A Joint Venture (JV, 合资企业 hézī qǐyè) vs Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE, 外商独资企业 wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) Decision Matrix is a structured comparison tool that scores both structures across seven weighted decision criteria. The matrix outputs a single numeric recommendation between 0 (strong WFOE) and 100 (strong JV) by weighing capital contribution, approval timeline, IP protection, local licensing, profit repatriation, operational control, and exit complexity. A score above 60 signals a JV likely outperforms a WFOE for your specific scenario. Below 40, a WFOE is the lower-risk path. Scores between 40–60 flag a tie that demands deeper due diligence.
Quick Reference: When to Use This Decision Matrix
- During due diligence — Run after a market sizing memo, before engaging a law firm (saves $5,000–$15,000 in retainer fees).
- Score bands: Above 60 = JV recommended; below 40 = WFOE; 40–60 = tie requiring deeper partner DD.
- 7 weighted criteria: Capital, Approval Timeline, IP Protection, Local Licenses, Partner Availability, Profit Repatriation, Exit Complexity.
- Negative List adjustment: Add 15 penalty points if your industry is on the Negative List.
- Update trigger: Re-run when the Negative List updates (December), when you register IP, or when partner availability changes.
How This Tool Works
The matrix assigns each of the seven criteria a weight between 1 (low importance) and 5 (critical) based on your industry, revenue target, and partner requirements. You then score your specific situation against each criterion on a 0–10 scale, where 0 favors a WFOE and 10 favors a JV.
The weighted sum produces a composite score. The tool also generates a side-by-side cost estimate for setup, a timeline in months, and a risk flag for common failure modes such as IP leakage or deadlock dispute clauses. All inputs are editable, so you can re-run scenarios by adjusting partner risk or regulatory speed.
Key Inputs / Variables
| Variable | Fast Scenario | Slow Scenario | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Capital Requirement | RMB 500,000 (~$69,000) | RMB 10 million (~$1.38M) | Higher capital pushes score toward JV (+15 points) |
| Regulatory Approval Window | 4–6 weeks (negative-list exempt) | 4–6 months (restricted sector review) | Longer window adds 20+ points for JV necessity |
| IP Protection Level | Patent filed before entry | No IP registration in place | Weak IP protection favors WFOE by 25+ points |
| Local License Requirement | None needed (consulting, software) | ICP license or value-added telecom permit | License dependency adds 30 points toward JV |
| Partner Availability | No qualified local partner found | Existing JV-ready distributor or supplier | Available partner shifts score 20 points toward JV |
| Profit Repatriation Timeline | WFOE: dividends available in 6 months | JV: profit sharing begins month 18 | Delayed repatriation adds 10 penalty points to JV score |
| Exit Complexity | WFOE: liquidation in 6–9 months | JV: dissolution requires both party consent | JV exit risk adds 15 points favoring WFOE |
Sample Output / Scenarios
Scenario A — Foreign SaaS Startup (Shanghai, WFOE score 28): Capital: $50,000. Sector: software (not restricted). IP: patented algorithm. No local license required. Weighted score: 28 (strong WFOE). Estimated setup cost: $3,500–$6,000. Timeline: 8–10 weeks. No partner necessary.
Scenario B — Manufacturing JV in Zhejiang (JV score 78): Capital: $2 million. Sector: automotive parts (restricted, requires foreign-invested JV). IP: shared. Local license: manufacturing permit + EIA approval. Weighted score: 78 (strong JV). Setup cost: $25,000–$45,000. Timeline: 5–8 months. Partner: existing OEM supplier.
Scenario C — F&B Chain Expansion (Tie score 52): Capital: $300,000. Sector: catering (limited restrictions). IP: trademark, unregistered in China. License: food service permit + fire safety. Score: 52. Recommendation: run sensitivity analysis. A WFOE works if you register the trademark pre-entry (30 days); a JV works if you already have a local franchise partner. Setup ranges $8,000–$20,000 with a 12–16 week timeline.
Who Should Use This Tool
Foreign founders and corporate strategy teams evaluating their first China entry structure. Use this tool during the due diligence phase — ideally after completing a market sizing memo but before spending on legal retainers. The matrix helps you decide whether to commission a full JV structure or proceed with a WFOE application.
Consultants advising SMEs on China expansion can also run the matrix with clients to align expectations on cost, timeline, and control trade-offs before engaging a law firm.
Common Mistakes and When to Update Your Estimate
Ignoring the Negative List (外商投资负面清单): Many founders score a WFOE-friendly 20, then discover their sector requires a JV by law. Always check the latest Negative List (updated December every year) before running the matrix. For a complete guide, see our 2026 Foreign Investment Law Review.
Underestimating IP registration lead time: A Chinese trademark takes 9–12 months. A patent takes 2–4 years. If your IP is unregistered, the WFOE advantage weakens significantly. Update your score once trademark filing is underway.
Overlooking deadlock clauses: A 50/50 JV with no deadlock resolution mechanism scores 15 penalty points automatically. Add a shotgun clause or swing-man director before locking the matrix recommendation.
Where to Go From Here
Based on what you just read:
- Ready to act? China Market Entry Structure Guide
- Still comparing? WFOE Registration Step-by-Step Guide
- Need numbers? China Market Entry Cost Calculator
— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.
