How to Set Up an MRO Facility in China: 2026 Aviation Guide for Foreign Companies
Setting up a Maintenance, Repair, and Overhaul (MRO) facility in China as a foreign company is a complex but increasingly necessary move, requiring an 11-step process spanning regulatory approval, joint venture negotiation, and facility certification. By 2026, China’s civil aviation MRO market is projected to reach 15.7 billion USD, growing at a CAGR of 7.2%, driven by a domestic fleet that will exceed 4,000 aircraft by 2028. Foreign operators must navigate the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC, 民航局, Mínhángjú) certification framework, which is distinct from EASA or FAA systems.
This guide provides a practical roadmap for foreign executives and investors, covering regulatory requirements, entity structuring, common pitfalls, and a decision framework to choose the right setup path. Whether you are a Western OEM or an independent MRO provider, understanding China’s unique requirements is critical to avoid costly delays.
China’s MRO Market in 2026: Why Foreign Companies Are Entering Now
China’s MRO market is the second-largest globally, behind only the United States. In 2025, the market was valued at approximately 14.5 billion USD, with 2026 projections showing a 7.2% CAGR to 15.7 billion USD. For context, the global MRO market grew at only 4.1% CAGR over the same period, making China a standout opportunity.
Key drivers include:
- Fleet expansion: China’s commercial fleet will grow from 3,650 aircraft in 2024 to over 4,000 by 2028, according to Boeing’s Commercial Market Outlook.
- Aging aircraft: The average fleet age in China is 8.2 years in 2026, up from 6.7 years in 2020, increasing demand for heavy maintenance checks.
- Policy support: China’s 2026 aviation plan explicitly encourages foreign investment in MRO, including tax incentives for facilities in free trade zones (FTZ, 自由贸易试验区, zìyóu màoyì shìyàn qū) such as Shanghai’s Pudong FTZ and Hainan Free Trade Port.
Foreign entrants in 2025-2026 include Lufthansa Technik’s joint venture in Shenzhen and GE Aerospace’s expansion of its Chengdu facility. However, over 40% of new foreign MRO ventures in China faced delays due to regulatory mismatches, according to a 2025 CAAC industry report.
The Three Pillars of MRO Regulation in China
China’s MRO regulatory framework is built around three core certifications under the CAAC (中国民航局, Civil Aviation Administration of China, Mínhángjú). Foreign companies must understand these to avoid scope misalignment.
| Certification Type | Scope | Typical Approval Time | Foreign Ownership Limit | Key Standard |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CCAR-145 维修机构 wéixiū jīgòu |
Maintenance, repair, and overhaul of aircraft and components | 6-9 months | Up to 49% (automatic); up to 100% with case-by-case review | Equivalent to EASA Part-145 / FAA Part-145 |
| CCAR-147 维修培训机构 wéixiū péixùn jīgòu |
Training and certification of maintenance technicians | 4-6 months | No explicit cap, but requires local partner for curriculum approval | Equivalent to EASA Part-147 |
| CCAR-66 维修人员执照 wéixiū rényuán zhízhào |
Individual technician licensing (required for CCAR-145 sign-offs) | 2-4 months per technician | N/A (applies to individuals) | Mandatory for all technicians at MRO facilities |
Most foreign MRO facilities operate under CCAR-145 certification. A critical nuance: CAAC does not automatically recognize FAA or EASA certifications. Even if your facility holds FAA Part-145 or EASA Part-145, you must obtain a separate CCAR-145 certificate to perform maintenance on Chinese-registered aircraft. However, CAAC has bilateral agreements with 34 countries (as of 2026), including the US and EU, which can reduce duplication of effort.
Step-by-Step: How to Structure Your MRO Entity in China
Setting up an MRO facility involves three sequential phases: entity formation, facility certification, and operational launch. Below is the 11-step process broken into these phases.
Phase 1: Entity Formation (Steps 1-4)
Step 1: Choose your entity type. Foreign companies typically use a Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE, 外商独资企业, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) allowed in many FTZs. However, specialist MRO services are a partly restricted sector (限製類, xiànzhì lèi), meaning a Joint Venture (JV, 合资企业, hézī qǐyè) with a Chinese partner may be required unless you operate in a free trade zone where 100% ownership is permitted.
Step 2: Register your company. Submit your business plan, articles of association, and capital investment proof to the State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR, 国家市场监督管理总局, Guójiā Shìchǎng Jiāndū Guǎnlǐ Zǒngjú). Minimum registered capital is typically 2 million RMB for MRO WFOEs, but 5-10 million RMB is more common to meet operating license requirements.
Step 3: Obtain a lease or purchase agreement for hangar space. MRO facilities require CAAC-approved hangars with specific dimensions and fire suppression systems. In Shanghai Pudong FTZ, hangar rental costs average 120-180 RMB per square meter per month for Grade-A aviation facilities.
Step 4: Apply for the Foreign Investor Certificate.
