Review Summary
A China pilot free trade zone should be evaluated as an operating location and reform-testing platform, not as a blanket approval or automatic incentive. Official government materials describe market-access and cross-border-service negative lists, institutional opening-up measures and support for foreign enterprises. The location decision still depends on the company’s sector, customer access, customs route, talent, data, tax, licensing, supply chain and actual local implementation. A useful screen compares a specific zone and project against the same criteria used for a non-FTZ location.
What an FTZ Can and Cannot Do
| Question | Practical reading |
|---|---|
| Can an FTZ provide a policy-testing environment? | Yes, official materials describe pilot reforms and institutional opening-up measures. |
| Does an FTZ remove all sector licensing? | No. Sector access, market-access lists and licensing still need to be checked. |
| Does an FTZ guarantee a tax incentive? | No. Any incentive requires an applicable policy, eligibility and implementation confirmation. |
| Does an FTZ fit every business? | No. The value depends on the project’s trade, service, investment and operating needs. |
| Should the local authority be contacted? | Yes. The company should request the current application channel and project-specific implementation details. |
Location Screening Criteria
| Criterion | Questions to ask | Evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Market access | Is the activity permitted and are there special restrictions? | Current foreign-investment and market-access lists |
| Customer access | Where are customers and decision makers located? | Customer map and travel or delivery model |
| Trade and logistics | Does the zone improve the actual import, export or bonded route? | Customs process, ports and logistics cost model |
| Talent and operations | Can the company recruit and manage the required roles? | Talent plan, labor route and operating budget |
| Data and technology | What data will be processed, transferred or stored? | Data map, security review and system architecture |
| Implementation | Who confirms the local policy and what documents are required? | Written authority response and application checklist |
Step-by-Step Location Review
- Describe the project, activity, ownership and expected operating functions.
- Screen the sector against foreign-investment access and general market-access restrictions.
- Compare two or more locations using the same weighted criteria.
- Ask each local authority for current policies, application channels, service contacts and implementation conditions.
- Check customs, tax, labor, data, product and environmental requirements separately.
- Build a total operating model that includes compliance and management effort, not only rent or an advertised incentive.
- Record the decision, assumptions, evidence owner and review date.
- Recheck the location after a material change in business activity, ownership, product or policy.
Signals from Official Materials
The State Council reported that China’s pilot FTZs have introduced reforms in market access, cross-border service trade and institutional opening-up, and that the 22 pilot FTZs attracted foreign direct investment in 2024. A separate action plan describes strengthening opening-up platforms and stress-testing foreign-investment access in pilot FTZs. These are useful reasons to investigate a zone, but they are not a substitute for project-level eligibility and implementation evidence.
Common Mistakes
- Choosing a zone from a general ranking without checking customer and supply-chain fit.
- Treating an FTZ label as a replacement for a negative-list or license review.
- Budgeting a headline incentive before obtaining written eligibility confirmation.
- Ignoring local implementation differences between policy text and project handling.
- Comparing rent only and excluding customs, talent, data, tax and management costs.
- Failing to record which policy version supported the location decision.
Recommendation
Use an FTZ when its specific reform, trade, service or investment platform solves a documented business need. If the only reason is a general expectation of cheaper setup or easier approval, the evidence is not yet strong enough. The next action should be a written project screening with the relevant authority and an independent compliance review.
Sources and Review Date
- State Council, FTZs provide robust support for foreign businesses operating in China – official FTZ reform and foreign-investment context
- State Council, China to enhance effectiveness of opening-up platforms – opening-platform and FTZ action-plan context
- State Council, Foreign Investment Guide of the People’s Republic of China, 2025 Edition – foreign-investment location and policy framework
Last reviewed: 2026-07-14
