Office Setup Cost Estimator for China
Setting up a physical office in China requires an initial capital outlay of ¥120,000 to ¥500,000 for a 50–100 sqm space, depending on city tier, lease terms, and fit-out requirements. This estimator breaks down the real costs — rent deposits, renovation, furniture, licensing, and hidden fees — so you can budget before signing anything. Understanding 办公室设置 (office setup, bàngōngshì shèzhì) early prevents costly surprises that delay your market entry by months.
China’s three largest markets — Shanghai, Beijing, and Shenzhen — account for over 60% of foreign company office setups. Yet rental rates vary by as much as 300% between Grade A and Grade B buildings within the same district. On top of rent, most landlords require a deposit equal to 3 months’ rent plus 1 month’s advance payment, effectively locking 4 months of rent from Day 1. Renovation costs for a basic fit-out run ¥500–1,500 per sqm, while furniture adds another ¥200–600 per sqm. These numbers mean a 50 sqm office in a mid-tier building can require ¥80,000–120,000 in total upfront cash before a single employee starts work.
Cost Breakdown Table: What You Will Pay
The table below summarises the six major cost categories for a typical 50–100 sqm office in a Tier-1 Chinese city. Use these figures as your baseline estimate, then adjust for city tier, building grade, and scope of renovation.
| Cost Category | Typical Range (¥) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rent deposit (3 months) | 30,000–90,000 | Refundable at lease end, minus repairs |
| Rent advance (1 month) | 10,000–30,000 | Paid upfront before keys are handed over |
| Renovation / fit-out | 25,000–150,000 | ¥500–1,500/sqm; includes wiring, lighting, flooring |
| Furniture & equipment | 10,000–60,000 | Desks, chairs, cabinets, IT rack, printer |
| Registration & licensing | 5,000–15,000 | Business license, fire safety, tax registration |
| Internet & utilities deposit | 3,000–8,000 | Usually 2–3 months’ estimated usage |
| Total upfront (approx.) | 83,000–353,000 | Varies by city, size, and build quality |
A 50 sqm serviced office in Shanghai’s Pudong area might cost ¥8,000–12,000/month all-inclusive, requiring only a 1-month deposit plus monthly fee — a lower upfront burden. In contrast, a 100 sqm traditional lease in Beijing’s CBD demands a 3-month deposit (¥45,000–75,000) plus renovation (¥50,000–150,000), pushing upfront costs past ¥200,000. The choice between serviced and traditional leases directly impacts how much cash you need in the first quarter.
Step-by-Step: How to Use This Estimator
Follow these four steps to build a custom estimate for your specific office setup:
- Determine city tier and target district. Tier-1 cities (Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, Guangzhou) command 40–60% higher rent than Tier-2 cities (Hangzhou, Chengdu, Nanjing). Within a city, central business district rent can be double that of suburban areas. Select your city and district first, as this drives 70% of your total cost.
- Choose lease type: serviced vs. traditional. Serviced offices (雷格斯, Regus, and local operators) typically cost ¥2,500–4,500 per person per month with 1-month deposit. Traditional leases require 3–4 months’ rent upfront plus renovation and furniture — a 3–5× higher initial cash requirement. Use the decision framework in the next section to decide.
- Add renovation and furniture based on headcount. For every 10 employees, budget 40–60 sqm of space. Multiply sqm by ¥500 (basic) to ¥1,500 (premium) for renovation, and add ¥200–600/sqm for furniture. A 60 sqm office for 8 people thus starts at ¥42,000 for basic fit-out plus furniture.
- Include licensing and contingency. Add ¥5,000–15,000 for business license and fire safety approvals. Always add a 15% contingency buffer to cover permit delays, deposit adjustments, and unexpected utility connection fees.
Using this method, a 60 sqm traditional lease in Shanghai’s Jing’an district would yield an estimated upfront cost of ¥120,000–180,000. A comparable serviced office would require only ¥30,000–50,000 upfront. The difference of ¥70,000–130,000 can be reallocated to hiring or marketing if cash flow is tight.
Decision Framework: Serviced vs. Traditional Lease
Your choice of office type determines upfront cash, flexibility, and operational complexity. Use this framework to match your situation with the right option:
If you have fewer than 10 employees, need to start operations in under 30 days, and prefer flexible monthly contracts, choose a serviced office. You avoid renovation and furniture costs, and deposits are typically 1 month instead of 3–4 months. The trade-off is higher per-person monthly cost (¥2,500–4,500 vs. ¥1,500–3,000 for traditional) and less branding control.
If you have 10–30 employees, plan to stay 2+ years, and need branded signage or specialised lab/warehouse space, choose a traditional lease. You pay more upfront but lower monthly costs over the lease term. Ensure you budget at least ¥150,000 for a 100 sqm fit-out and allow 60–90 days for renovation and licensing before move-in.
If you are testing the market with 3–5 people and have timeline uncertainty, choose flexible co-working (e.g., WeWork, Naked Hub, Kr Space) with month-to-month memberships. Upfront cost drops to ¥10,000–20,000 including deposit. Once headcount passes 8 people, re-evaluate toward serviced or traditional to manage per-person cost.
Hidden Costs That Blow Budgets
Even with a solid estimate, three common pitfalls can inflate your actual spend by 30–50%. Address them proactively to protect your budget.
NEXT STEPS
- Download our free China office lease checklist — this guide walks you through 20 key clauses to negotiate with landlords, from rent escalation caps to exit terms.
- Compare serviced office providers in your target city — read our comparison of Regus, WeWork, and local operators with real pricing data.
- Get a customized cost estimate for your headcount and city — use our interactive estimator tool to generate a detailed breakdown in under 10 minutes.
— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.
