China Franchise Update: Cross-Border Royalty Withholding Tax Rate Clarified — Key Takeaways
China’s State Taxation Administration (STA, 国家税务总局, guójiā shuìwù zǒngjú) has issued a new circular clarifying the withholding tax rate on cross-border royalty payments made by Chinese franchisees to foreign franchisors. Effective for payments processed after January 1, 2025, the standard withholding tax rate remains 10% under domestic law, but the circular explicitly confirms that treaty-reduced rates—as low as 5% or even 0% in specific jurisdictions—still apply if the foreign recipient satisfies beneficial ownership requirements. This update affects an estimated 1,200+ active international franchise brands operating in China, with total cross-border royalty flows exceeding RMB 18 billion annually.
What the Clarification Changes for Foreign Franchisors
The circular (补充通知 2024-28, bǔchōng tōngzhī 2024-28) does not create a new tax rule; rather, it resolves a two-year ambiguity that arose after a 2022 audit trend. From 2022 to 2024, some local tax bureaus in Tier-1 cities like Shanghai and Beijing routinely denied treaty benefits if the foreign franchisor did not maintain a physical office or registered branch in China. The new guidance makes it clear that a foreign entity without a China permanent establishment (PE, 常设机构, chángshè jīgòu) can still claim the treaty rate, provided it can prove the royalty income is beneficially owned by the recipient and not a conduit.
For a typical US-based franchisor, the treaty rate is 10% on gross royalties—unchanged—but the practical change is that processing time for treaty applications has been cut from an average of 8 weeks to 3 weeks under the new simplified filing procedure. For UK and Japanese franchisors, whose treaties (China-UK Article 12 and China-Japan Article 12) provide a 10% cap with no lower tier, the clarification removes the threat of a retroactive 20% domestic rate being applied.
Three Key Numbers That Matter for Your Next Royalty Payment
First, the domestic statutory rate is 10%, but treaty rates for 27 jurisdictions—including Singapore, Hong Kong, and Ireland—drop to 5% or lower. Second, the minimum beneficial ownership holding period has been confirmed at 12 months: if the foreign franchisor has not held the rights for at least one year before the payment date, treaty relief is automatically denied. Third, penalties for non-compliance: if a Chinese franchisee fails to withhold and remit the correct tax, the tax authority can impose a late payment surcharge of 0.05% per day (≈18.25% annualized), plus a fine of 50%–100% of the under-withheld amount.
History shows that this is the first time since 2015 that the STA has issued a dedicated circular on royalty withholding tax for franchises, signaling a shift toward clearer enforcement. In the 2020–2023 period, an estimated 340 franchise-related tax audits were opened, with 68% involving royalty rate disputes.
How the Treaty Rate Table Compares — A Practical Guide
Below is a comparison of withholding tax (WHT) rates for cross-border royalties paid from China to selected franchisor home countries under the new clarification:
| Jurisdiction | Domestic Rate | Treaty Rate (Royalties) | Key Condition for Reduced Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 10% | 10% | Beneficial ownership certificate + IRS Form 6166 |
| Singapore | 10% | 6% | Not a conduit; Singapore entity must have substantial business operations |
| Hong Kong | 10% | 7% (CAAR) / 5% (AMR) | Either 50%+ ownership (AMR) or independent agent (CAAR) |
| United Kingdom | 10% | 10% | No further reduction available; full rate applied |
| Japan | 10% | 10% | No further reduction available; full rate applied |
| Ireland | 10% | 5% | Beneficial ownership must be proven; annual compliance filing required |
| Germany | 10% | 5% | Royalty must be paid for “industrial, commercial or scientific equipment” |
| Australia | 10% | 10% | No reduction; full rate applied |
Decision Framework: If your franchisor is domiciled in a jurisdiction with a 5%–7% treaty rate (e.g., Singapore, Hong Kong, Ireland, Germany), apply the treaty rate by submitting the simplified beneficial ownership form (新表格 2025-01) to your local tax bureau before the payment date. If your jurisdiction has no reduction (e.g., US, UK, Japan, Australia), accept the 10% domestic rate and focus on ensuring your franchise agreement clearly defines what constitutes a “royalty” vs. a “technical service fee,” which can trigger a separate 6% VAT assessment.
Three Common Pitfalls That Can Cost You Thousands
Next Steps for Foreign Franchisors and Chinese Franchisees
This clarification is a net positive for the foreign franchise sector, eliminating the risk of local tax bureau discretion that had frozen some royalty payments in 2023. However, it also means stricter compliance: every treaty claim will be audited within 24 months of filing. Here are three concrete actions to take now:
- Audit your royalty payment structure. Review your current franchise agreement against the new beneficial ownership rules. If you use a Hong Kong or Singapore intermediary, confirm it meets the substantial business threshold. Read our guide on franchise royalty structure optimization for a step-by-step compliance checklist.
- Update your tax withholding procedures. Ensure your Chinese franchisee’s finance team has the new simplified treaty application form (新表格 2025-01) and knows the 15-day filing deadline after each royalty payment. Our China tax withholding compliance tool can automate the process.
- Plan for the 2026 treaty renegotiation cycle. China is currently renegotiating tax treaties with four major markets, including the US (expected completion Q4 2025). If the US treaty rate drops to 5% for royalties, the impact on net cash flow for a US franchisor with RMB 20 million in annual royalties would be a saving of RMB 1 million per year. Track updates via our China tax treaty monitor.
— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.
