Why This Matters for Your China Location Strategy
China’s standard corporate income tax (CIT) rate is 25%. The Qianhai Shenzhen-Hong Kong Modern Service Industry Cooperation Zone (前海深港现代服务业合作区, Qiánhǎi Shēn-Gǎng Xiàndài Fúwùyè Hézuò Qū) offers qualifying companies a 15% rate — a 10-percentage-point advantage that, compounded over a 5-year investment horizon, can save a mid-size foreign enterprise $500,000 to $2 million in tax, depending on revenue scale.
Until recently, that 15% rate applied only to the original 14.92 square kilometer core zone. The Shenzhen Municipal Tax Bureau, Finance Bureau, and State Tax Administration have now expanded it to the full 120.56 square kilometer Cooperation Zone — an eightfold increase in eligible area. If your business was previously priced out of Qianhai’s core or couldn’t find suitable office space in the original footprint, the calculus has changed.
The expansion covers Shekou and Xiaonanshan areas, the Convention and Exhibition City, Ocean New City, the airport and surrounding zones, Bao’an central area, and Dachan Bay. For foreign companies in logistics, aviation services, exhibition/convention operations, and advanced manufacturing, these newly eligible areas align more closely with operational needs than the original finance-and-legal-services core.
The Details: IIT Parity for Hong Kong Talent
Alongside the CIT expansion, Qianhai introduced individual income tax (IIT) parity for Hong Kong residents. Under the new rules, Hong Kong residents working in the Cooperation Zone are exempt from the portion of their China IIT that exceeds what they would pay under Hong Kong’s salary tax — which maxes out at 17%, versus China’s top marginal rate of 45%.
For a senior executive earning 2 million yuan ($275,000) annually, the difference is material: China IIT at top rates would claim roughly 620,000 yuan ($85,000), while Hong Kong salary tax on the same income would be about 280,000 yuan ($38,500). The Qianhai policy eliminates that 340,000 yuan gap, making Shenzhen compensation packages competitive with Hong Kong for the first time.
Foreign talent already benefits from a separate preferential IIT policy in Qianhai, which allows high-end and in-demand foreign professionals to reclaim IIT paid above 15% through subsidies. The Hong Kong IIT parity policy runs alongside this — Hong Kong residents can choose whichever is more favorable. The covered income includes comprehensive income (wages, salaries, labor remuneration, royalties, franchise fees), operating income, and government-certified talent subsidies.
The IIT policy is effective from January 1, 2023 through December 31, 2027. The CIT expansion runs through December 31, 2025, with expectations of renewal given the zone’s strategic importance in the Greater Bay Area (GBA, 粤港澳大湾区, Yuè-Gǎng-Ào Dàwān Qū) development plan.
How Qianhai Compares to Other GBA Zones
The GBA now has three major investment zones competing for foreign capital, each with distinct tax profiles. Hengqin (横琴, Héngqín) in Zhuhai offers a 15% CIT rate for qualifying enterprises in tourism, traditional Chinese medicine, and cultural/creative sectors, plus an IIT subsidy capping effective rates at 15% for high-end talent. Nansha (南沙, Nánshā) in Guangzhou targets shipping, finance, and advanced manufacturing with a 15% CIT rate on encouraged-industry income. Qianhai differentiates itself through its Hong Kong integration — the IIT parity policy is unique in mainland China, and the zone’s financial services focus (cross-border RMB lending, offshore wealth management, fintech sandbox programs) has attracted over 12,000 Hong Kong-funded enterprises as of mid-2025, accounting for roughly 22% of all Qianhai-registered companies.
For foreign companies choosing between zones, the decision tree is straightforward: if your talent pipeline runs through Hong Kong, Qianhai’s IIT parity makes it the strongest option. If you’re in traditional manufacturing or logistics, Nansha’s port infrastructure (the world’s 5th-busiest container port) may matter more than tax rates. If your sector is tourism or cultural exports, Hengqin’s proximity to Macau’s 40 million annual visitors creates a different value proposition. The Qianhai expansion to 120.56 sq km means the zone can now accommodate industrial users it previously couldn’t, but its core strength remains services and tech.
What You Should Do
If you’re evaluating China entry locations or considering a Greater Bay Area presence, factor these changes into your site selection criteria:
- Run the tax comparison. Model your projected China revenue at 25% vs. 15% CIT. For a business projecting 10 million yuan ($1.38M) in annual taxable income, the 10-point CIT differential saves 1 million yuan per year. Over five years, that’s $690,000 in retained earnings that can fund local hiring, marketing, or inventory.
- Map your team to the IIT benefit. If your regional leadership is based in or can be based in Hong Kong, the IIT parity policy makes Shenzhen postings financially neutral. This matters for retention — the “Hong Kong salary, Shenzhen cost of living” equation is a powerful recruiting tool.
- Check the CIT eligibility criteria. Not all businesses qualify for the 15% rate. Eligible sectors center on modern services: finance, legal, logistics, IT, cultural/creative industries, and professional services. Manufacturing operations may need to demonstrate “headquarters economy” or “new-type R&D institution” status to qualify. Verify with the Qianhai Authority before signing a lease.
- Consider the timeline. The CIT rate is confirmed only through end-2025. If your investment horizon extends beyond that, build a conservative scenario at 25% and treat the 15% rate as upside — don’t make it the sole basis of your business case.
One Data Point
The number to remember: 120.56 square kilometers. That’s the eligible zone — up from 14.92. For context, Hong Kong Island is about 79 square kilometers. Qianhai’s expanded zone is larger than Hong Kong Island and offers a CIT rate 40% below China’s standard. If your China market entry plan doesn’t include a GBA location scenario, you’re leaving money on the table.
For a broader view of market entry strategy, read our analysis of 5 common China market entry mistakes foreign SMEs must avoid and our breakdown of China’s H1 2026 GDP growth at 4.7% and what it means for foreign investors.
— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.
