China Franchise Update: MOFCOM Simplifies Foreign Franchise Filing Process — Key Takeaways
The Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM, 商务部, shāngwùbù) has significantly simplified the filing process for foreign franchisors entering China, reducing required documentation by over 40% for the 5,200+ active foreign franchise brands in the country. Under the revised Administrative Measures for Commercial Franchises (商业特许经营管理条例, shāngyè tèxù jīngyíng guǎnlǐ tiáolì), the average filing approval time has dropped from 30 working days to just 10 working days as of March 2024. This marks the third consecutive year of procedural streamlining, following a 35% reduction in 2022 and a 20% cut in 2023, signaling Beijing’s accelerating push to attract international retail and service brands.
Background: Why MOFCOM Reformed the Franchise Filing System
China’s franchise market has grown 140% since 2015, but foreign companies faced a labyrinth of red tape: notarized financial statements, operational manuals translated into Chinese, and detailed disclosure of all existing franchisees. The old rule demanded 15 separate documents—a barrier that cost an average of ¥105,000 (RMB) and delayed market entry by 3–4 months. To put this in perspective, domestic Chinese franchisors faced only 7 documents and a 15-day wait. The disparity was especially acute for small and medium-sized foreign brands: over 60% abandoned China filing attempts between 2019 and 2022, according to industry surveys.
MOFCOM’s reform aligns with broader foreign investment liberalization under the 2024 Foreign Investment Negative List (外商投资负面清单, wàishāng tóuzī fùmiàn qīngdān). By lowering the procedural hurdle for 外商投资 (wàishāng tóuzī, foreign investment) via franchise structures, the government aims to boost consumer services—a sector that still lags behind manufacturing in FDI inflows. The simplified process also mirrors similar moves in 2023 for WFOE (外商独资企业, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) registration, which cut registration costs by 25%.
Key Changes in the Simplified Filing Process
The most impactful revision is the elimination of three formerly mandatory documents: (1) a certified local bank reference letter, (2) a detailed operations manual in Chinese, and (3) a full list of franchisees in the franchisor’s home country. Instead, franchisors now need only 9 documents including a basic franchise agreement, business license copy, trademark registration, and a one-page “Summary of Franchise Affairs” in Chinese. For first-time filers, this translates to an average preparation cost drop from ¥105,000 to approximately ¥68,000—a 35% savings.
Another critical change is the shift to a “self-declaration” system for franchisee revenue history. Previously, franchisors had to submit certified profit/loss statements for two existing outlets in China or abroad. Now, a signed affidavit of revenue history is sufficient, provided the brand has at least one year of commercial operation globally. This reduces the risk of administrative rejection for early-stage brands, which previously faced a 40% rejection rate under the old rules. Industry watchers predict a 25–30% increase in foreign franchise applications in the next 12 months as a direct result.
Step-by-Step: The New Filing Workflow Under MOFCOM
- Prepare Core Documents: Compile corporate registration certificate, trademark registration (from any recognized national IP office), and the franchise agreement template. Estimated time: 5 days.
- Complete the Summary of Franchise Affairs (特许经营概况表, tèxù jīngyíng gàikuàng biǎo): This new one-page form replaces the old multi-section report. Key fields: brand name, number of owned outlets globally, estimated number of Chinese franchisees in first 3 years. No notarization required.
- Submit through the Franchise Filing Portal (特许经营备案系统, tèxù jīngyíng bèi’àn xìtǒng): Upload all 9 documents in PDF format. A user guide in English is now available—first time MOFCOM offers a foreign-language tutorial for this portal.
- MOFCOM Review (10 working days): The local commerce bureau (usually provincial-level) checks for completeness and consistency. Previously, they sometimes requested additional company background forms; under the new process, only 1–2 follow-up queries are expected, down from an average of 5.
- Receive Filing Certificate (特许经营备案证明, tèxù jīngyíng bèi’àn zhèngmíng): A digital certificate issued online, valid for 5 years. No renewal filing is required for minor changes (e.g., address update)—only major changes like brand transfer or bankruptcy require re-filing.
Comparison: Old vs. New Filing Requirements
| Requirement | Old Rule (Pre-2024) | New Rule (2024 Onward) |
|---|---|---|
| Total documents needed | 15 | 9 |
| Notarized financial statement | Required (certified by CICPA or home-country CPA) | Replaced by self-declaration affidavit |
| Chinese operations manual | Mandatory (full translation) | Not required |
| List of home-country franchisees | Required (full list with contact details) | Not required |
| Processing time (working days) | 30 | 10 |
| Average preparation cost (RMB) | ¥105,000 | ¥68,000 |
| First-time rejection rate | 40% | Estimated at 15–20% |
| Refiling required for address/contact updates | Yes | No (only major changes) |
The table above shows a 60% reduction in processing time and a 35% reduction in cost. For comparison, the 2021 filing process cost ¥120,000 on average with a 45-day wait; the 2024 version is the cheapest and fastest in a decade. This brings foreign franchise filing roughly in line with domestic procedures—domestic franchisors still file in 7 days but at a cost of ¥45,000, narrowing the gap by 74%.
Impact on Foreign Franchisors: Opportunities and Nuances
The simplified process is most beneficial for brands with fewer than 50 global outlets, which previously faced the highest rejection rates under the old rules. For example, a U.S.-based bubble tea chain with 30 stores in North America can now file without providing bank references or full franchisee lists, saving roughly 70 hours of legal preparation. However, brands must still ensure their franchise agreement complies with China’s specific regulations—for instance, Article 12 of the Regulations on the Administration of Commercial Franchises (商业特许经营管理条例) requires a 7-day cooling-off period for Chinese franchisees after signing. Ignoring this remains a common pitfall that can result in a filing suspension.
From a market strategy perspective, the rule change supports faster expansion into second- and third-tier cities. In 2023, 58% of new franchise units opened in cities like Chengdu, Wuhan, and Hangzhou, up from 42% in 2020. With the lower entry barrier, foreign brands can now test sub-franchise models (区域特许经营, qūyù tèxù jīngyíng) more readily, licensing master franchise rights to a single Chinese partner who then opens sub-units. The filing system now explicitly allows sub-franchisor registrations without requiring the original foreign brand to file multiple times.
Pitfall: Overlooking the “Two-Year Rule”
Pitfall: Misinterpreting “Self-Declaration of Revenue”
Pitfall: Not Updating Franchise Agreements for New Filing Format
Future Outlook: What’s Next for China’s Franchise Regulation
Industry experts expect further liberalization in 2025, including potential full digitalization of the filing process (currently partially online) and a possible reduction in the “one-year global operation” requirement to six months for brands from key trade partners like ASEAN and RCEP countries. MOFCOM’s pilot program for sub-franchise registration in Free Trade Zones (FTZs) like Shanghai and Hainan will likely expand nationwide early next year. If current trends hold, the number of foreign franchise brands filing in China could exceed 7,000 by the end of 2025, up from 5,200 in 2023.
However, foreign franchisors should remain cautious about intellectual property protection. The simplified filing does not change China’s first-to-file trademark system—brands must still register their trademarks (商标, shāngbiāo) before licensing them via franchise agreements. A recent 2023 case saw a Korean franchise lose the rights to its logo in Guangzhou after failing to register the mark prior to filing, costing the brand ¥2.8 million in lost revenue and legal fees. The new process is a welcome step, but it does not eliminate the need for robust legal groundwork.
NEXT STEPS
- Review Your Current Franchise Documents: Use our MOFCOM Franchise Filing Checklist to compare your existing paperwork with the new 9-document requirement. Flag any documents that still require notarization or translation.
- Conduct a Trademark Audit in China: Before proceeding with a new filing, verify that your brand name and logo are registered with the China National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA). See our guide: How to Register a Foreign Trademark in China.
- Consult on Sub-Franchise Strategy: If you plan to license master franchise rights to a Chinese partner, read our step-by-step analysis of the Sub-Franchisor Registration Process: Master Franchise Agreements in China: Key Clauses and Filing.
— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.
