Chongqing Logistics Hub Subsidies 2026: Foreign Investor Incentive Guide

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Chongqing Western China logistics hub (西部物流枢纽, xībù wùliú shūniǔ)

In mid-2026, Chongqing municipality launched a comprehensive subsidy program targeting foreign-invested logistics and manufacturing projects in designated hub zones, offering up to RMB 50 million (US$6.9 million) in capital grants per project. This program is the most aggressive municipal incentive package for foreign logistics investment ever offered in Western China, combining capital subsidies, tax rebates, and operational cost reductions across a 300-square-kilometer logistics corridor.

Why This Matters

Chongqing is already China’s largest inland port city and the anchor of the China-Europe Railway Express (中欧班列, Zhōng-Ōu bānliè), which connects the municipality to Duisburg, Germany — a journey of roughly 11,000 kilometers completed in 12 to 16 days, compared to 35 to 45 days via sea freight. In 2025, the corridor handled over 5,000 freight train trips, up 22% year-on-year, accounting for nearly one-quarter of all China-Europe Railway Express traffic nationwide. The new subsidy program aims to double that volume by 2028.

Western China accounts for only 8.5% of China’s total foreign direct investment (FDI), despite holding 28% of the national population. Chongqing’s program directly targets this imbalance by offering incentives that bring effective corporate costs below those of coastal tier-1 cities. For a foreign logistics firm investing RMB 100 million (US$13.8 million) in a designated hub zone, the combined subsidy package can reduce first-year operating expenses by up to 18%.

The program is embedded within the Chengdu-Chongqing Economic Circle (成渝经济圈, Chéng-Yú jīngjì quān) master plan, which targets a combined regional GDP of RMB 8 trillion (US$1.1 trillion) by 2030. Last year, the Chengdu-Chongqing region surpassed the Beijing-Tianjin-Hebei cluster to become China’s fourth-largest urban economic zone. Its combined GDP reached RMB 5.8 trillion (US$800 billion) in 2025. Learn more about the Chengdu-Chongqing Economic Circle →

The Details

The subsidy program covers four incentive categories across three designated logistics hub zones. Here is a breakdown of each zone’s key advantages:

Hub Zone Key Advantage Warehouse Rent
Liangjiang New Area (两江新区, Liǎngjiāng Xīnqū) Broadest CIT breaks (9% rate) RMB 30/m²/month
Chongqing Pilot FTZ (重庆自贸试验区, Chóngqìng Zìmào Shìyànqū) 24-hour paperless customs clearance RMB 25/m²/month
Guoyuan Port Logistics Park (果园港物流园, Guǒyuán Gǎng Wùliú Yuán) Lowest rent + rail subsidies RMB 18/m²/month

Capital grants cover 8% to 15% of total fixed-asset investment, capped at RMB 50 million (US$6.9 million) per project. The minimum investment threshold is RMB 30 million (US$4.1 million) for eligibility.

Corporate income tax (CIT) incentives are among the most generous in inland China. Qualified foreign-invested logistics enterprises in hub zones receive a reduced CIT rate of 9% — instead of the standard 25% — for the first five profit-making years. This is followed by a 12.5% rate for the subsequent three years.

The cumulative tax saving is significant for mid-sized operators. A company with an annual taxable profit of RMB 10 million (US$1.38 million) would save approximately RMB 12.5 million (US$1.7 million) over the eight-year period. That is equivalent to roughly 125% of one year’s taxable profit retained through the incentive alone.

Operational subsidies target the two largest cost items for logistics companies: warehousing and cross-border freight. Warehouse rent subsidies cover 30% of lease costs for the first three years, capped at RMB 2 million (US$276,000) annually. Cross-border rail freight subsidies provide RMB 3,000 (US$414) per TEU shipped on the China-Europe Railway Express from Chongqing, reducing per-container costs by roughly 15% compared to the standard rate of RMB 20,000 (US$2,760) per TEU.

Eligible industries include international logistics and supply chain management, cold-chain warehousing, cross-border e-commerce fulfillment, advanced manufacturing logistics, and multimodal transport operators. Foreign investors must establish a Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE) with minimum registered capital of RMB 10 million (US$1.38 million). A binding five-year operational commitment within one of the three designated hub zones is required to qualify.

What You Should Do

  1. Audit your eligibility — Map your planned investment against the RMB 30 million (US$4.1 million) minimum threshold and confirm your industry falls within the encouraged list. Projects in cold-chain logistics, cross-border e-commerce, and multimodal transport receive processing priority.
  2. Select your zone early — The three designated hub zones have distinct advantages. Liangjiang New Area offers the broadest CIT breaks, the Pilot Free Trade Zone provides 24-hour paperless customs clearance, and Guoyuan Port Logistics Park delivers the lowest warehousing rental rates at RMB 18 (US$2.50) per square meter per month.
  3. Prepare a five-year business plan — The program requires quarterly reporting on job creation, investment milestones, and TEU volumes. Applications submitted before December 31, 2026 benefit from an expedited 45-day review period.
  4. Engage a local advisory firm — Navigating overlapping municipal, provincial, and national incentive schemes requires specialist knowledge.

One Data Point

Chongqing’s Guoyuan Port — the largest river-rail multimodal port (联运港, liányùn gǎng) in the upper Yangtze — handled 1.8 million TEUs in 2025, yet operates at only 55% of its designed annual capacity of 3.3 million TEUs. At current growth rates, the port will reach full capacity by late 2028. The subsidy program aims to accelerate that timeline to early 2027.

Where to Go From Here

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