taxes for Foreign Capital in China (2025)
Tax Type Standard Rate Reduced Rate Applies to Typical annual cost for a 10M RMB revenue WFOE
Corporate Income Tax 25% 15% (HNTE) / 20% (STPE) Global net profit ~250,000 RMB (assuming 1M profit)
Value-Added Tax 6% / 13% 3% (small taxpayer) Revenue (goods/services) ~60,000-130,000 RMB
Dividend Withholding Tax 10% 5% (treaty) Profit distribution to foreign parent ~50,000-100,000 RMB (on 1M distribution)
Stamp Duty (capital) 0.025% N/A Registered capital ~1,250 RMB (one-time)
Urban Maintenance & Education 12% of VAT N/A VAT surcharge ~7,200-15,600 RMB

Decision Framework for tax strategy

If your foreign capital entry is into high-tech or R&D (patents, software, biomedicine), choose HNTE certification to achieve 15% CIT and full R&D expense super-deduction (200% of qualifying expenses). If your entry is trading or consulting, choose standard WFOE structure with treaty planning (e.g., Hong Kong holding company) to reduce DWT from 10% to 5%. If your entry is e-commerce or manufacturing with low margins, choose small-scale taxpayer status (3% VAT) to cut transaction tax by 50-70% for the first year.

3 Common pitfalls for foreign capital taxation

Pitfall: Not applying for treaty benefits before the first dividend distribution. Cost: 50,000-500,000 RMB overpaid (10% versus 5% DWT). Fix: File “Tax Resident Certificate” with the home tax authority and submit treaty application to Chinese SAT before declaring the dividend.
Pitfall: Treating all cross-border service payments as subject to 6% VAT without exemption. Cost: 6,000-100,000 RMB overpaid per transaction. Fix: Obtain a “Zero-Rate or Exemption Confirmation Letter” from the local tax bureau for services provided entirely offshore.
Pitfall: Misclassifying expatriate salary as “separate from China” to avoid IIT on worldwide income. Cost: Penalties up to 50% of tax underpaid + daily interest. Fix: Register expatriates as tax residents if they spend >183 days in China, and declare global income.

NEXT STEPS

  1. Audit your current structure: Review if your registered capital and shareholder location qualify for treaty benefits. Read: China Tax Treaty Optimization Guide.
  2. Set up VAT exemption for services: If your WFOE charges management fees or royalties to an overseas parent, verify zero-rating eligibility. Read: VAT Exemption for Cross-Border Services FAQ.
  3. Plan for HNTE certification: If your business has 3+ years of R&D expenditure above 3% of revenue, apply for reduced CIT rate. Read: HNTE Certification for Foreign Companies Guide.

— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.

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