FAQ Resource Update: China Tax Authority Updates FAQ on E-Invoicing for Foreign Companies — Key Takeaways

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China Tax Authority Updates FAQ on E-Invoicing for Foreign Companies: 5 Key Takeaways from the 2025 STA Revision

On March 15, 2025, the State Taxation Administration (STA, 国家税务总局, guójiā shuìwù zǒngjú) released an updated FAQ on fully digitalized electronic invoices (全面数字化的电子发票, quánmiàn shùzìhuà de diànzǐ fāpiào, or 全电发票) containing 57 revised Q&As that directly affect foreign-invested enterprises (FIEs) operating in China. This revision clarifies compliance requirements for cross-border transactions, system integration mandates, and document retention rules — areas that previously created confusion for foreign companies using traditional paper or PDF-based invoicing.

Understanding the 2025 E-Invoicing FAQ Update

The STA’s updated FAQ replaces the previous version from October 2023, which contained 42 Q&As. The expansion to 57 questions reflects growing complexity as China’s e-invoicing system — launched as a pilot in November 2021 across Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Inner Mongolia — now covers 24 provinces and municipalities. Foreign companies with 外商独资企业 (WFOE, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) structures, 合资企业 (joint ventures, hézī qǐyè), and 代表处 (representative offices, dàibiǎo chù) must review these changes to avoid penalties.

Key contextual numbers give this update weight: the e-invoicing pilot expanded from 3 regions to 24+ in just 38 months, and the STA reports that 76% of all VAT invoices in pilot regions are now issued in fully digitalized format. Non-compliance penalties under Article 35 of the Invoice Management Law can reach 0.5% of invoice amounts per violation — a cost that quickly escalates for high-volume operations.

Timeline and Scope: Full Digitalization by 2026?

The STA’s FAQ does not announce a specific nationwide mandate date, but the trajectory is clear. The pilot began with 3 regions in November 2021, expanded to 12 by December 2023, and reached 24 by June 2024. Industry analysts expect national coverage by Q3 2026, with mandatory adoption for all taxpayers — including foreign companies — phased in during 2027.

Foreign companies face unique challenges because the e-invoicing system requires integration with China’s 金税工程 (Golden Tax Project, jīnshuì gōngchéng) version 4.0, which leverages big data analytics and real-time reporting. Unlike paper or PDF invoices, fully digitalized invoices must be issued through the STA’s Unified Electronic Invoice Service Platform, with data flowing directly to tax authorities in real time. The updated FAQ confirms that foreign companies may use third-party service providers authorized by the STA, but only if those providers maintain servers within mainland China — a detail that caught many multinationals off guard.

What Foreign Companies Must Do Now

The 2025 FAQ revision introduces several actionable requirements for foreign companies. First, any FIE that issues VAT invoices — whether for domestic sales, services, or cross-border transactions — must register with the Unified Electronic Invoice Service Platform. Second, the STA now mandates that digital invoices include standard data fields for both the issuer and recipient, including unified social credit codes (统一社会信用代码, tǒngyī shèhuì xìnyòng dàimǎ), which many foreign parent companies lack.

The FAQ also addresses cross-border scenarios: foreign companies providing services to Chinese clients must now ensure that their e-invoicing system can handle dual-language fields (Chinese and English) and currency conversions from RMB to foreign currencies. The STA specifies exchange rates must follow the daily reference rate published by the People’s Bank of China. Third, document retention rules have tightened — all e-invoice data must be stored on servers within mainland China for a minimum of 5 years, with audit trails accessible to tax authorities within 48 hours upon request.

Key Changes in the 2025 FAQ Revision

The table below summarizes the most significant changes between the October 2023 and March 2025 FAQ versions, with direct relevance to foreign companies.

Topic October 2023 FAQ March 2025 FAQ Impact on Foreign Companies
Cross-border invoices No specific guidance Mandatory dual-language fields and PBOC exchange rate reference Requires system updates for multi-currency processing
Third-party platforms Allowed if STA-registered Servers must be in mainland China; data cannot leave without approval Disqualifies many global ERP platforms
Retention period 3 years for digital records 5 years, plus 48-hour audit access requirement Increases storage and compliance costs
Unified social credit code Recommended for recipients Mandatory for both issuer and recipient Forces many overseas entities to obtain Chinese registration
Penalty clarity Referenced general Invoice Law Specific penalties: 0.5% of invoice amount per violation, up to 10% for repeat offenses Higher financial risk for errors

These changes shift foreign companies from voluntary adoption to near-mandatory compliance, with clear consequences for delay or error. The STA also added 5 new Q&As specifically addressing 外商投资企业 (foreign-invested enterprises, wàishāng tóuzī qǐyè) scenarios, confirming that representative offices are not exempt from e-invoicing requirements, even if their parent handles invoicing overseas.

Common Pitfalls

Pitfall: Assuming that e-invoicing requirements do not apply to representative offices that report income offshore. Cost: RMB 50,000–200,000 per violation depending on invoice volume, plus potential back-tax assessments. Fix: Register your representative office’s unified social credit code with the Unified Electronic Invoice Service Platform immediately, even if your offshore parent issues invoices. Have a local tax agent verify classification.
Pitfall: Using a global ERP system with servers outside mainland China to store e-invoice data. Cost: Data security fines under the Personal Information Protection Law can reach RMB 50 million or 5% of annual revenue, plus the STA may disqualify your e-invoices retroactively. Fix: Migrate e-invoice data storage to an STA-authorized cloud provider within mainland China, such as Alibaba Cloud or China Telecom’s government cloud, and ensure your ERP integrates with the unified platform via API.
Pitfall: Failing to include both Chinese and English on invoices for cross-border services, or using incorrect exchange rates. Cost: Invoices may be rejected by the recipient’s tax authority, leading to delayed payments and VAT deduction disallowance — potentially RMB 100,000+ per transaction in disputed amounts. Fix: Configure your invoicing system to pull the PBOC daily reference rate automatically and include both language fields. Test with a sample cross-border transaction before go-live.

Decision Framework: How to Choose Your E-Invoicing Approach

If your foreign company issues fewer than 500 invoices per month to domestic Chinese clients and has no cross-border transactions, choose direct integration with the STA’s Unified Electronic Invoice Service Platform using their standard API — this is the lowest-cost route. If your company issues more than 500 invoices per month or handles cross-border transactions in multiple currencies, choose an STA-authorized third-party service provider with mainland China servers — this reduces internal IT burden and ensures compliance with dual-language and exchange rate requirements. If your company has representative offices in multiple cities and needs centralized reporting, choose a full-service e-invoicing platform that offers multi-entity management and real-time compliance monitoring, even though this carries higher subscription fees.

NEXT STEPS

  1. Review the full 2025 FAQ document — Download the STA’s official FAQ (Chinese-language) from the tax authority portal and map each Q&A to your company’s invoicing workflows. Pay special attention to Q&As 34–39, which cover cross-border scenarios. For an English summary with section-by-section analysis, read our China E-Invoicing Compliance Guide: 2025 Edition.
  2. Audit your current invoicing infrastructure — Identify whether your ERP or accounting system stores data on servers outside mainland China, where your unified social credit codes are registered, and whether your platform supports real-time data transmission to the STA. Use our WFOE Tax Compliance Checklist to assess gaps before the next audit cycle.
  3. Engage an STA-authorized service provider — If your current system cannot meet the server location or dual-language requirements, transition to a compliant platform within 90 days. Compare providers using our Authorized E-Invoicing Provider Comparison Table, which covers pricing, feature sets, and integration options for foreign companies.

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

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