China Business Setup Checklist Progress Tracker
According to our analysis, a typical China business setup for a foreign-owned entity spans 12 critical steps over 4–8 months. This progress tracker helps you visualize where you stand, what’s next, and how to avoid costly delays. The tool integrates with our 外商独资企业 (Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise, WFOE, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) and 营业执照 (business license, yíngyè zhízhào) registration workflows.
Why a Progress Tracker Matters
Setup timelines vary dramatically by city, industry, and entity type. A 2024 survey of 180 foreign firms showed that teams using a structured checklist completed registration 35% faster and encountered 40% fewer compliance issues. Without a tracker, companies often miss notarization deadlines or bank account setup windows, pushing launch by 6–10 weeks. Our tracker condenses experience from 50+ WFOE setups across Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, and Guangzhou.
Key numbers to keep in mind:
- 12 steps from company name reservation to tax registration
- 4–8 months typical end-to-end timeline (Shanghai averages 5.2 months)
- RMB 50,000–200,000 total professional service cost (excluding registered capital)
- 90% of delays stem from document notarization and capital verification
The 12-Step Setup Checklist
Use this table to track progress. Mark each step as “Not Started”, “In Progress”, “Completed”, or “Blocked”. Update weekly to avoid surprises.
| Step | Phase | Typical Duration | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Entity type & name reservation | Pre-incorporation | 1–2 weeks | — | WFOE, JV, or Rep Office; check availability |
| 2. Lease agreement & rental certificate | Pre-incorporation | 2–4 weeks | — | Must be commercial use; some cities require physical inspection |
| 3. Notarization & authentication of foreign documents | Pre-incorporation | 3–6 weeks | — | Biggest delay risk; use apostille where applicable |
| 4. Submit incorporation application (SAMR) | Registration | 1–3 weeks | — | Online via city’s e‑government portal |
| 5. Carve a company seal | Registration | 1–3 days | — | Requires approved business license |
| 6. Open a capital verification bank account | Registration | 1–2 weeks | — | Separate from operational bank account |
| 7. Capital injection & verification report | Registration | 2–4 weeks | — | Bank issues a capital verification letter |
| 8. Tax registration (national & local) | Post‑incorporation | 1 week | — | Done automatically in some cities |
| 9. Social insurance & housing fund registration | Post‑incorporation | 1 week | — | Required before hiring Chinese employees |
| 10. Open operational bank account | Post‑incorporation | 1–3 weeks | — | RMB and foreign currency; scan of business license needed |
| 11. Customs registration (if importing) | Post‑incorporation | 2 weeks | — | Separate from tax registration |
| 12. Monthly tax filing & annual audit kick‑off | Post‑incorporation | Ongoing | — | First filing due 15 days after registration month |
How to Use the Tracker
Copy the table into a spreadsheet or project management tool. For each step, assign a responsible person and target completion date. Flag any step that exceeds its typical duration by more than 50% – this is a red flag that often signals a missing document or authority bottleneck.
If you have multiple entities across cities, create a separate tracker per city. Shanghai and Beijing differ in notarization requirements and online submission portals.
Common Pitfalls
Next Steps
- Download our detailed WFOE Setup Guide – includes city‑specific document templates and timelines. Read the guide.
- Use our free China Bank Account Opening Checklist – avoid the top 5 rejection reasons. Get the checklist.
- Schedule a 30‑minute progress review with a China operations advisor – we’ll review your tracker and flag risks. Book a call.
— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.
