Essential HR Checklist for Hiring in China: Mandatory Steps and Compliance Requirements
Hiring in China requires compliance with a HR checklist of at least 7 mandatory items that span from signing a labor contract (劳动合同, láodòng hétong) within 30 days to enrolling employees in five social insurance funds and a housing provident fund. Failure to meet any of these requirements exposes companies to back-payments, fines of up to RMB 20,000 per violation, and even employee lawsuits. With China’s labor law revision in 2018 and ongoing social insurance reforms in 2024-2025, the checklist has evolved. This FAQ breaks down each mandatory item, provides a comparison table for local vs. foreign employees, and highlights common pitfalls that cost foreign-funded enterprises millions annually.
1. Employment Contract: Deadlines, Language, and Content
The cornerstone of any hire in China is a written employment contract. Under the Labor Contract Law (劳动合同法, láodòng hétong fǎ), a contract must be signed within 30 days of the employee starting work. If no written contract exists after one year, the employee is automatically deemed to have an open-term contract (无固定期限劳动合同, wú gùdìng qīxiàn láodòng hétong), and the employer may face double monthly wages for the period of non-compliance.
Contracts must be in Chinese (中文, Zhōngwén). Bilingual English/Chinese versions are common for foreign hires, but the Chinese text prevails in disputes. Essential clauses include job description, work location, probation period (试用期, shìyòng qī) rules (maximum 6 months depending on contract duration), working hours, and termination conditions. Note that China does not allow “at-will” employment; termination requires statutory cause or mutual agreement.
For foreign employees, the contract must explicitly state the position title, salary, and work location to match the work permit (外国人工作许可证, wàiguórén gōngzuò xǔkě zhèng) application. Any deviation can trigger permit cancellation.
2. Social Insurance and Housing Fund Registration
Employers must register all employees (both Chinese and foreign) in the social insurance system (社会保险, shèhuì bǎoxiǎn) within 30 days of hire. There are five mandatory categories: pension (养老, yǎnglǎo), medical (医疗, yīliáo), unemployment (失业, shīyè), work-related injury (工伤, gōngshāng), and maternity (生育, shēngyù). The employer’s contribution rate varies by city, but typically totals 28-30% of the employee’s gross salary (e.g., ~16% pension, ~9% medical, ~0.5% injury, ~1.5% maternity, ~0.8% unemployment). The employee contributes roughly 10.5% (8% pension, 2% medical, 0.5% unemployment).
Additionally, the Housing Provident Fund (住房公积金, zhùfáng gōngjījīn) is mandatory. Employer and employee each contribute 5-12% of salary, with the rate set by the local Housing Fund Management Center. As of 2025, all 31 provinces have extended social insurance coverage to foreigners with a work permit (except those from countries with bilateral agreements, such as Germany and South Korea).
3. Work Permits and Residence Permits (For Foreign Hires)
Hiring a foreign national in China requires three sequential steps: Work Permit Notification (外国人工作许可通知, wàiguórén gōngzuò xǔkě tōngzhī) issued by the local Bureau of Science and Technology (or Foreign Experts Bureau), then a Z-visa (Z字签证, Z zì qiānzhèng) obtained overseas, and within 30 days of entry, a Residence Permit (外国人居留许可, wàiguórén jūliú xǔkě) from the Exit-Entry Administration. The entire process takes 30-60 working days in tier-2 cities, but can stretch to 90 days in Beijing or Shanghai during peak periods.
Since 2023, the Foreigner’s Work Permit System has been digitized. Points-based classification (A, B, C) determines permit validity: Class A (high-end talent) gets a 5-year permit; Class B (professional) gets 1-2 years; Class C (ordinary) gets 1 year. Employers must report any changes in job title, work location, or salary within 10 days. Failure to do so can lead to a RMB 5,000-20,000 fine per employee and possible blacklisting.
4. Labor Registration with Local Authorities
All employers must complete labor employment registration (劳动用工备案, láodòng yònggōng bèi’àn) within 30 days of hiring. This involves submitting the signed contract and employee documents to the local human resources and social security bureau. The deadline varies: in Shanghai, it’s 7 days; in Shenzhen, 15 days. Non-compliance can block the employee from accessing social insurance benefits.
Additionally, for company payroll and individual tax (个人所得税, gèrén suǒdé shuì), monthly filings are mandatory. Employers must deduct individual income tax (IIT) at source using the progressive tax table (3% to 45%). As of 2024, the annual standard deduction is RMB 60,000 (RMB 5,000/month). Special additional deductions for rent, education, and elderly care apply. Foreigners also get an additional “foreigner’s deduction” (which will be phased out by 2026 – currently standing at RMB 2,700/month in many cities).
| Mandatory Item | Enforcement Standard | Deadline | Penalty for Non-Compliance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Written Employment Contract | 30 days from first day of work | 30 days | Double salary for period without contract; deemed open-term after 1 year |
| Social Insurance Enrollment | Employer contribution ~28-30% of salary | 30 days | Back-payment + penalty up to 3x unpaid amount + interest |
| Housing Fund Enrollment | 5-12% bilateral contribution | 30 days | Back-payment + daily late fee at 0.05% of unpaid amount |
| Work Permit & Residence Permit (Foreigner) | Pre-approval + entry visa + post-entry residence permit | 30 days after entry for residence permit | RMB 5,000-20,000 fine per employee; possible blacklisting |
| Labor Use Registration | Submit contract & employee data to local HR bureau | 7-30 days (city-dependent) | Warnings; blocked social insurance access |
| IIT Withholding & Filing | Monthly declaration; annual reconciliation | 15th of following month | Late fee 0.05% per day + fine of 50-200% of underpayment |
| Probation Period Rules | Max 6 months; cap based on contract length | Must be in written contract | Unpaid wages for excess period; possible punitive damages |
5. Probation Period, Payroll, and Termination Compliance
China’s Labor Contract Law strictly regulates probation periods: maximum 1 month for contracts under 1 year, maximum 2 months for contracts 1-3 years, and maximum 6 months for contracts 3+ years or indefinite-term. Probation salary cannot be less than 80% of the formal salary or the local minimum wage, whichever is higher. During probation, termination is still restricted—only for severe misconduct or proven incompetence (after documented performance improvement plans).
Payroll frequency must be at least once per month. China does not allow bi-weekly or monthly-in-arrears cycles beyond 30 days. Overtime pay is mandatory: 150% for ordinary overtime (weekdays beyond 8 hours), 200% for weekends, 300% for public holidays. Many foreign companies inadvertently violate overtime rules by using “comprehensive working hours” without government approval.
6. Record-Keeping and Annual Reporting
Employers must retain all HR records—contracts, timesheets, payroll registers, social insurance contribution receipts, and annual leave logs—for at least 2 years after employment ends. Foreign-funded enterprises (外商独资企业, WFOE, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) are also subject to annual labor compliance audits by the Bureau of Human Resources and Social Security. Since 2024, the National Social Insurance Audit has intensified, with random checks targeting companies that consistently report employees at the minimum contribution base.
Another critical reporting item: Individual Income Tax annual reconciliation (汇算清缴, huìsuàn qīngjiǎo) must be done for each employee between March 1 and June 30 of the following year. Foreign employees who qualify for the “5-year rule” (resident for 183+ days in 5 consecutive years) become subject to worldwide income tax – frequently overlooked by HR departments of international firms.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a separate checklist for hiring Chinese vs. foreign employees?
Yes. For Chinese employees, the main focus is contract, social insurance, housing fund, and IIT. For foreign employees, you add work permit, residence permit, and the “foreigner’s tax deduction” calculation. However, social insurance is now mandatory for foreigners in all but a few bilateral agreement cases.
What is the penalty if I forget labor registration?
Failure to perform labor use registration (劳动用工备案) typically results in a warning from the local HR bureau and a delay in social insurance activation. In practice, the employee cannot use medical insurance until the registration is done. There is no direct fine, but the company is liable for any medical expenses the employee incurs during the gap.
Are fixed-term contracts mandatory in China?
No. You can offer open-term (indefinite) contracts immediately. However, after the second fixed-term contract renewal (or 10 consecutive years of service), the employee can demand an open-term contract. Many foreign companies use fixed-term contracts of 2-3 years to maintain flexibility, but termination at expiry still requires statutory cause or severance (n+1 formula).
How does the new 2025 social insurance reform affect foreign employees?
As of 2025, all foreign employees holding a work permit in China must be enrolled in the full five social insurance categories. Previously, some cities allowed exemptions. Now, the only exception is for employees from countries with bilateral social security agreements (e.g., Germany, South Korea, Japan) – they can be exempt from pension and unemployment if they provide proof of continued coverage in their home country.
NEXT STEPS
- Download our free China HR Compliance Checklist – a detailed spreadsheet with city-specific deadlines and contribution rates. Get the checklist here.
- Schedule a 30-minute consultation to audit your current hiring process for both Chinese and foreign employees. Book a call.
- Read our guide on Work Permits in 2025 – including the new points-based system and how to classify foreign talent. Read the guide.
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