Can Foreign EdTech Companies Operate Directly in China?

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Can Foreign EdTech Companies Operate Directly in China?


Can Foreign EdTech Companies Operate Directly in China?

Topic: Education in China | Content Type: FAQ | Last Updated: July 2026

Overview: The Landscape for Foreign EdTech in China

China’s education technology (EdTech) market — valued at approximately USD 80-100 billion in 2025 — remains one of the largest and most dynamic in the world. For foreign EdTech companies, the question “Can we operate directly in China?” has no simple answer. The regulatory environment has become significantly more complex and restrictive since 2021, yet opportunities remain for companies that understand the rules and focus on the right market segments.

The key distinction for foreign EdTech companies is not whether you can operate in China, but what you can do and how you can do it. China’s approach to foreign EdTech is highly segment-specific: some areas are completely closed, some are open with restrictions, and others remain relatively accessible. The regulatory framework is shaped by three intersecting policy domains: education regulation (Ministry of Education), foreign investment restrictions (NDRC/MOFCOM Negative List), and data security/compliance (CAC, MIIT).

The Big Picture (2026): Direct B2C (business-to-consumer) EdTech operations targeting Chinese K-12 students in academic subjects are effectively closed to foreign companies. However, B2B (business-to-business) EdTech, adult learning platforms, corporate training technology, non-academic enrichment tools, and education infrastructure software remain viable entry points. The key is choosing the right segment and establishing the proper legal and compliance structure.

EdTech Segments: Open, Restricted, and Closed

This segment-by-segment analysis shows where foreign EdTech companies can and cannot operate directly in China as of 2026.

EdTech Segment Status for Foreign Companies Key Requirements Example Companies
K-12 Academic Tutoring Platform CLOSED N/A — prohibited by law
K-12 Non-Academic Enrichment (Art, Music, Coding, Chess) RESTRICTED WFOE/JV; EdTech filing; content compliance Various local coding schools
Adult Language Learning (English, etc.) OPEN (with conditions) WFOE; ICP license; content compliance; data localization EF Education First, Duolingo (JV)
Corporate Training / Enterprise LMS OPEN WFOE; ICP license (if public-facing) Cornerstone, Docebo (via partners)
Professional Certification Prep (PMP, CFA, ACCA, etc.) OPEN WFOE; content provider agreements with certifying bodies Kaplan (via China entity)
AI-Powered Learning Tools (adaptive learning, assessment) OPEN (gray area) WFOE; algorithm registration; content compliance; data security Multiple startups
Education Infrastructure (LMS, SIS, Analytics) OPEN WFOE; data security compliance (schools require onshore storage) PowerSchool, Canvas (via resellers)
International Exam Prep (IELTS, TOEFL, SAT) OPEN (with conditions) WFOE; teacher qualifications; content compliance New Oriental (Chinese-owned), British Council (via representation)
Study Abroad Counseling / Application Platform OPEN WFOE; self-study advisory license (in some provinces) Various platforms
VR/AR Education Content OPEN (emerging) WFOE; content compliance; potential new regulations Early-stage companies
Online Degree Programs (foreign universities) HIGHLY RESTRICTED CSCSE recognition unlikely for fully online degrees Various foreign universities (limited)
Test Preparation / Assessment Platforms RESTRICTED K-9 academic assessment restricted; adult/professional assessment open ETS, Pearson (via authorized centers)

Segment Analysis

The most viable segments for foreign EdTech companies are:

  • Corporate Training / Enterprise LMS: Lowest regulatory barriers. Companies can establish WFOEs and serve Chinese enterprises with learning management systems, content authoring tools, and compliance training platforms. The growing emphasis on workforce upskilling in China creates strong demand.
  • AI-Powered Learning Tools (non-K-12 academic): The most dynamic opportunity. AI tools that provide personalized learning, assessment, or tutoring in non-academic domains (language, coding, professional skills) can be structured as technology products rather than education services, reducing licensing requirements. However, AI regulation is evolving rapidly.
  • Adult Language Learning: Established market with clear regulatory pathways. EF Education First operates successfully through WFOEs in multiple Chinese cities. Duolingo has a partnership structure. The key is ensuring your platform is clearly positioned as adult-focused and non-academic.
  • Education Infrastructure: Schools and training centers in China need modern SIS, LMS, analytics, and communication platforms. These can be sold as software/services to institutions, avoiding direct consumer education regulation. Data security compliance is the primary requirement.
  • International Exam Prep: Strong and growing demand. Regulated but not prohibited. Teacher qualification and content compliance requirements apply.

How to Structure Your EdTech Entry into China

Foreign EdTech companies typically enter China using one of several legal structures. The best choice depends on your target segment, scale, and long-term goals.

Option 1: Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE)

The preferred structure for most EdTech companies. A WFOE is a limited liability company registered in China that is 100% owned by the foreign parent company.

Best for: B2B EdTech, corporate training, adult education platforms, education infrastructure software, AI tools (non-K-12 academic).

Advantages: Full control over operations, intellectual property protection, ability to hire directly, no Chinese partner required.

Challenges: Must have specific “business scope” that matches your EdTech activities; some cities restrict WFOEs in education-adjacent services; higher registered capital requirements in some provinces.

Option 2: Joint Venture (JV) with Chinese Partner

Required for restricted sectors where foreign ownership is capped. The Chinese partner must hold a majority stake (typically 51%+) in sectors where foreign investment is restricted.

Best for: K-12 non-academic enrichment platforms, cooperative education programs, and sectors where the Negative List requires a Chinese majority partner.

Advantages: Regulatory compliance, local market knowledge, existing relationships with schools and government.

Challenges: Loss of control, IP protection concerns, potential partner conflicts, profit sharing.

Option 3: Contractual / Licensing Arrangements

Instead of establishing a direct presence, license your EdTech content, technology, or brand to a Chinese partner who handles local operations.

Best for: Testing the market with minimal investment, content licensing, brand licensing, technology licensing.

Advantages: Low investment, faster time-to-market, minimal regulatory burden, flexibility to exit.

Challenges: Limited revenue potential, less control over brand and quality, IP theft risk, difficulty scaling.

Option 4: Representative Office (代表处)

A representative office can conduct market research, brand promotion, and liaison activities but cannot engage in direct revenue-generating activities.

Best for: Early-stage market exploration only — not a long-term operating structure.

Advantages: Simple setup, low cost.

Challenges: Cannot sign contracts, invoice clients, or employ staff directly (must use a third-party HR agency).

Option 5: Variable Interest Entity (VIE) Structure

Historically used by Chinese EdTech companies to bypass foreign ownership restrictions. The Dual-Reduction Policy has explicitly targeted VIE structures in the education sector, making this option extremely high-risk and generally not recommended for new entrants.

Recommendation for Most Foreign EdTech Companies: Start with a WFOE in a free trade zone (Shanghai FTZ, Hainan, or Shenzhen Qianhai) where the licensing process is more streamlined and pilot policies may apply. The WFOE should have a business scope that describes your activities as “technology services” or “software development” or “corporate training” rather than “education” to reduce licensing requirements, while ensuring the description accurately reflects your actual operations.

Licenses, Permits, and Registrations Required

Depending on your specific EdTech activities, you may need some or all of the following licenses and registrations:

License / Registration When Required Issuing Authority Timeline
Business License (营业执照) Always — any legal entity operating in China AMR (Administration for Market Regulation) 1-2 months
ICP License (增值电信业务经营许可证) Any for-profit website/app with user accounts, payments, or content uploads Provincial Communications Administration 2-4 months
ICP Filing (ICP备案) Non-commercial websites (less common for EdTech) MIIT 2-3 weeks
EdTech App Filing (教育APP备案) Any app providing educational content or services Ministry of Education 1-2 months
School Running License (办学许可证) If your platform provides structured, credit-bearing courses or is classified as an “education institution” Local Education Bureau 6-18 months
Online Publication License (网络出版服务许可证) If you produce/distribute original educational content as publications National Press and Publication Administration 3-6 months
Algorithm Filing (算法备案) AI-driven recommendation or personalization systems CAC (Cyberspace Administration) 2-4 months
Security Assessment Filing (安全评估) Platforms processing personal information, especially of minors Ministry of Public Security 1-3 months
Data Security Assessment (数据安全评估) Cross-border data transfer scenarios CAC 3-6 months
Copyright Registration (著作权登记) For protecting proprietary educational content and software National Copyright Administration 1-3 months

Critical: The “School Running License” (办学许可证) is the most significant regulatory hurdle. If your EdTech platform is determined by the local education bureau to be providing formal education services (as opposed to technology services), you will need this license, which requires a physical premises, a qualified principal, minimum capital, and a lengthy approval process. Structuring your business as a “technology service provider” rather than an “education institution” can often circumvent this requirement — but the distinction must be genuine, not a sham to avoid regulation. Regulators have become adept at identifying companies that claim to be “technology platforms” while actually delivering educational instruction.

Data Security, Privacy, and Content Compliance

Data security and content compliance are among the most challenging aspects of operating an EdTech platform in China, particularly for foreign companies.

Data Storage and Localization

All education-related personal data collected in China must be stored on servers physically located in mainland China. This means foreign EdTech companies must either:

  • Use a Chinese cloud provider (Alibaba Cloud, Tencent Cloud, Huawei Cloud, AWS China regions)
  • Own or lease servers in Chinese data centers (impractical for most EdTech companies)
  • Partner with a Chinese entity that hosts the data on your behalf

Using a non-Chinese cloud provider (e.g., AWS global, Azure global, Google Cloud) for Chinese user data is not compliant with PIPL and Data Security Law requirements.

Cross-Border Data Transfer

If your EdTech platform needs to transfer any data outside of China (e.g., for analytics, AI model training, customer support), you must:

  1. Conduct a data security self-assessment
  2. Pass a CAC security assessment (for “important data” or large volumes of personal information)
  3. Obtain individual consent from users for the cross-border transfer
  4. Enter into standard contractual clauses with the data recipient

In practice, for many foreign EdTech companies, the simplest approach is to architect the platform so that all Chinese user data remains in China with no cross-border transfer needed.

Content Compliance

All educational content distributed through your platform must comply with Chinese content regulations. Key requirements include:

  • No prohibited content: Content must not violate Chinese laws, national security, social stability, or “core socialist values.”
  • Historical and political accuracy: References to Chinese history, geography, politics, and territorial claims must align with official positions.
  • No religious instruction: Religious content in educational materials is strictly controlled.
  • Age-appropriate content: Content for minors must be specifically suitable for their age group.
  • AI content labeling: AI-generated educational content must be clearly labeled.
  • Content review processes: Platforms must have content review mechanisms (human or automated) to screen user-generated content and AI-generated outputs.

Practical Compliance Steps

  1. Data Mapping: Document exactly what data you collect, where it is stored, how it is processed, and whether any data leaves China.
  2. Privacy Policy Revamp: Ensure your privacy policy (in Chinese) complies with PIPL requirements, including specific sections on minor data, data retention periods, and user rights.
  3. Consent Mechanisms: Implement granular consent mechanisms that comply with Chinese standards (separate consent for different data processing purposes).
  4. Chinese Hosting: Migrate to a Chinese cloud provider before launching in China.
  5. Content Review Team: Establish a content review process with staff who understand Chinese content regulations.
  6. Legal Counsel: Engage a Chinese law firm with specific experience in data security and education regulation.

Case Studies: Foreign EdTech Companies Operating in China

Case Study 1: EF Education First — The WFOE Model

EF Education First has operated in China since the 1990s, offering English language training for adults and children, study abroad programs, and corporate training. EF China operates through multiple WFOEs with appropriate business scopes. Key success factors: long-term commitment to the Chinese market, investment in regulatory compliance from the outset, diversified product portfolio (adult + corporate + study abroad), strong brand recognition, and local management teams with deep regulatory knowledge. EF has weathered the Dual-Reduction Policy relatively well because its K-12 English programs are classified as language enrichment rather than academic tutoring, and its adult programs are clearly outside the policy’s scope.

Case Study 2: Duolingo — The Partnership Model

Duolingo entered China through a combination of partnership and direct presence. Duolingo’s app is available in China with Chinese-language UI and localized content. The company has established a presence through partnerships with Chinese publishers and education companies rather than a direct operating entity. Key challenges: ICP licensing requirements, content compliance for Chinese-language content, data localization requirements, and competition from local apps. Duolingo’s test preparation (Duolingo English Test) has carved out a niche in the international exam prep space, particularly post-pandemic as an alternative to TOEFL and IELTS.

Case Study 3: Coursera — The B2B Pivot

Coursera initially attempted a direct B2C approach in China but faced challenges with content regulation, payment processing, and data compliance. The company pivoted to a B2B model, partnering with Chinese universities and companies to provide online learning content through licensed partners. Coursera’s content is accessed through Chinese partner platforms that handle local compliance. This structure allows Coursera to reach Chinese learners without establishing a fully compliant direct presence. However, revenue is limited by the partnership structure, and control over the user experience is reduced.

Case Study 4: Multinational EdTech Hardware Companies

Companies like Promethean (interactive whiteboards) and SMART Technologies have successfully sold education hardware to Chinese schools through WFOEs and distribution partnerships. These B2B hardware + software models face fewer regulatory barriers than direct-to-consumer education platforms, as they are classified as technology/equipment providers rather than education institutions. Data security compliance is still required, particularly for software that collects student data.

Common Thread in Success Stories: Every successful foreign EdTech company in China has: (1) a clear understanding of the regulatory boundaries of their segment, (2) substantial investment in compliance (legal, data, content), (3) a local legal entity with appropriate registration, (4) local leadership and staff who understand the regulatory environment, and (5) a long-term perspective that accepts lower margins in exchange for market access.

Practical Entry Strategy for Foreign EdTech Companies (2026)

Based on the analysis above, here is a practical framework for foreign EdTech companies considering entry into China:

Stage 1: Feasibility and Regulatory Assessment (3-6 months)

  1. Identify your target segment using the Open/Restricted/Closed framework above.
  2. Engage specialized Chinese legal counsel for a regulatory feasibility assessment.
  3. Assess your data infrastructure (can you localize data in China?).
  4. Evaluate content compliance requirements for your educational materials.
  5. Develop a realistic financial model that accounts for: higher licensing costs (RMB 500K-2M), longer time-to-market (12-24 months from decision to operations), ongoing compliance costs (legal, data, content review), and potentially lower margins than your home market.

Stage 2: Structure and Licensing (6-12 months)

  1. Choose the optimal entry structure: WFOE (preferred for most segments), JV (if required), or licensing (for low-investment entry).
  2. Incorporate the Chinese entity with the appropriate business scope.
  3. Apply for the ICP license (allows revenue generation from the platform).
  4. File the EdTech app with the MOE (if you have an education app).
  5. Set up Chinese cloud infrastructure and data compliance processes.
  6. Obtain any industry-specific licenses required for your segment.

Stage 3: Launch and Compliance (3-6 months)

  1. Localize your product for the Chinese market (UI, content, payments, social login).
  2. Implement content review and data compliance systems.
  3. Hire local team (product, marketing, compliance, customer support).
  4. Launch and begin user acquisition through permitted channels.

Risk Factors to Monitor

  • Regulatory change risk: China’s education and tech regulations evolve rapidly. Build regulatory monitoring into your operations.
  • Enforcement variability: National laws are interpreted and enforced differently across provinces and cities. What is permitted in Shanghai may face scrutiny in other cities.
  • Geopolitical risk: US-China tensions can affect technology licensing, data flows, and regulatory treatment of foreign companies.
  • Local competition: Chinese EdTech companies are well-capitalized, understand the regulatory environment, and have strong local relationships. Differentiation requires genuine competitive advantage.
  • IP protection: While improving, IP enforcement in China remains imperfect. Protect core technology and content through patents, copyright registration, and trade secret protection.

Final Assessment (2026): Yes, foreign EdTech companies can operate directly in China — but not in all segments and not without substantial investment in regulatory compliance. The most viable paths are B2B technology platforms serving schools and enterprises, adult learning and professional development platforms, AI-powered learning tools in non-academic domains, and international exam preparation and study abroad services. The key to success is understanding where the regulatory lines are drawn, choosing your segment carefully, investing in compliance from day one, and maintaining the patience and capital reserves to navigate a complex and occasionally unpredictable regulatory environment.

For companies with the right focus, resources, and commitment, China’s EdTech market offers scale and dynamism unmatched anywhere else in the world.


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