How to Invest in China’s Solar Energy Market as a Foreign Company: 2026 Guide
China installed 216.9 GW of new solar photovoltaic capacity in 2024, bringing total cumulative capacity to over 890 GW, cementing its position as the world’s largest solar market. For a foreign company, investing in China’s solar energy market in 2026 requires navigating a three-tier system: wholly foreign-owned enterprise (外商独资企业, WFOE, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) setup for manufacturing, joint venture (JV, 合资企业, hézī qǐyè) for project development, and strategic partnerships for technology licensing. China now accounts for over 80% of global solar module production, with policy support under the 14th Five-Year Plan targeting 1,200 GW of total wind and solar capacity by 2030.
Market Entry Routes: WFOE, JV, and Licensing
Foreign investors in China’s solar sector face a regulated but increasingly open landscape. Since the 2020 revision of the Foreign Investment Negative List, solar power generation is classified as “encouraged” — meaning 100% foreign ownership is permitted for solar power plants, but manufacturing of certain high-efficiency cells may require a JV for access to subsidies. In 2026, three principal entry routes dominate.
Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE) suits companies focused on solar module manufacturing, inverter production, or engineering services. A WFOE gives full control over IP and profits. Minimum registered capital requirements vary by city; Shanghai generally requires RMB 1–5 million (approx. USD 140,000–700,000) for manufacturing WFOEs, while Tier-2 cities like Hefei offer lower thresholds. Processing time averages 8–12 weeks.
Joint Venture (JV) is often mandatory for grid-connected solar farm development exceeding 50 MW capacity. Majority Chinese ownership (typically 51%) is required for projects on state-owned land. Foreign JV partners contribute technology and financing; Chinese partners provide land-use rights, grid connection approvals, and local government relationships. A typical JV structure: 60% Chinese state-owned enterprise (SOE, 国有企业, guóyǒu qǐyè), 40% foreign partner.
Technology Licensing and Strategic Partnerships offer a lighter-touch approach. Foreign companies license perovskite cell designs or bifacial module technology to Chinese manufacturers for royalty fees of 3–7% of net sales. This route avoids capital commitment while capturing China’s production scale. In 2025, 14 such licensing deals were signed between foreign tech firms and Chinese solar manufacturers, totaling USD 320 million.
Regulatory Framework: Key Policies in 2026
China’s solar regulatory environment is shaped by the Renewable Energy Law (可再生能源法, kězàishēng néngyuán fǎ) and provincial-level implementation rules. Since 2024, the National Energy Administration (NEA, 国家能源局, guójiā néngyuán jú) has mandated that all new solar installations above 10 MW must include 15% energy storage capacity — a rule that drives investment in co-located battery systems. Foreign investors must also comply with the Foreign Investment Law (外商投资法, wàishāng tóuzī fǎ) requiring equal treatment but imposing security review for projects designated as “sensitive,” including those near military zones or on disputed land.
Tax incentives remain a major draw. Solar manufacturing enterprises in approved industrial parks enjoy a 15% reduced corporate income tax rate (standard is 25%) under the “High and New Technology Enterprise” certification. Additionally, a VAT refund policy allows solar equipment importers to reclaim 13% input VAT on machinery. However, these benefits require annual R&D spending of at least 3% of revenue. Since 2025, foreign companies that meet the threshold can apply directly — no Chinese partner needed — saving an estimated RMB 2–4 million per year for a mid-sized factory.
| Policy Area | Requirement (2026) | Foreign Impact | Expected Cost (RMB) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Corporate Income Tax Rate | 15% (HTNE) / 25% (standard) | All foreign companies eligible if certified | Annual savings: 0.5–5M |
| Energy Storage Mandate | 15% of solar capacity for >10 MW | Increases upfront capex by 8–12% | Per 100 MW: 40–60M |
| Grid Connection License | Provincial NEA approval required | Must partner with SOE or local govt | Application fee: 50,000–200,000 |
| Foreign Ownership Cap | 100% for manufacturing; 49% for grid-connected >50 MW | Limits control on large utility projects | JV negotiation cost: 300,000–800,000 |
| VAT Refund on Equipment | 13% reclaimable on imported machinery | Lowers equipment cost by 10–12% | Refund amount: 0.2–2M per shipment |
Investment Costs and ROI Timelines
Capital expenditure for a 100 MW solar farm in western China (Gobi Desert) averaged RMB 350–400 million in 2025, down 22% from 2022 due to falling module prices. Operation costs run RMB 8–12 million per year. Feed-in tariffs (FIT, 上网电价, shàngwǎng diànjià) have largely been replaced by competitive auctions. In 2025, winning bids ranged from RMB 0.15–0.25 per kWh — roughly 40% lower than five years ago. A WFOE manufacturing a 5 GW/year module plant requires initial investment of RMB 1.2–1.8 billion, with breakeven at 18–24 months at current margins of 8–12%.
Return on equity (ROE) for foreign-controlled solar farms averages 7–9% after tax in 2026, compared to 10–12% for Chinese state-backed developers due to lower financing costs. Foreign companies with a WFOE structure in manufacturing report 12–15% ROE, driven by exports to Southeast Asia and Europe. A case study: German inverter manufacturer SMA set up a WFOE in Suzhou in 2023 with RMB 50 million registered capital. By Q4 2025, it captured 6.7% of China’s utility-scale inverter market, achieving 18-month payback.
Decision Framework: Choose Your Entry Model
If your company has proprietary solar cell technology with patent protection and seeks maximum IP control, choose WFOE manufacturing. If you aim to develop large-scale solar farms above 50 MW and need land access and grid permits, choose a majority-owned JV with a Chinese state-owned enterprise. If your technology is in early-stage R&D or you want to test market demand with minimal capital, choose a technology licensing agreement with a Chinese manufacturer. If you offer solar-plus-storage integration solutions and have a proven track record, choose a WFOE with a Chinese EPC partner under a service contract.
Critical Pitfalls for Foreign Solar Investors
NEXT STEPS
- Conduct a Feasibility Study for Your Target Province — Solar policies vary by province. Read our China Solar Provincial Comparison 2026 to compare FIT, land costs, and SOE partners in Xinjiang vs. Zhejiang.
- Apply for HTNE Certification Early — The High and New Technology Enterprise status takes 6–9 months to approve. Follow our step-by-step guide on HTNE Certification for Foreign Companies to secure the 15% tax rate from year one.
- Set Up a WFOE or JV with Legal Structuring — Engage a China-licensed law firm for contract review. Use our checklist Solar WFOE/JV Setup Checklist 2026 to avoid 90-day delays in business license issuance.
— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.
