Can a Foreign Company Register for Taxes in China Remotely?
For foreign companies planning their China market entry, the question of whether corporate tax registration can be completed remotely is a critical operational consideration. The direct answer is that while certain preliminary steps of the tax registration process can be initiated remotely — particularly document preparation, digital form submission, and online appointment booking — the complete registration process ultimately requires a physical presence in China for several essential steps. As of 2026, Chinese tax authorities have made significant progress in digitising tax services, but the regulatory framework still mandates in-person verification for first-time foreign-invested enterprise (FIE) registrations. This article provides a detailed breakdown of which steps can be handled remotely, which require physical presence, and practical hybrid approaches for minimising on-site time.
Steps That Can Be Completed Remotely
The Chinese tax authorities have developed a robust digital service platform known as the “Electronic Tax Bureau” (电子税务局), which now handles approximately 80% of routine tax administration processes. For FIE tax registration specifically, the following steps can be completed entirely from abroad:
| Step | Remote Method | Platform | Completion Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Document preparation and notarisation | Engage a Chinese law firm or notary via email/courier | Secure document exchange | 2–4 weeks |
| EIT registration form pre-filling | Digital form submission via STA portal | Electronic Tax Bureau (etax.chinatax.gov.cn) | 1–2 days |
| Digital certificate (CA) application | Online application with video verification | STA CA certificate portal | 2–3 working days |
| Taxpayer classification declaration | Online form with supporting PDF uploads | Electronic Tax Bureau | 1 day |
| Bank account information reporting | Online submission of scanned bank certificate | Electronic Tax Bureau | 1 day |
| Accounting system registration | Upload system configuration documents | Electronic Tax Bureau | 2–3 working days |
| Invoice quota pre-application | Digital submission with business projections | VAT invoice management system | 3–5 working days |
| Social security registration | Online registration via HR platform | 12333 (national HR platform) | 1–2 working days |
The Electronic Tax Bureau platform supports digital identity verification through the “Personal Income Tax App” (个人所得税APP), which allows foreign nationals with a Chinese mobile phone number and valid visa to complete face recognition and link their identity to the company’s registration. However, this digital identity linkage requires at least one prior in-person registration at a Chinese tax bureau to establish the initial identity record.
Steps That Require Physical Presence in China
Despite the significant progress in digital tax services, several critical steps in the FIE tax registration process still require the legal representative, financial controller, or an authorised tax agent to be physically present in China:
- Original document verification (原件核验): The tax bureau must physically inspect the original business license, parent company notarised documents, and company seal registration certificate. While digital pre-submission is accepted for preliminary review, the final approval requires the tax bureau to stamp the originals. This step requires an in-person visit to the tax bureau service hall (办税服务厅) by an authorised representative.
- Premises inspection (实地核查): For first-time FIE registrations, particularly those applying for General Taxpayer status, the tax bureau dispatches an inspector to physically verify the company’s registered address. The inspection includes a review of the physical office space, company nameplate, accounting system setup, and meeting with the financial controller or legal representative. This inspection cannot be conducted remotely and requires the company to have its registered address fully operational with staff present.
- Company seal impression filing (印鉴留存): The company’s registered seal (公章), financial seal (财务章), and legal representative’s personal seal (法人章) must be physically filed with the tax bureau. The seal impressions are stored in the tax bureau’s secure seal database and are used for subsequent document authentication. The seal impression filing requires a physical visit with the actual seals — photocopies or digital images are not accepted.
- VAT invoice physical pickup (发票领取): While the invoice quota can be applied for remotely, the actual issuance of VAT invoices (particularly paper invoices) requires physical pickup from the tax bureau. Some cities now support courier delivery of electronic invoices, but paper VAT special invoices (增值税专用发票) must still be collected in person in most jurisdictions.
- CA certificate token collection: The digital certificate for online tax filing is issued as a USB token (U-Key) in most cities. While some advanced FTZs now support mail delivery of the U-Key, the majority of tax bureaus require physical collection with identity verification.
The Hybrid Approach: Minimising Physical Presence Time
For foreign companies that want to minimise the time their representatives need to spend in China, a hybrid remote-and-in-person approach is the most practical strategy. This approach concentrates all in-person requirements into a single concentrated visit of 3 to 5 working days:
Phase 1 — Remote Preparation (Weeks 1–4, entirely from abroad): All document notarisation and legalisation is completed in the home country. Parent company documents are notarised, apostilled or embassy-legalised, and certified Chinese translations are prepared. The EIT registration form is pre-filled and submitted digitally. The CA certificate application is initiated. A licensed Chinese tax agent is engaged to pre-review all documents and coordinate with the local tax bureau on any preliminary questions.
Phase 2 — In-Person Visit (Week 5, 3–5 days in China): The legal representative or authorised financial controller travels to China for a concentrated registration window. Day 1: Document verification at the tax bureau, original document submission, and seal impression filing. Day 2: Premises inspection coordination, meeting with tax inspector, and accounting system demonstration. Day 3: VAT invoice quota approval, U-Key collection, and digital certificate activation. Days 4–5: Buffer for any unexpected document corrections or follow-up submissions. This compressed schedule is feasible when all preparation work has been completed remotely and a local tax agent handles the coordination logistics.
Phase 3 — Remote Completion (Week 6 onward): After the in-person visit, all ongoing tax compliance activities — monthly VAT filing, quarterly EIT filing, annual tax reconciliation, invoice management — can be handled entirely remotely through the Electronic Tax Bureau platform using the activated digital certificate.
Using a Licensed Tax Agent as a Proxy
Under Chinese tax law, a licensed tax agent (税务师) registered with the China Registered Tax Agent Association can handle most tax registration procedures on behalf of the foreign company without requiring the legal representative to be physically present. However, there are important limitations:
- The tax agent CAN: Submit all registration forms, coordinate document review, schedule appointments, attend the premises inspection as the company’s representative, follow up on document corrections, collect stamped certificates, and handle all ongoing tax filings after registration.
- The tax agent CANNOT: Sign the EIT registration declaration form (which requires the legal representative’s original signature or a notarised power of attorney), physically file the company seal impression (the actual seals must be presented), or collect VAT invoices without a specific authorisation letter bearing the company seal.
- Power of Attorney requirement: The legal representative must issue a notarised power of attorney (授权委托书) specifically authorising the tax agent to act on the company’s behalf for tax registration purposes. This POA must be notarised in China or, if signed abroad, must be notarised, legalised, and accompanied by a certified Chinese translation.
Companies using the tax agent proxy route typically still need at least one physical visit to file the company seal impression, but all other steps can be handled by the agent. This reduces the required in-person time from 5–7 working days to a single half-day visit.
City-by-City Remote Registration Capabilities
The extent to which tax registration can be completed remotely varies significantly by city. China’s digital tax infrastructure is not uniform, and each municipality operates its own Electronic Tax Bureau platform with different levels of remote functionality:
| City | Remote Form Submission | Digital Document Review | Remote Premises Inspection | U-Key Mail Delivery | Overall Remote Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shanghai (including Pudong FTZ) | Full | Full | Accepted by video call | Available | 90% |
| Shenzhen (Qianhai FTZ) | Full | Full | Accepted by video call | Available | 85% |
| Beijing | Full | Full | In-person required | Not available | 70% |
| Guangzhou (Nansha FTZ) | Full | Partial | In-person required | Available | 65% |
| Chengdu | Full | Partial | In-person required | Not available | 50% |
| Suzhou Industrial Park | Full | Full | Accepted by video call | Available | 85% |
| Chongqing | Partial | Limited | In-person required | Not available | 35% |
| Hangzhou | Full | Full | Accepted by video call | Available | 80% |
Shanghai and Shenzhen’s free trade zones lead the country in remote registration capabilities, with the Pudong New Area Tax Bureau having piloted a fully digital FIE tax registration process in 2025 that eliminates the need for any in-person visit except seal impression filing. Companies registered in these FTZs report that over 90% of the registration process can be completed from abroad, with only the seal-filing step requiring a brief physical visit.
Practical Considerations for Fully Remote Companies
For foreign companies that have no physical presence in China at all (sometimes called “pre-establishment” or “pre-incorporation” scenarios), several practical challenges must be addressed:
- Chinese mobile phone number requirement: The Electronic Tax Bureau platform requires a Chinese mobile phone number (+86 prefix) for SMS verification codes during every login and document submission. Foreign phone numbers cannot be used. Companies must either assign a Chinese-resident employee or engage a tax agent who provides a shared verification number.
- Digital signature compatibility: The CA digital certificate (U-Key) is compatible with Windows and macOS but requires specific browser plugins (typically Internet Explorer compatibility mode or a STA-provided browser extension) that may not work on all systems. Remote desktop solutions (e.g., a cloud-hosted Windows VM in China) are commonly used by fully remote companies to access the tax system reliably.
- Time zone coordination: The Electronic Tax Bureau platform operates on Beijing time (UTC+8) and many functions are only available during business hours (9:00–17:00, Monday to Friday). Companies in time zones that are significantly offset from Beijing time (e.g., US East Coast, UTC-5, which is 13 hours behind) may find same-day communication difficult and should plan for a 24-hour turnaround cycle.
- Document courier logistics: Even when submitting digitally, original documents must eventually be sent to the tax bureau or the company’s registered address for physical filing. Reliable international courier services (DHL, FedEx, UPS) are essential for companies operating entirely from abroad. Expect courier transit times of 3–7 days each way depending on the origin country.
Where to Go From Here
While full remote tax registration for foreign companies in China is not yet a reality for most cities, the hybrid approach — combining remote document preparation with a condensed in-person visit — can reduce the physical presence requirement to as little as 3 to 5 working days. Companies establishing in leading FTZs like Shanghai Pudong or Shenzhen Qianhai can achieve the highest level of remote processing, with only seal impression filing requiring an in-person visit.
- Ready to act? Read a step-by-step guide to completing remote tax registration for your foreign company in China
- Still comparing? See a side-by-side comparison of remote registration capabilities across Chinese cities
- Need numbers? Try an interactive remote tax registration feasibility and cost calculator for your specific situation
Can a Foreign Company Register for Taxes in China Remotely? — first published on China Gateway 360. Last updated: July 2026.
