How do I handle China tax filings if I have no local staff?

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China tax filing document and compliance illustration

How do I handle China tax filings if I have no local staff?

Foreign companies operating in China without local employees must still meet all statutory tax obligations including Individual Income Tax / IIT (个人所得税, gèrén suǒdé shuì), Corporate Income Tax / CIT (企业所得税, qǐyè suǒdé shuì), and Value-Added Tax / VAT (增值税, zēngzhí shuì) through the 电子税务局 (diànzǐ shuìwù jú, e-Tax portal). Without in-house staff, companies typically appoint a licensed tax agent (税务代理, shuìwù dàilǐ) or use digital filing software while maintaining a registered tax representative (税务代表, shuìwù dàibiǎo) with the local bureau. The penalty for late filing is a 0.05% daily surcharge on unpaid amounts, making compliance automation essential for remote operations.

1. What tax obligations do I have with zero local staff?

Short answer:

File IIT (个人所得税) for foreign employees, CIT (企业所得税) quarterly, and VAT (增值税) monthly or quarterly — all via the e-Tax portal.

What to know:

Even a single-member WFOE triggers a full calendar. IIT due 15th monthly. CIT within 15 days post-quarter. VAT frequency depends on taxpayer type. All use the 电子税务局 with a CA certificate.

Bottom line:

Zero staff does not mean zero compliance. Budget CNY 2,000–5,000/month for a tax agent or software.

2. Can I file entirely online without visiting a tax bureau?

Short answer:

Yes. Over 95% of filings are completed through the national 电子税务局 (diànzǐ shuìwù jú) using a CA digital certificate.

What to know:

Covers IIT, CIT, VAT, stamp duty, surcharges, and social insurance. First-time taxpayer registration (一般纳税人 / 小规模纳税人) may require a one-time visit or notarized power-of-attorney. City portals share one backend.

Bottom line:

The only in-person barrier is initial certificate registration. After that, everything is online.

3. What is a tax agent (税务代理) and do I need one?

Short answer:

A licensed professional (税务代理, shuìwù dàilǐ) authorized to prepare and submit tax filings. Not legally required, but 80%+ of foreign companies without staff use one.

What to know:

Agents must hold a practicing license (税务师执业资格). They handle IIT, CIT, VAT, annual reconciliation (汇算清缴, huìsuàn qīngjiǎo), and social insurance. Costs: CNY 1,500–5,000/month. Using an agent does not shift legal liability.

Bottom line:

Hire a licensed agent with FIE experience and good English capability.

4. How do I handle IIT filing for foreign employees without HR staff?

Short answer:

Register employees in the 自然人电子税务局 and file IIT withholding monthly by the 15th. Use a tax agent or payroll software with IIT modules.

What to know:

Employees at 183+ days/year are tax residents (居民纳税人), taxed on worldwide income at 3%–45% progressive rates. Key deductions: CNY 5,000/month standard, housing, language training, children’s education. Withholding is the employer’s responsibility — failure triggers a 0.05% daily surcharge.

Bottom line:

IIT is the highest-risk remote filing. Use expat-specific software or a tax agent.

5. What are the deadlines and penalties for late filing?

Short answer:

IIT & VAT: due 15th monthly. CIT quarterly: 15 days after quarter-end. Annual CIT reconciliation: May 31. Late penalty: 0.05% daily surcharge (万分之五, wàn fēn zhī wǔ).

What to know:

CNY 100,000 owed + 30 days late = CNY 1,500 penalty. Deliberate evasion (逃税, táoshuì) draws fines of 50%–500%. Late zero returns incur CNY 50–200 each.

Bottom line:

Set calendar alerts for the 15th every month. One missed IIT filing on CNY 50,000 salary costs CNY 750/month in surcharges.

6. How do I handle VAT (增值税) filing remotely?

Short answer:

Log into 电子税务局, enter sales and purchase invoices (发票, fāpiào), and submit. Small-scale (小规模纳税人) file quarterly; general taxpayers (一般纳税人) file monthly.

What to know:

Rates: 13% (goods), 9% (services/construction), 6% (intangibles), or 3% (small-scale simplified). The portal auto-populates fapiao data if using the national system. Export-oriented companies can claim VAT refunds (出口退税). Use a cloud fapiao platform like 51Fapiao to avoid manual errors.

Bottom line:

VAT is straightforward with digitized fapiao management. Don’t skip software integration.

7. How do I register for a digital tax number and e-Tax access from abroad?

Short answer:

The tax number (纳税识别号, nàshuì shíbié hào) is issued during standard incorporation. Remote filing requires a CA digital certificate.

What to know:

Your tax number links to the Unified Social Credit Code (统一社会信用代码). Obtain a CA certificate (数字证书) — a USB key (税务UKey) or cloud certificate. Some cities accept facial recognition (人脸识别) via mobile app for fully remote issuance.

Bottom line:

Complete tax registration at setup. Request a cloud CA certificate if your city supports it.

8. Do I need to appoint a tax representative (税务代表)?

Short answer:

Yes. Every FIE must register a responsible person (办税人员, bànshuì rényuán) — the legal representative, a director, or an appointed agent.

What to know:

The representative must have a Chinese ID or valid residence permit. If your legal representative lacks a permit, hire a third-party agent as 办税人员. All tax notifications go to that contact. Changes require a notarized board resolution.

Bottom line:

Appoint a tax agent as 办税人员 if no team member holds a Chinese residence permit.

9. How does annual CIT reconciliation (汇算清缴) work remotely?

Short answer:

File the full-year CIT return by May 31 with audited financial statements. Requires a China-licensed CPA.

What to know:

Adjusts book to taxable profit — adding back non-deductible expenses, applying R&D deductions and loss carryforwards (up to 10 years). Must include an audit report (审计报告). Late filing triggers the 0.05% daily surcharge.

Bottom line:

Budget CNY 5,000–20,000 for audit plus CPA preparation. Start by March.

10. How do dual tax treaties affect remote company filings?

Short answer:

China has DTTs with 100+ countries. They reduce withholding tax on dividends (5%–10%), interest (7%–10%), and royalties (6%–10%) when claims are filed via e-Tax.

What to know:

File a 协定待遇申请 (xiédìng dàiyù shēnqǐng) with a home-country tax residency certificate and beneficial ownership declaration. Processing: 10–30 working days. Common issues: insufficient ownership proof, treaty article mismatches, late filing. Most treaties follow the OECD model with China-specific variations like the “5-year rule” on share disposals.

Bottom line:

File treaty applications before cross-border payments leave China. Use an agent familiar with your home country’s treaty.

11. How do I handle social insurance (社保) without HR staff?

Short answer:

Social insurance (社会保险, shèhuì bǎoxiǎn) is filed monthly via the 社保网上服务平台. Most companies outsource this.

What to know:

Contributions: pension (16% + 8%), medical (8%–10% + 2%), unemployment (0.5%–1% each), work injury (0.2%–1.9%), maternity (0.5%–1%). Foreign employees must participate — exceptions under bilateral totalization agreements with 12+ countries (Germany, South Korea, Japan, Canada). Outsourced agencies charge CNY 300–800/employee/month.

Bottom line:

Social insurance is mandatory including expats. Outsource it.

12. What software automates China tax filing for remote teams?

Short answer:

Kingdee (金蝶), Yonyou (用友), and cloud-based TMF Group or Dezan Shira platforms automate IIT, CIT, and VAT preparation.

What to know:

Costs: CNY 500/month (fapiao-to-VAT) to CNY 10,000+/month (full ERP). Look for fapiao OCR, IIT treaty-aware calculators, and e-Tax API submission (Shanghai, Shenzhen pilot cities). Open-source options don’t exist due to restricted tax bureau APIs. Pair software with a tax agent for final review.

Bottom line:

Software alone is rarely enough. You still need a licensed preparer for authorization.

13. Are there city-specific variations I should know about?

Short answer:

Yes. Local bureaus in Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, and tier-2 cities have different portals, grace periods, and document requirements.

What to know:

Shanghai is fully digital with e-invoice mandate. Beijing requires stricter paper for treaty claims. Shenzhen is startup-friendly with simplified quarterly filings. Tier-2 cities have less English support. Local surcharges (城市维护建设税) range 1%–7%. Pilot zones like Lingang and Qianhai offer 15% CIT rates for qualifying industries.

Bottom line:

Engage a tax agent specializing in your city — local nuance is the #1 error source for remote teams.

14. What audit requirements apply with no staff?

Short answer:

All FIEs need an annual statutory audit (审计报告, shěnjì bàogào) by a China-registered CPA firm for CIT reconciliation and the annual report (企业年度报告).

What to know:

Costs: CNY 3,000–10,000 (dormant WFOE) to CNY 8,000–25,000 (active). Even zero-revenue companies need this by June 30. Simplified audit exemptions (审计豁免) exist only in select free-trade zones.

Bottom line:

Don’t skip the audit. A dormant company audit costs ~CNY 5,000 but missing it blocks 汇算清缴 and annual report filing.

15. What does the full-year tax filing calendar look like?

Short answer:

Monthly (15th): IIT + VAT + social insurance. Quarterly (15 days post-quarter): CIT prepayment. Jan–May 31: Annual CIT 汇算清缴. By June 30: Market regulator annual report.

What to know:

Monthly (by 15th):

  • IIT withholding — any expat payroll
  • VAT + urban + education surcharges
  • Social insurance via e-Tax portal

Quarterly (15 days post-quarter):

  • CIT quarterly prepayment (企业所得税预缴)
  • Stamp duty / property tax (if applicable)

Annually:

  • Mar 1 – May 31: CIT reconciliation (汇算清缴)
  • Jan 1 – Mar 31: Annual IIT reconciliation for individuals
  • By June 30: Enterprise annual report via 国家企业信用信息公示系统
  • Ongoing: Transfer pricing docs if revenue exceeds CNY 200M+ group-wide

Bottom line:

Create a compliance calendar with 10+ reminders. Miss one deadline and cascading effects hit multiple filings.

Next Steps

  1. Register your tax representative — if no team member has a Chinese residence permit, hire a licensed agent as 办税人员 before your first filing deadline.
  2. Obtain your CA digital certificate — request a cloud certificate or have your agent collect a USB tax key (税务UKey). Test e-Tax login before any return is due.
  3. Set up a monthly compliance cadence — choose a tax agent or software (budget CNY 2,000–5,000/month) and sync your calendar with all deadlines.
  4. Automate fapiao management — use a cloud fapiao system to avoid reconciliation errors that trigger VAT mismatches.
  5. Engage a China-licensed CPA for the annual audit — start by February so your 汇算清缴 (due May 31) has reliable financial statements.
  6. Review applicable double tax treaties — file treaty benefit applications before the first cross-border remittance.
  7. Verify city-specific rules — confirm surcharge rates, digital certificate procedures, and any FTZ incentives for your registered city.

CG360-REMOTE-FAQ-017 — Published for foreign companies operating in China
Last updated: July 2026 • v1.0

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