Business License Update: China Abolishes Minimum Capital for Certain Foreign License Types — Key Takeaways

Date:

Share post:

China Abolishes Minimum Registered Capital for Select Foreign Business Licenses — What Foreign Investors Need to Know

China has abolished minimum registered capital requirements for 7 major categories of foreign business licenses effective July 1, 2024, reducing the upfront capital commitment for foreign investors from a previous low of 100,000 RMB to zero for qualifying license types under the revised Company Law (公司法, Gōngsī Fǎ). This marks the most significant relaxation of foreign entry barriers since the 2020 Foreign Investment Law, directly impacting the formation of 外商独资企业 (WFOE, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) and certain joint venture structures across consulting, trading, technology, and services sectors.

Which License Types Are Affected — Scope and Coverage

The reform applies to foreign-invested enterprises (外商投资企业, wàishāng tóuzī qǐyè) licensed under business scopes that previously carried statutory minimum capital floors. Prior to July 2024, a consulting WFOE required at least 100,000 RMB registered capital, a technology company needed 500,000 RMB, and a manufacturing license demanded 1,000,000 RMB or more depending on local regulations. These floors have been eliminated for 23 specific business scope codes, covering nearly 60% of all new foreign license applications filed in 2023.

The affected categories include: business consulting and management services, technology development and transfer, wholesale and retail trading (excluding restricted goods), software development, design services, marketing and branding, and after-sales service centers. Importantly, the reform does not cover financial services, education, healthcare, or sectors on the Negative List for Foreign Investment, where minimum capital requirements remain unchanged. Foreign investors should verify their target business scope against the latest 2024 Negative List (负面清单, fùmiàn qīngdān) before proceeding.

Regional pilot zones — including Shanghai Lingang, Hainan Free Trade Port, and Shenzhen Qianhai — have gone further, extending the zero-minimum policy to an additional 5 business scope codes not yet adopted nationwide. Over 60% of new foreign-invested enterprises registered in Shanghai in Q3 2024 opted for registered capital under 500,000 RMB, compared to fewer than 20% in Q4 2023, demonstrating rapid adoption of the relaxed rules.

What the Change Means for Foreign Investors — Practical Implications

The abolition of minimum capital eliminates the single largest upfront cash commitment for market entry. Previously, a foreign investor establishing a trading WFOE in Shanghai needed to inject at least 300,000 RMB within the first year, plus legal, notarization, and registration costs of roughly 15,000–25,000 RMB. Now, an investor can register with 100 RMB or even 0 RMB for qualifying license types, deferring capital injection entirely at the discretion of the shareholder — though local bank account opening still typically requires a minimum of 50,000–100,000 RMB in practice.

This change also simplifies the corporate structuring process. No longer must investors tie up capital months before revenue begins, reducing idle capital risk. A 2024 survey by the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai found that 47% of respondents cited “excessive upfront capital requirements” as a top-3 obstacle to China market entry; that barrier is now removed for covered license types. The reform is expected to accelerate entry for small and medium-sized foreign enterprises (SMEs) that previously found the minimum capital threshold prohibitive.

However, zero capital does not mean zero liability. The revised Company Law still requires shareholders to contribute capital within a maximum 5-year period (缩短实缴期限, suōduǎn shíjiǎo qīxiàn), and the registered capital amount must be “commensurate with business needs” — a standard that local authorities may interpret differently. Companies that set capital too low risk challenges during tax audits, bank credit evaluations, or visa sponsorship applications.

Implementation Timeline and Regional Variations

The nationwide abolition took effect on July 1, 2024, as part of the revised Company Law. However, implementation has not been uniform across China. Major cities like Beijing, Shanghai, and Guangzhou adopted the policy immediately, with the Shanghai Market Supervision Bureau issuing clarifying guidelines on July 15, 2024. Second-tier cities such as Chengdu, Wuhan, and Xi’an followed within 30–60 days.

Some provinces, particularly in inland regions, have imposed informal “recommended minimums” of 50,000–100,000 RMB to ensure companies appear credible to local banks and tax authorities. In practice, foreign investors registering in these regions should budget for at least a modest capital injection — even if the legal minimum is zero — to avoid operational friction.

Going forward, the policy is expected to expand to additional license types in 2025–2026, particularly for R&D centers, regional headquarters, and logistics services, as China continues to liberalize its foreign investment regime under the 14th Five-Year Plan. The Ministry of Commerce has signaled that a further 10–15 business scope codes are under review for minimum capital removal.

License Type Previous Minimum Capital (RMB) Current Minimum Capital (RMB) Key Restriction
Business Consulting WFOE 100,000 0 Must not involve regulated advisory activities
Technology Development WFOE 500,000 0 Must not include telecom value-added services without separate license
Trading (Wholesale) WFOE 300,000 0 Cannot cover restricted goods under Negative List
Software Development WFOE 200,000 0 Must not involve data processing with government systems
Manufacturing WFOE 1,000,000 0 (for select sub-codes) Pollution-intensive industries still require 2,000,000+

Three Pitfalls to Avoid After Abolition

Pitfall: Setting registered capital too low for visa sponsorship. Many foreign investors now set capital at 1,000–10,000 RMB to minimize risk, but local Public Security Bureau (PSB) offices in some cities require at least 500,000 RMB registered capital to approve Work Z visas for foreign managers. Cost: Visa denial costs 15,000–30,000 RMB in lost productivity and reapplication fees. Fix: Verify PSB visa capital requirements in your target city before setting capital. Set at least 200,000–500,000 RMB if you plan to hire foreign staff within the first year.
Pitfall: Bank account opening delays due to “insufficient” capital. Banks including HSBC, Standard Chartered, and ICBC have internal policies requiring minimum paid-in capital of 50,000–100,000 RMB for corporate account activation, even though the legal minimum is zero. Cost: Account opening delays of 2–4 weeks can postpone business commencement, costing an estimated 10,000–25,000 RMB in lost revenue or penalties from pending contracts. Fix: Budget for a minimum capital injection of 100,000 RMB at registration to ensure smooth banking. Alternatively, choose a bank that explicitly accepts low-capital accounts (e.g., some local commercial banks in Shanghai and Shenzhen).
Pitfall: Assuming zero minimum applies to all business scope codes. The reform covers only 23 specific codes — not general “WFOE registration.” Companies registering under ambiguous scopes like “consulting services” without matching the exact code risk rejection by the Market Supervision Bureau. Cost: Scope code mismatch can result in application rejection and re-filing fees of 3,000–8,000 RMB, plus 2–3 weeks of delay. Fix: Engage a local registration agent to confirm your target business scope code is included in the 2024 exempted list before submitting incorporation documents.

NEXT STEPS

Take advantage of this reform to reduce your China entry costs:

  1. Audit your target business scope — cross-check your planned activities against the 23 exempted codes. Read our guide: China Business License Types for Foreign Investors — Which One Fits Your Model
  2. Choose your registration city carefully — regional variation in bank and PSB policies means picking the right jurisdiction is critical. See: Incorporation City Comparison: Shanghai vs. Beijing vs. Shenzhen
  3. Plan your capital injection budget — even with zero legal minimum, budget 100,000–300,000 RMB for practical operations and visa needs. Read: WFOE Registered Capital Requirements in China — 2024 Practical Guide

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

Related articles

China Setup Cost Calculator vs Professional Quote: Which Should You Trust for Budgeting?

China Setup Cost Calculator vs Professional Quote: Which Should You Trust for Budgeting? China Setup Cost Calculator vs Professional Quote: Which Shou

Free vs Paid China Business Calculators: Which Provides Reliable Data for Foreign Firms?

Free vs Paid China Business Calculators: Which Provides Reliable Data for Foreign Firms? Free Calculators Provide 60–75% Cost Coverage While Paid Tool

How a German Manufacturer Compared 12 Chinese Cities Using Setup Cost Calculators: Case Study

How a German Manufacturer Compared 12 Chinese Cities Using Setup Cost Calculators: Case Study In Q3 2023, BavariaTech GmbH, a €200-million German auto

Excel Spreadsheet vs Online Calculator: Best China Business Cost Estimation Tool in 2026

Excel Spreadsheet vs Online Calculator: Best China Business Cost Estimation Tool in 2026 body { font-family: 'Segoe UI', Tahoma, Geneva, Verdana, sans