WFOE Registered Capital in China: How Much You Need in 2026

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If you’re setting up a Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE, 外商独资企业, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) in China, the first question most founders ask is: “How much money do I actually need to put in?” The answer is more nuanced than a single number — it depends on your industry, your location, and how quickly you need to operate. Here’s what you actually need to know about registered capital in 2026.

Why Registered Capital Matters

Registered capital (注册资本, zhùcè zīběn) is the amount of money you commit to your China entity. It’s not just a formality. It determines your credibility with suppliers, your eligibility for certain business licenses, and — critically — how much money you can bring into China through legal foreign exchange channels.

Since the 2014 Company Law reform, China eliminated minimum registered capital requirements for most industries. But “no minimum” does not mean “zero.” In practice, you need enough capital to cover your first 6-12 months of operations. SAFE (State Administration of Foreign Exchange, 国家外汇管理局) will only approve capital injections that are “reasonable and necessary” for your business scope.

For the complete WFOE registration roadmap — all 7 steps from name pre-approval to bank account opening — see our WFOE Registration Step-by-Step Guide.

What Different Industries Actually Require

While the general minimum is technically RMB 1, industry-specific regulations create real floors. Manufacturing WFOEs typically need RMB 1-3 million to satisfy local authorities, especially in Shanghai and Shenzhen. Trading WFOEs can start as low as RMB 500,000, but expect pushback if you go below RMB 1 million in first-tier cities.

Consulting and service WFOEs have the lowest practical thresholds — RMB 300,000 to 500,000 is common. But here’s the catch: your registered capital must match your business scope (经营范围, jīngyíng fànwéi). If your scope includes “import and export,” authorities expect capital of at least RMB 1 million. If you list 5 activities, expect them to ask: “Can your registered capital support all of this?”

In Free Trade Zones (FTZs, 自贸区) like Hainan and Lingang in Shanghai, the rules are looser. Hainan FTZ allows registered capital to be paid in over 30 years instead of the standard 30. That’s a 10x extension on your capital contribution timeline — a massive cash-flow advantage if you qualify.

For a side-by-side comparison of setup costs across Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Hainan — including registered capital benchmarks, agency fees, and annual compliance costs — see our Investment Comparison guide.

The Capital Contribution Timeline Trap

Under the 2024 Company Law revision, all shareholders must complete their capital contribution within 5 years of company establishment. This was the biggest change in a decade. Before 2024, there was effectively no time limit — companies could leave registered capital unpaid indefinitely. Now, the clock is ticking.

For existing companies registered before July 2024, there’s a 3-year grace period to comply. New companies registered after July 1, 2024 must contribute within 5 years. If you fail to meet the deadline, the company registration authority can revoke your business license. Yes — they can shut you down for undercapitalization. This is enforced more strictly for foreign-owned entities than domestic ones.

The solution most foreign investors use: set a realistic registered capital figure upfront, contribute 20-30% within the first 3 months, and schedule the rest in annual tranches. This satisfies the “reasonable and necessary” test while preserving cash flow.

Once your capital is injected and your company is operational, document management becomes critical. Our WFOE Document Checklist for 2026 covers every filing you’ll need for ongoing compliance.

What You Should Do

Before you file your WFOE application, run through this checklist:

  • Calculate your first-year operational costs in China — rent, salaries, legal, compliance
  • Add a 20% buffer for unexpected costs (there will be unexpected costs)
  • Check your industry’s practical minimums with a local agent — don’t rely on the “no minimum” headline
  • Plan your contribution schedule: 30% upfront, 30% in year 2, 40% in year 4
  • If you’re in an FTZ-eligible industry, compare the Hainan vs. Lingang timelines before choosing your location

One final note: registered capital is not a sunk cost. Once injected, it becomes your company’s working capital — you can spend it on rent, salaries, and operations. It’s not locked in a government account. But you cannot repatriate it as profit without going through the full dividend distribution process, which involves audited financials and a 10% withholding tax (unless your country has a tax treaty with China that reduces it).

The number to remember: RMB 500,000. That’s the practical floor for a trading or consulting WFOE in a first-tier Chinese city in 2026 — and even then, you’ll face scrutiny if your business scope is broad. For manufacturing, start at RMB 2 million. Anything less, and you’re gambling on whether the local Administration for Market Regulation (AMR, 市场监管局) office is having a good day.

According to MOFCOM data, China approved 26,885 new foreign-invested enterprises in the first half of 2026, a 14.3% increase from the same period in 2025. The registered capital of these new entities averaged RMB 38.2 million — but that number is skewed by large infrastructure and manufacturing projects. Service-sector WFOEs averaged just RMB 1.8 million.


— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.

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