Bank Account Update: Cross-Province Recognition Agreement Signed — Key Takeaways

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Bank Account Update: Cross-Province Recognition Agreement Signed — Key Takeaways

On 15 March 2025, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) signed a 跨省账户认可协议 (Cross-Province Bank Account Recognition Agreement, kuà shěng zhànghù rènkě xiéyì) covering 5 provinces — Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Anhui, Fujian, and Shanghai. This agreement allows foreign-invested enterprises (FIEs) to update corporate 银行账户 (bank account, yínháng zhànghù) details across provincial lines without re-submitting verification documents to each branch. Previously, each province required separate in-branch visits and notarized originals; now 12 participating banks will accept a single set of certified documents, reducing processing time from 15 days to just 3 days per update.

Agreement Scope and Participating Banks

The agreement applies to corporate bank accounts held by 外商独资企业 (wholly foreign-owned enterprises, WFOE, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè), joint ventures, and representative offices. It covers account name changes, authorized signatory updates, and chop (seal) modifications. The table below lists the participating banks, their provincial coverage, and the implementation timeline.

Bank Name Provinces Covered Implementation Date Contact Department
Bank of China All 5 provinces 1 April 2025 Corporate Banking
ICBC Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Shanghai 15 April 2025 International Business
China Construction Bank Anhui, Fujian, Shanghai 15 April 2025 Corporate Services
Agricultural Bank of China Jiangsu, Anhui, Zhejiang 1 May 2025 Enterprise Banking
Bank of Communications All 5 provinces 1 May 2025 Corporate Account Mgmt
HSBC China (participating branches) Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang 1 June 2025 Commercial Banking

Key figures: 12 banks are participating, covering an estimated 78% of corporate banking business in the Yangtze River Delta region. Over 4,200 FIEs with multi-province operations are expected to benefit in the first year, with an average cost saving of RMB 2,000 per update once travel, notary, and translation expenses are eliminated. The PBOC plans to extend the agreement to an additional 8 provinces by Q1 2026.

Operational Impact on Foreign-Invested Enterprises

For WFOEs operating across multiple provinces, the agreement represents a significant reduction in administrative burden. Previously, updating a bank account name after a legal entity change required sending a finance officer or legal representative to each branch with hard copies of the board resolution, business license, and passport chops. With the new agreement, a single document set submitted to the “lead bank branch” (the branch where the primary corporate account is held) will be electronically verified and shared across all participating provincial branches within the same bank group.

This cuts the average update cycle from 15 business days (including inter-province travel and document preparation) to 3 business days — an 80% time reduction. Finance teams can now complete updates for 5-province operations in one working week rather than a month. The agreement also eliminates duplicate notary costs, which typically run RMB 800–1,200 per document set per province.

Pitfall: Submitting a board resolution that is not translated into Chinese or not notarized per PBOC requirements. Cost: RMB 300–500 resubmission fee plus 2–3 day processing delay. Fix: Use the template provided by your corporate secretary and have it dual-language (Chinese + English) before submission.
Pitfall: Assuming all bank branches within a group are aware of the agreement on day one. Cost: 2–4 day delay while branch staff verify the new process. Fix: Call the target branch in advance, quote the PBOC circular number (银发〔2025〕38号), and confirm that they accept cross-province recognition.
Pitfall: Forgetting to update authorized signatories simultaneously across all provinces, causing payment rejection in one region. Cost: RMB 1,500–2,500 in returned payment fees and urgent courier costs. Fix: Submit a single consolidated list of all authorized signatories for every provincial account to the lead branch — they will cascade the updates.

Compliance and Documentation Requirements

To take advantage of cross-province recognition, FIEs must prepare a standardized document set that meets PBOC verification standards. The required documents include:

  • Board resolution (original + certified translation) — must specify the exact account detail change and authorize a specific representative.
  • Updated business license (copy with chop) — reflecting the new legal name or registered address.
  • Company chop (seal) — must match the specimen registered with the lead bank branch.
  • Passport copies of legal representative and authorized signatories — notarized if the representative is not a Chinese national.
  • Bank account change application form (provided by the lead branch) — signed by two authorized signatories.

Steps to execute the update under the new agreement:

  1. Contact your lead bank branch and request the cross-province account update procedure. Quote the agreement reference (银发〔2025〕38号).
  2. Prepare the document set as a single electronic package (PDF, 300 dpi minimum) plus two hard copies with original chops.
  3. Submit to the lead branch. They will issue a 统一收件回执 (unified receipt confirmation, tǒngyī shōujiàn huízhí) within 1 business day.
  4. The lead branch electronically forwards the documents to all other participating provincial branches. Each branch updates its records within 2 business days.
  5. Verify all accounts by making a small test transfer (e.g., RMB 100) to each province account within 3 business days of confirmation.

Compliance warning: The agreement does not cover account closures or new account openings — only updates to existing accounts. FIEs must still visit the branch in person for new account applications. Also, any change involving a tax registration number or foreign currency license still requires separate approval from the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) and may not be processed under this agreement.

Contextual comparison: Before the agreement, a WFOE with accounts in 4 provinces spent on average 18 days and RMB 8,000 (travel + notary + translation) per account update cycle. After the agreement, the same update takes 3 days and RMB 500 (document preparation only) — a 90% cost reduction. For FIEs that conduct 3–4 updates per year (common during entity restructuring), the annual savings reach RMB 30,000–60,000.

What This Means for Foreign Executives

If your company has operations in two or more of the covered provinces, you should prioritize consolidating your bank accounts with a participating bank group that offers cross-province recognition. Banks with coverage in all 5 provinces — Bank of China and Bank of Communications — are the most efficient choice for multi-province FIEs. For those with presence only in Jiangsu, Zhejiang, and Shanghai, HSBC China’s commercial banking division offers a dedicated cross-border account management team that can handle updates in English.

The agreement also signals a broader regulatory trend: the PBOC is moving toward a unified national corporate account system. Foreign executives should plan for eventual province-by-province harmonization of KYC (Know Your Customer) requirements, which will further streamline entity management across China.

NEXT STEPS

  1. Audit your multi-province bank account structure — Identify all corporate accounts held across provinces and map them to the covered banks. Use our multi-province banking checklist to ensure no account is missed.
  2. Prepare standardized document templates — Create a master document set (board resolution, signatory list, chop specimen) that meets PBOC requirements for all covered provinces. Download our corporate document template pack with bilingual samples.
  3. Contact our banking liaison for branch-specific guidance — Branch staff may have different interpretations during the first 90 days. Book a 30-minute consultation with our banking entry team to verify your setup before submission.

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

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