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China Negative List Checker is a digital lookup tool that instantly identifies whether a foreign-invested project hits a restricted or prohibited sector under China’s Foreign Investment Negative List (外商投资准入负面清单, Waishang Touzi Zhunru Fumian Qingdan). The 2024 edition of the Negative List contains exactly 29 items — down from 31 in 2023 — marking the shortest list since the regime was introduced in 2018. For foreign executives planning a China market entry, this tool eliminates guesswork: enter your industry code or keyword, and the tool returns a clear verdict — Permitted, Restricted, or Prohibited — along with the specific regulatory clause that applies. This article explains how the tool works, which categories trigger restrictions, and how to use the output for compliance planning.
🔢 Key numbers you need to know:
• 29 — total restricted/prohibited items on the 2024 National Negative List (down 6% from 2023)
• 12 — number of sectors explicitly listed as “prohibited” (including rare-earth mining and news media)
• 17 — restricted items that require Chinese-controlled equity or joint-venture structures
• 33% — average equity cap for foreign partners in restricted financial services (e.g., securities, futures)
• 2027 — target year for further liberalization under China’s WTO+ commitments in the Hainan Free Trade Port pilot
The regulatory backbone is the 外商投资准入负面清单 (Waishang Touzi Zhunru Fumian Qingdan), jointly issued by the NDRC and the Ministry of Commerce. The list applies nationwide, with a separate Free Trade Zone Negative List (自由贸易试验区负面清单, Ziyou Maoyi Shiyanqu Fumian Qingdan) containing 27 items for pilots in 21 FTZs.
How the Negative List Checker Tool Works
The tool is built on an industry-classification engine that maps your project to the 4-digit industry code used in China’s Industrial Classification for National Economic Activities (GB/T 4754—2017). You simply type a description (e.g., “electric vehicle battery manufacturing,” “telecom value-added services,” “hospital management”) or select from a dropdown of 80+ common FDI sectors.
Three possible outputs:
- ✅ Permitted — No Negative List restriction applies. Standard establishment procedures via MOFCOM or AMR registration.
- ⚠️ Restricted — Conditions such as Chinese-majority ownership, joint-venture requirement, minimum capital, or technology-sharing provisions.
- 🚫 Prohibited — Foreign investment is not allowed. Alternative: consider a technology-licensing or distribution agreement without equity.
Each result includes a direct citation of the relevant Negative List clause and a link to the official NDRC document. The tool refreshes automatically when the Negative List is updated (typically every 1–2 years).
Industry Categories That Trigger Restrictions
Even with only 29 items, the Negative List covers many high-growth sectors. Below is a snapshot of the most commonly checked categories by foreign investors, along with the restriction type.
| Industry | Restriction Type | Key Condition |
|---|---|---|
| Rare-earth mining & smelting | 🚫 Prohibited | No foreign equity allowed |
| Telecom value-added services | ⚠️ Restricted | Foreign equity ≤ 50% (≤ 50% for basic, ≤ 50% for VAS) |
| Medical institutions | ⚠️ Restricted | Joint venture only; foreign equity ≤ 70% |
| Securities, futures, insurance | ⚠️ Restricted | Foreign equity ≤ 51% (life insurance ≤ 50%) |
| Nuclear power generation | ⚠️ Restricted | Chinese party must hold control |
| News websites & publishing | 🚫 Prohibited | No foreign investment allowed |
Beyond the 29 national items, foreign investors should also check the Market Access Negative List (市场准入负面清单, Shichang Zhunru Fumian Qingdan), which applies equally to domestic and foreign firms and adds operational restrictions in sectors such as education and logistics.
Using the Tool Output for Compliance and Strategy
A “Permitted” result does not mean zero hurdles. Provincial-level regulations, environmental assessments, and cybersecurity reviews may still apply. The tool’s output should be used as the first filter in a three-stage due-diligence process:
- Stage 1 – Negative List Check: Run your industry through the tool. If the result is “Prohibited,” pivot immediately to a non-equity model (e.g., licensing, franchising, or representative office).
- Stage 2 – Sectoral License Screening: Even “Permitted” industries often require a Foreign Investment Approval (外商投资批准证书) or special license from ministries such as MIIT or NHSA.
- Stage 3 – Local vs. FTZ Route: If your project falls under a restricted category, consider locating in a Free Trade Zone where certain restrictions are relaxed. For example, the Hainan FTZ allows foreign majority ownership in some value-added telecom services through 2027.
The tool also generates a downloadable Compliance Brief PDF that includes the relevant Negative List clause, suggested corporate structure (WFOE, JV, or RO), and estimated timeline to business license. This document can be shared directly with your legal team or Chinese partners.
🧪 Try the Lookup
Enter industry: _______ → Check
Example results:
“Lithium battery manufacturing” → ✅ Permitted (no Negative List restriction; standard FDI procedures).
“Life insurance brokerage” → ⚠️ Restricted (foreign equity ≤ 50%; joint venture required).
Next Steps: Your Decision Path Based on the Tool Output
Once you have your Negative List result, here are three concrete actions tailored to each outcome:
- If PERMITTED: Engage a local incorporation agent to register a Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE) under the new Foreign Investment Law. Budget 8–14 weeks for business license, tax registration, and capital account opening. Run a parallel sectoral license check (e.g., ICP license for online platforms).
- If RESTRICTED: Map out a joint-venture structure with a Chinese partner that satisfies the equity cap. Use the tool’s clause reference to determine the exact ownership ceiling. Approach the China International Trade Single Window (国际贸易单一窗口) for pilot programs — some FTZs offer faster approval for restricted sectors.
- If PROHIBITED: Shift to a Technology Licensing or Franchise Agreement model with no equity stake. Register a Representative Office (RO) for market research only. Alternatively, explore the Hainan Free Trade Port or Qianhai special zones where certain prohibitions are waived under industry-specific pilots through 2027.
Bookmark the official NDRC Negative List page (国家发展改革委, Guojia Fazhan Gaige Wei) and subscribe to update alerts. The list is revised every 1–2 years, and China has committed to further shortening it.
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