Work-related injury insurance (工伤保险, gōngshāng bǎoxiǎn) in China costs employers between 0.2% and 1.9% of each employee’s monthly salary, with the national average falling at approximately 0.75% — making it the lowest-cost component of China’s mandatory social insurance system. Unlike pension, medical, or unemployment insurance, the entire premium is borne by the employer with zero employee contribution. This mandatory coverage applies to all employers in China, including wholly foreign-owned enterprises (WFOEs), joint ventures, and representative offices employing local staff. The system is governed by the PRC Social Insurance Law (社会保险法, shèhuì bǎoxiǎn fǎ, effective 2011, amended 2018) and the Regulations on Work-Related Injury Insurance (工伤保险条例, gōngshāng bǎoxiǎn tiáolì, revised 2010), which together establish a national framework with industry-specific rate tiers.
Regulatory Basis for Work-Related Injury Insurance
Work-related injury insurance in China is mandated under Chapter 4 (Articles 33–43) of the PRC Social Insurance Law. The Regulations on Work-Related Injury Insurance (工伤保险条例) provide detailed implementation rules, including the definition of work-related injuries, the rate classification system, and the claim adjudication process. Under Article 33 of the Social Insurance Law, all employers must register for work-related injury insurance and pay premiums based on a percentage of their total payroll, calculated using industry-specific risk classification rates.
The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security (MOHRSS, 人力资源和社会保障部, rénlì zīyuán hé shèhuì bǎozhàng bù) oversees the national framework, while local social insurance bureaus (社保局, shèbǎo jú) at the municipal level administer registration, premium collection, and benefit disbursement. As of 2026, the system covers approximately 300 million workers across all provinces and industry sectors.
Industry Risk Classification and Premium Rates
China categorizes industries into 8 risk classes, each assigned a base contribution rate. The rates are applied to the employee’s contribution base — defined as the employee’s actual monthly salary, subject to the local social insurance floor and ceiling (typically 60% to 300% of the local average wage).
| Risk Class | Industry Examples | Base Rate (% of salary) |
|---|---|---|
| Class 1 (Lowest) | Finance, IT services, consulting, education | 0.2% |
| Class 2 | Retail, real estate, hospitality | 0.4% |
| Class 3 | Food processing, printing, textiles | 0.7% |
| Class 4 | Chemical manufacturing, light machinery | 0.9% |
| Class 5 | Heavy machinery, metal processing | 1.1% |
| Class 6 | Mining, oil and gas extraction | 1.3% |
| Class 7 | Construction, shipbuilding | 1.6% |
| Class 8 (Highest) | Coal mining, hazardous chemicals, explosives | 1.9% |
Employers’ actual rates may be adjusted upward or downward by up to 50% based on their claims history — a form of experience rating (浮动费率, fúdòng fèilǜ). Companies with zero or low claims in the previous year can qualify for a rate reduction, while those with frequent claims face a surcharge. This adjustment is recalculated annually by the local social insurance bureau.
What Qualifies as a Work-Related Injury
Under Article 14 of the Regulations on Work-Related Injury Insurance, an injury qualifies as work-related if it occurs under any of the following circumstances:
- During working hours and at the workplace — injuries sustained while performing job duties
- During work-related travel — injuries occurring while on business trips or traveling for work assignments
- While commuting — injuries caused by non-negligent traffic accidents on the regular commute route, within reasonable time windows
- Occupational diseases — illnesses listed in the PRC Occupational Disease Prevention and Control Law, diagnosed by a qualified medical institution
- During emergency response — injuries sustained while protecting company property or during emergency rescue activities
- Military-related injuries for veterans — injuries recurring at work for employees with prior military service-related disabilities
Article 16 excludes injuries caused by intentional criminal acts, alcohol or drug intoxication, or self-harm. The burden of proof generally falls on the employer to contest a claim, and the law presumes an injury is work-related unless the employer can demonstrate clear exclusion criteria.
Benefits Covered by Work-Related Injury Insurance
The insurance covers both medical and financial benefits, with significant differences from standard medical insurance. Key benefits include:
| Benefit Type | Coverage Details | Duration / Limit |
|---|---|---|
| Medical treatment costs | Full coverage for approved treatment at designated hospitals, including surgery, medication, hospitalization, and rehabilitation | No cap — as long as treatment is certified as necessary |
| Hospitalization food allowance | 70% of the local per-diem rate for inpatient care | Duration of hospitalization |
| Leave wages during recovery | Full salary paid by employer during medical treatment period | Up to 12 months (extendable to 24 months with medical certification) |
| Disability benefits | One-time lump sum and monthly pension based on disability grade (Grade 1–10) | Lump sum: 7–27 months of local average salary; Monthly: 50–90% of pre-injury wage for Grades 1–4 |
| Survivor benefits | One-time payment of 20x local average annual salary + monthly pension for dependents | Monthly pension: 30–40% of deceased’s salary per dependent |
| Funeral subsidy | 6 months of local average salary | One-time payment |
Cost to Employers: City-by-City Comparison
While the national rate framework provides the base, actual effective costs vary by city due to differences in the social insurance contribution base floor and ceiling. For a Class 3 industry (e.g., light manufacturing), here are representative 2026 costs:
| City | Contribution Floor (RMB/month) | Contribution Ceiling (RMB/month) | Monthly Premium at Floor (Class 3) | Monthly Premium at Ceiling (Class 3) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shanghai | 7,310 | 36,549 | 51.17 | 255.84 |
| Beijing | 6,820 | 35,388 | 47.74 | 247.72 |
| Shenzhen | 6,210 | 31,045 | 43.47 | 217.32 |
| Guangzhou | 5,980 | 29,874 | 41.86 | 209.12 |
| Chengdu | 5,640 | 28,215 | 39.48 | 197.51 |
For a WFOE in Shanghai with 50 employees in a Class 3 industry earning an average of RMB 15,000/month, the total monthly work-related injury insurance cost would be approximately RMB 5,250 (0.7% x RMB 750,000 total payroll) — roughly RMB 63,000 per year. This compares with approximately RMB 2.2–2.8 million per year for all five social insurance contributions combined.
Claims Process: Step-by-Step
When a work-related injury occurs, employers must follow a specific process to ensure the employee receives benefits and the company avoids penalty liability:
- Immediate medical treatment — Transport the employee to a designated social insurance hospital. Use the company’s social insurance registration card or pay out-of-pocket (reimbursable later).
- Report the injury within 48 hours — Submit a verbal or written report to the local social insurance bureau. For serious injuries or fatalities, the report must be filed within 24 hours.
- File a formal claim within 30 days — Submit the Application for Work-Related Injury Identification (工伤认定申请表) along with medical records, employment contract, witness statements, and the employer’s incident report. The social insurance bureau must issue a decision within 60 days (extendable to 90 days for complex cases).
- Disability assessment — If the injury results in permanent impairment, the employee must undergo a disability grade assessment (劳动能力鉴定) at a MOHRSS-designated medical evaluation body. Grades range from 1 (most severe) to 10 (least severe).
- Benefit disbursement — The social insurance fund pays approved medical costs directly to the hospital and disburses disability or survivor benefits to the employee or their dependents.
If the employer fails to file the claim within 30 days, the employee or their family may file directly within one year of the injury date. Employers who fail to register for work-related injury insurance altogether are liable for 100% of all resulting benefits out-of-pocket, plus fines under Social Insurance Law Article 86.
Special Rules for Foreign Employees
Foreign employees working in China under valid work permits are generally covered by the same work-related injury insurance system as Chinese nationals. Under Article 97 of the Social Insurance Law and the Interim Measures for the Participation of Foreigners in Social Insurance in China (2011), foreign employees must be enrolled in the five mandatory social insurance programs, including work-related injury insurance.
However, China has concluded bilateral social security totalization agreements with 12 countries (Germany, South Korea, Denmark, Finland, Canada, Switzerland, Netherlands, Spain, Luxembourg, Japan, Serbia, and Chile). Under these agreements, employees from these countries may apply for an exemption from Chinese social insurance contributions, including work-related injury insurance, if they remain covered by their home country’s program. The exemption is not automatic — it requires obtaining a Certificate of Coverage (证明) from the home country’s social security authority and submitting it to the local Chinese social insurance bureau.
For foreign employees not covered by a totalization agreement, the employer must enroll them and pay contributions based on the same rates as local employees. The contribution base is the employee’s actual salary up to the local ceiling.
Penalties for Non-Compliance
Under Social Insurance Law Article 86, employers who fail to register or pay work-related injury insurance face:
- Late payment surcharge — 0.05% daily on the overdue amount, calculated from the day the payment was due
- Administrative fines — 1 to 3 times the unpaid amount
- Full benefit liability — The employer must pay 100% of all work-related injury benefits that would have been covered by the insurance fund
- Credit rating downgrade — Non-compliance is recorded in the social credit system, affecting the company’s taxpayer credit rating, access to government tenders, and visa processing speed for foreign employees
In practice, the daily surcharge accumulates rapidly. A company that underpaid work-related injury premiums by RMB 50,000 for 12 months would owe approximately RMB 10,950 in late payment surcharges alone, plus fines of up to RMB 150,000.
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What is work-related injury insurance and how much does it cost in China? — first published on China Gateway 360. Last updated: July 2026.
