A Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE, 外商独资企业, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) remains the most popular entity type for foreign businesses entering China in 2026. The registration process averages 45 days across major cities, but in Free Trade Zones like Shanghai’s Lingang and Hainan, it has come down to 12–15 days. Here is the complete process — step by step, with real timelines, real costs, and the specific government agencies you will deal with.
Why It Matters
If you are building a China business in 2026, the WFOE is still the cleanest structure. It gives you 100% foreign ownership, full management control, and the ability to invoice in RMB, hire local staff, and repatriate profits. No local partner required for most industries — the 2025 Negative List (负面清单, fùmiàn qīngdān) opened 3 additional sectors to full foreign ownership, bringing the total restricted categories down to 29 from 33 in 2024.
The process has not become effortless. You will still deal with 7 government agencies, produce roughly 15–20 documents, and navigate a system where one missing chop (印章, yìnzhāng) can reset your timeline by two weeks. But the rules are clearer now than they were five years ago. The Ministry of Commerce (MOFCOM, 商务部) has consolidated pre-approval into a single filing system in most cities. The State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR, 市场监管总局) runs a unified online portal for the business license.
What you need is a roadmap. What follows is the exact sequence, from name pre-approval to opening your corporate bank account.
The Details: 7 Steps to a Registered WFOE
**Step 1 — Name Pre-Approval (3–5 business days).** You submit 3–5 proposed company names to SAMR through the local Administration for Market Regulation (AMR) office. The name must follow the format: [City] + [Brand Name] + [Industry] + Co., Ltd. For example: “Shanghai Horizon Consulting Co., Ltd.” SAMR checks against a national database of 48 million registered enterprises. Rejection rates run at 35–40% on first submission, usually because the proposed name is too similar to an existing registration or uses restricted words like “China” or “National” without State Council approval.
**Step 2 — Business Scope Drafting (2–3 business days).** Your business scope (经营范围, jīngyíng fànwéi) defines what your company is legally permitted to do. This is not a marketing document — it is a legal boundary. Every activity must match an item in the Industry Classification for National Economic Activities (GB/T 4754-2017). Getting this wrong is the single most expensive mistake foreign founders make: amending a scope after registration costs RMB 2,000–5,000 and takes 10–15 business days. In 2026, most cities use a pick-from-list system for scope items, which has reduced ambiguity but still requires you to anticipate future business lines.
**Step 3 — Lease Agreement and Registered Address (5–10 business days).** You need a physical office address for registration in most cities, though some FTZs now accept “virtual registered addresses” (虚拟注册地址, xūnǐ zhùcè dìzhǐ) for service-sector WFOEs. The lease must be at least 12 months and the landlord must provide a property certificate (房产证, fángchǎn zhèng). In Shanghai’s Jing’an district, Grade A office space averages RMB 12 per square meter per day, putting a 100 sqm office at roughly RMB 36,000 per month. In Chengdu, comparable space runs RMB 3–5 per sqm per day.
**Step 4 — Document Preparation and Notarization (7–14 business days).** This is where most timelines blow up. You need: passport copies of the legal representative and supervisors (notarized), the parent company’s certificate of incorporation (notarized and legalized by the Chinese embassy or consulate in your home country), a bank reference letter for the parent company (issued within the last 3 months), and the legal representative’s CV and photo. If your parent company is incorporated in a non-Hague Convention country, the legalization chain adds 2–3 weeks. The notarization-legalization process alone costs USD 500–1,200 per document set depending on your jurisdiction.
**Step 5 — Business License Application (5–10 business days).** You file the complete package with the local AMR. The application goes through the “five-in-one” business license system (五证合一, wǔ zhèng hé yī), which bundles the business license, tax registration certificate, organization code certificate, social insurance registration, and statistical registration into a single Unified Social Credit Code (统一社会信用代码). In Shenzhen, 73% of foreign-invested enterprise applications received approval within 7 business days in Q1 2026. In Beijing, the average is 10 days.
**Step 6 — Chops and Seals (2–3 business days).** After receiving your business license, you must commission company chops: the company chop (公章, gōngzhāng), financial chop (财务章, cáiwù zhāng), legal representative chop (法人章, fǎrén zhāng), and invoice chop (发票章, fāpiào zhāng). These are physical stamps registered with the Public Security Bureau (公安局). A chop set costs RMB 500–800 from an authorized maker. Without these chops, you cannot sign contracts, open bank accounts, or issue invoices in China.
**Step 7 — Tax Registration and Bank Account Opening (5–10 business days).** The tax bureau (税务局, shuìwù jú) registration is partially automated through the five-in-one license, but you still need to physically visit the tax office to register for invoicing and designate a financial contact. For the bank account, expect 2–3 in-person visits: one for initial paperwork, one for the bank’s site inspection of your office, and one for final activation. Bank of China and ICBC process foreign enterprise accounts in 5–7 business days. The initial deposit requirement varies — most banks ask for RMB 10,000–50,000.
Once your business license is in hand, the post-registration compliance clock starts ticking. China’s Tax Collection and Administration Law gives you exactly 30 days to complete tax registration, social security registration, and bank account activation. Miss that window and penalties begin at RMB 2,000 — but the real cost is operational: without tax registration you cannot issue invoices, and without invoices you cannot collect revenue. See our complete compliance guide for the full post-registration checklist, and our business setup roadmap for the end-to-end timeline from incorporation to first invoice.
What You Should Do
- Check the Negative List first. Before spending a single RMB, confirm your industry is open to 100% foreign ownership. The 2025 Negative List is available on MOFCOM’s English website. If you are in a restricted sector, you will need a Joint Venture or a variable interest entity (VIE) structure instead. Our Market Entry FAQ covers the most common questions foreign founders ask about entity selection and sector restrictions.
- Choose your city based on your business, not cost. Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Hainan FTZs offer the fastest processing but higher operating costs. Chengdu and Wuhan offer 30–50% lower office costs but add 7–10 days to registration timelines due to less streamlined AMR workflows.
- Start the notarization process immediately. This is the only step you cannot accelerate. Begin collecting and legalizing parent-company documents before you have a lease signed.
- Budget RMB 15,000–30,000 for registration fees if using a local agent. DIY registration costs RMB 5,000–8,000 for government fees and chops but requires at least one Mandarin-speaking representative on the ground.
- Plan for the full 45 days. Even in efficient jurisdictions, budget 6–8 weeks from name pre-approval to bank account activation. Rushed timelines are the number one cause of rejected applications — incomplete document packages account for 28% of rejections according to Shanghai AMR data.
One Data Point
The number to remember: 45 days. Despite digitization, the average WFOE registration timeline across China’s top 10 business cities held steady at 42–48 days in the first half of 2026, according to aggregate data from three major corporate service providers. FTZs can cut this to 12–15 days, but only if your documentation is perfect on first submission. For most foreign businesses, “45 days” is the number to put in your project plan — and the number to celebrate when you beat it.
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