How to Decide Between Leasing and Building a Factory for Foreign Manufacturers in China: 2026 Guide

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How to Decide Between Leasing and Building a Factory for Foreign Manufacturers in China: 2026 Guide

For foreign manufacturers expanding in China, the build vs. lease decision represents a fork in the road with long-term financial, operational, and strategic consequences. In 2025, 62% of new foreign-invested manufacturing projects in China chose to lease existing facilities rather than build from the ground up, according to Ministry of Commerce data. This guide provides a structured decision framework based on capital intensity, time-to-market requirements, and operational control needs, helping executives make the right call for their specific situation.

Under China’s 外商投资法 (Foreign Investment Law, wàishāng tóuzī fǎ), foreign manufacturers can establish operations as a 外商独资企业 (WFOE, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) or WFOE, which grants full control over both leased and built facilities. The choice between leasing and building ultimately determines your capital deployment, regulatory exposure, and operational flexibility for the next 10–20 years.

The Core Trade-Off: Speed of Market Entry vs. Long-Term Control

The primary tension between leasing and building is simple: leasing gets you into production quickly with lower upfront capital, while building gives you full control over facility design and long-term cost structure. Foreign manufacturers must weigh these competing priorities against their strategic timeline in China.

Leasing a factory typically takes 3–6 months from lease signing to first production batch, assuming the facility requires only moderate fit-out. Standard industrial leases in first-tier cities cost 25–45 RMB/sqm/month (Shanghai exurbs: 30–40 RMB; Suzhou: 18–28 RMB; Guangzhou: 22–35 RMB). Deposit requirements range from 3–6 months’ rent, meaning a 5,000 sqm facility in Suzhou requires roughly 270,000–540,000 RMB in upfront deposits.

Building a factory, by contrast, requires 12–24 months for land acquisition, design approval, construction, and commissioning. Industrial land in major manufacturing hubs costs 800–2,500 RMB/sqm (Shanghai: 2,000–2,500; Suzhou: 900–1,200; Chengdu: 500–800). Construction costs add 2,500–4,500 RMB/sqm depending on specification, meaning a 10,000 sqm factory requires total land and construction investment of 33–70 million RMB.

Financial Comparison: CapEx, OpEx, and ROI Timelines

The financial case for leasing vs. building depends on your projected operating horizon, production volume, and ability to absorb upfront capital expenditure. Below is a side-by-side comparison for a 10,000 sqm manufacturing facility in a second-tier industrial hub (e.g., Suzhou or Dongguan).

Metric Leasing (10,000 sqm, Suzhou) Building (10,000 sqm, Suzhou)
Upfront capital required 4.5–9.0 million RMB (deposit + fit-out) 33–70 million RMB (land + construction)
Monthly occupancy cost 180,000–280,000 RMB (rent + property mgmt) 60,000–120,000 RMB (amortized + maintenance)
Time to production 3–6 months 12–24 months
Customization freedom Limited to interior fit-out Full structural, utilities, and layout control
Leasehold improvements depreciation Over lease term (5–10 years) Over 30+ years (land + building life)
Exit flexibility Low — sublease or terminate at lease end Very low — must sell land-use rights
Breakeven ROI vs. lease (10yr horizon) Base case — lease is capital-light If utilization > 75%, building breaks even in Year 7–9

The capital-light advantage of leasing is undeniable for manufacturers entering China for the first time. A lease requires roughly 10–15% of the upfront capital needed to build, freeing cash for equipment, working capital, and market development. However, over a 10-year operating horizon, building becomes cheaper on a per-sqm basis if utilization remains consistently above 70–75%.

For manufacturers with high power requirements (e.g., semiconductor fabrication, chemical processing), building is often the only viable option because standard leased factories cannot support the electrical, ventilation, or wastewater treatment infrastructure needed. These specialized requirements can add 10–20 million RMB to leasehold improvements that you will never recover at lease end.

Regulatory and Bureaucratic Realities

Foreign manufacturers face different regulatory burdens depending on whether they lease or build. China’s 外商投资准入负面清单 (Foreign Investment Negative List, wàishāng tóuzī zhǔnrù fùmiàn qīngdān) specifies industries restricted or prohibited for foreign investment, and this applies equally to leasing and building. However, the permitting process differs significantly.

For leasing: You need a WFOE with an industrial-compatible business scope, a fire safety inspection certificate (消防验收合格证, xiāofáng yànshōu hégé zhèng), and an environmental impact assessment approval (环评批复, huánpíng pīfù) from the local Ecology and Environment Bureau. In tier-2 cities, this process takes 2–4 months and costs approximately 50,000–150,000 RMB in permits and consulting fees. Lease registration with the local housing authority is also mandatory and carries a stamp duty of 0.1% of total lease value.

For building: Foreign manufacturers must obtain land-use rights through a competitive bidding process (招拍挂, zhāo pāi guà) managed by the local Bureau of Natural Resources. This process takes 3–6 months and requires the WFOE to demonstrate minimum investment, employment, and environmental standards. After land acquisition, construction permits require approvals from planning, fire, environmental, and construction bureaus — a process that typically adds 4–8 months and 300,000–800,000 RMB in fees and third-party reports.

A critical regulatory risk for building: China’s 土地管理法 (Land Administration Law, tǔdì guǎnlǐ fǎ) requires that land be developed within 2 years of acquisition, or the government can reclaim it with minimal compensation. This deadline pressures manufacturers to complete construction promptly, and delays can result in forfeiting the land-use right.

Location and Strategic Factors

Geography plays a decisive role in the lease-vs-build decision. Coastal manufacturing hubs (Yangtze River Delta, Pearl River Delta) have high land costs but deep supplier ecosystems, abundant skilled labor, and excellent port access. Inland cities (Chengdu, Chongqing, Zhengzhou) offer lower land costs and government subsidies but thinner supply chains and longer logistics times.

Coastal hubs: Land costs in Shanghai’s industrial exurbs (Jinshan, Fengxian) run 2,000–2,500 RMB/sqm, making building prohibitively expensive for most foreign entrants. Lease rates are high but the ecosystem density means you can find ready-built factories with proper environmental permits and utility capacity. In the Pearl River Delta (Dongguan, Shenzhen), lease availability is high but competition for land is fierce — building approvals can stretch to 18+ months.

Inland cities: Chengdu offers industrial land at 500–800 RMB/sqm and construction costs are 15–20% lower than coastal areas. Many inland industrial parks also offer “turnkey” factory support, where the government builds standard factory shells and the foreign company handles interior fit-out. This hybrid model — lease a government-built shell — combines speed with some customization, requiring only 6–8 months to production.

A strategic caveat: Tax holidays and incentives are increasingly tied to building rather than leasing. Many local governments in inland provinces offer 2–3 year corporate income tax exemptions plus property tax waivers for factories built by foreign investors, but these incentives are rarely available for leased facilities. A manufacturer building a 10,000 sqm factory in Chengdu can save 4–8 million RMB in taxes over three years, offsetting 10–15% of land costs.

Decision Framework: Lease or Build?

Use the following decision framework based on your company’s specific situation and strategic priorities in China.

If your annual production volume is below 50,000 units and you are entering a new market with uncertain demand, lease a factory. The capital-light approach preserves cash and gives you the ability to exit or scale up within 3–6 months. Most foreign manufacturers in consumer goods, light assembly, and components production should lease for at least the first 3–5 years.

If your production requires specialized infrastructure — cleanrooms, high-voltage power, chemical storage, specialized ventilation, or wastewater treatment — build a factory. Leased facilities almost never have the built-in capacity for these requirements, and after spending 10–20 million RMB on leasehold improvements, you will have no asset value at lease end.

If your forecasted run rate exceeds 75% of capacity for 5+ years and you have capital available at moderate cost, build. The lower monthly carrying cost of a built facility (60,000–120,000 RMB vs. 180,000–280,000 RMB in rent) produces a net present value advantage of 5–8 million RMB over a 10-year period, assuming 8% cost of capital.

If you need production within 6 months and are willing to accept limited customization, lease. Time-to-market is often the single most important factor for foreign manufacturers competing against established domestic players. Every month of delay can cost 1–3 million RMB in lost revenue depending on your product market.

If you are in a government-subsidized industry — advanced manufacturing, new energy, semiconductors, biopharma — build. Chinese local governments offer substantial land discounts, tax holidays, and grants that are only available to foreign manufacturers who invest in physical assets. A build can reduce effective land cost by 30–50% through incentives, making it competitive with leasing on a total-cost basis.

Three Critical Pitfalls to Avoid in 2026

Pitfall: Signing a long-term lease (10+ years) without an escalator cap. Many industrial leases in China include annual rent escalation clauses of 5–10% per year, which can double your occupancy cost over the lease term. Cost: 500,000–1,200,000 RMB in excess rent over 10 years on a 5,000 sqm facility. Fix: Negotiate a fixed escalation rate of 3–4% per year or tie escalation to CPI (China’s CPI was 1.2–2.5% in 2024–2025). Include a break clause at year 5 with a penalty of 2–3 months’ rent.
Pitfall: Building on land with ambiguous rezoning risk. Industrial land near expanding urban areas may be reclassified for commercial or residential use, forcing you to relocate or pay significantly higher land-use fees. Cost: 5–20 million RMB in relocation costs and lost production, plus potential compensation disputes. Fix: Check the local city master plan (城市总体规划, chéngshì zǒngtǐ guīhuà) at the Natural Resources Bureau. Avoid land parcels within 3 km of current urban expansion zones. Build only in designated industrial parks with stable industrial land classification for 15+ years.
Pitfall: Underestimating hidden costs in leased facilities — property management fees, utility connection deposits, fire safety upgrades, and environmental compliance retrofits. These add 15–30% to effective occupancy costs in the first year. Cost: 200,000–600,000 RMB in unplanned first-year expenses on a 5,000 sqm facility. Fix: Perform a full technical due diligence before signing the lease, including a fire safety audit, power capacity check, environmental qualification review, and structural assessment. Hire a licensed third-party inspector familiar with foreign manufacturing standards.

NEXT STEPS: Make Your Decision with Confidence

  1. Run a Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) model for your specific parameters. Use our Factory TCO Calculator for China to compare leasing and building across your projected production volume, operating horizon, and location preferences. The model includes land costs, construction costs, lease rates, tax incentives, and depreciation scenarios.
  2. Engage a licensed industrial real estate advisor with foreign-invested experience. Not all Chinese real estate agents understand the regulatory requirements for WFOE manufacturing. Request a Factory Site Selection Consultation to evaluate specific properties, perform due diligence, and negotiate lease or land purchase terms.
  3. Secure environmental and fire safety approvals before committing capital. These permits can take 2–6 months and may require facility modifications. Contact our Regulatory Compliance Advisory team to pre-clear your facility requirements and avoid costly construction delays.

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

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