Opening a corporate bank account in China requires approximately 12-15 documents. Missing any one delays account activation by 2-3 weeks — during which you cannot receive revenue or pay suppliers.
Why Documentation Matters
According to PBOC regulations, Chinese banks are required to conduct enhanced due diligence on foreign-invested enterprise accounts. The document verification process includes identity checks, beneficial ownership identification, and business rationale assessment. In 2025, approximately 14% of first-attempt corporate account applications by FIEs were rejected due to incomplete documentation.
The Complete Document Checklist
1. Original business license. 2. Company chops: company chop, financial chop, and legal representative chop. 3. Legal representative passport (original) and valid China visa or residence permit. 4. Articles of Association. 5. Tax registration certificate. 6. Organization code certificate (if issued before unified credit code system). 7. Office lease agreement with landlord property ownership certificate showing commercial zoning. 8. Company signboard photograph (required for on-site inspection). 9. Completed KYC questionnaire detailing expected transaction volumes, counterparties, and business model. 10. Board resolution authorizing account opening (if required by the Articles of Association). 11. Authorized signatory list with specimen signatures. 12. Bank-specific application forms (provided by the bank). 13. For capital account: SAFE registration confirmation. 14. For multi-currency account: foreign exchange registration. Prepare both original documents and 2-3 photocopies of each. Documents in languages other than Chinese require certified translation.
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