Is Bank Account Business on China’s Negative List for Foreign Investment?
As of 2025, providing bank account services (银行账户业务, yínháng zhànghù yèwù) as a core business is implicitly restricted under China’s 2024 Negative List, which contains 31 prohibited or restricted items for foreign investment. The banking sector falls under “Restricted” categories, meaning foreign investors cannot operate retail deposit-taking without meeting specific conditions, effectively limiting direct provision of bank accounts to wholly foreign-owned entities (WFOEs) without a banking license (银行业牌照, yínháng yè pàizhào). This FAQ clarifies the regulatory landscape for foreign executives evaluating market entry in China’s financial services sector.
Understanding the Negative List and Banking Restrictions
China’s Negative List for Foreign Investment (外商投资准入负面清单, wàishāng tóuzī zhǔnrù fùmiàn qīngdān) is a legal document updated annually by the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) and the Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM). It specifies industries where foreign ownership is prohibited (禁止, jìnzhǐ) or restricted (限制, xiànzhì). The 2024 version reduced items from 33 to 31, but banking remains in the restricted category.
For financial services, the key restriction is that foreign banks must establish a wholly foreign-owned bank (外商独资银行, wàishāng dúzī yínháng) or a joint-venture bank (合资银行, hézī yínháng) with regulatory approval from the National Financial Regulatory Administration (NFRA). Retail deposit-taking—including opening personal and corporate bank accounts—requires a banking license issued under the Banking Supervision Law of the PRC. Without this license, any entity offering account services is illegal.
Furthermore, foreign banks with a branch structure (分行, fēnháng) are restricted from conducting RMB retail business for Chinese citizens unless they meet specific capital-adequacy ratios and have operated in China for at least 3 years. This creates a significant barrier for non-bank foreign firms wanting to offer bank account functionality as a service.
| Category | Items on List | Restriction Detail | Impact on Bank Account Business |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prohibited | 5 (e.g., news, education, traditional Chinese medicine) | No foreign investment allowed | Banking not prohibited per se |
| Restricted | 26 (includes banking) | Foreign ownership capped at 50% for a licensed bank; retail RMB deposit-taking requires 10-year track record abroad and minimum assets of US$10 billion | Bank account services effectively limited to licensed banks |
| Encouraged | N/A (for banking) | No special incentives for retail banking | No path for non-bank entities |
Is Bank Account Business Specifically Listed as a Separate Item?
No—”bank account business” does not appear as a standalone item on the Negative List. Instead, it is subsumed under the broader category of “banking services (银行业务, yínháng yèwù)”. The 2024 Negative List states: “Foreign investment in banking institutions shall comply with relevant regulations of the banking regulatory authority.” This includes deposit-taking, lending, settlement, and other core banking functions.
However, there is a distinction between offering bank accounts as a service (e.g., a fintech company providing account opening APIs) and operating a bank that holds deposits. The former may fall under “value-added telecommunications services (增值电信业务, zēngzhí diànxìn yèwù)” or “financial information services,” which have their own restrictions. For instance, foreign investment in value-added telecom requires a joint venture with Chinese control (maximum 50% foreign equity), and financial information services (e.g., credit scoring) are subject to data security reviews. This creates a gray area:
- Scenario A: A foreign fintech partners with a Chinese licensed bank to offer account services via its app. Since the partner bank holds the license, this is permissible but requires thorough compliance with data localization laws.
- Scenario B: A foreign firm directly manages deposits and provides account statements to Chinese users. This is prohibited without a banking license.
In practice, the NFRA and the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) have clamped down on unlicensed deposit-taking. In 2023, PBOC fined RMB 2.1 billion across 17 fintech firms for illegal deposit-like activities. This underscores that any business resembling bank account services must go through a licensed institution.
Decision Framework: Can Your Company Operate a Bank Account Business?
Use this framework to determine feasibility:
- If your business directly accepts deposits from Chinese residents or enterprises for the purpose of holding funds and enabling payments, choose A: Apply for a banking license as a foreign-invested bank. This requires minimum registered capital of RMB 1 billion and a track record of 10 years in banking overseas.
- If your business provides technology or services that facilitate account opening for a licensed Chinese bank, choose B: Establish a WFOE under the Foreign Investment Law and partner with a Chinese bank. Your WFOE can operate in fintech, under the “encouraged” category for certain R&D and software services.
- If your business offers cross-border account services (e.g., offshore accounts for Chinese companies), choose C: Register as a representative office and operate under special regimes like the Shanghai Free Trade Zone (FTZ), which allows limited cross-border financial services without a full banking license.
3 Pitfalls in Bank Account Business Entry
NEXT STEPS
- Assess the nature of your bank account business: Is it deposit-taking or tech-enablement? Read our 2024 Negative List Guide for Banking Services to identify your business category.
- Explore partnership models: If your business is tech-based, review Setting Up a Fintech WFOE in China: 2025 Roadmap for licensing alternatives.
- Consult with regulatory specialists: For cross-border or FTZ structures, read Free Trade Zone Financial Services: Less-Restricted Paths for specific exemptions.
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