Digital Yuan Corporate Account 2026: WFOE Rules in 15 Cities

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The People’s Bank of China (中国人民银行, zhōngguó rénmín yínháng / PBOC) issued new rules effective July 1, 2026 requiring all newly registered wholly foreign-owned enterprises (WFOEs) to open a digital yuan (e-CNY / 数字人民币, shùzì rénmínbì) corporate wallet alongside their standard RMB corporate account. The mandate applies to WFOEs with registered capital exceeding RMB 10 million — approximately 34% of new WFOE registrations in 2025.

The rule targets 15 pilot cities including Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, Guangzhou, and Hangzhou, where e-CNY merchant acceptance has reached 92% of registered businesses as of Q1 2026, according to PBOC data. WFOEs below the RMB 10 million threshold may opt in voluntarily but are not required to comply until October 1, 2027.

What the New Rules Require

New WFOEs must register for a corporate e-CNY wallet — known as a “corporate digital wallet” (对公数字钱包, duìgōng shùzì qiánbāo) — at one of 18 designated commercial banks. The wallet must be operational within 60 days of business license issuance. Failure to activate within 90 days results in a RMB 50,000 fine for the first month of non-compliance and RMB 10,000 per month thereafter.

The wallet must support at least three functions: supplier payments of RMB 500,000 or more must be routed through the e-CNY wallet (not standard wire transfers) for tax receipt purposes; payroll disbursement to any employees who have opted into e-CNY salary receipt (estimated at 24% of China’s urban workforce as of Q1 2026); and tax payments to district-level tax bureaus that have enabled e-CNY collection — currently 47% of district-level tax offices nationwide.

Existing WFOEs registered before July 1, 2026 have until January 1, 2028 to comply. This staggered timeline affects approximately 62,000 active WFOEs across China, with an estimated 14,500 of them above the RMB 10 million capital threshold and thus subject to mandatory compliance.

Key Requirements at a Glance

New WFOEs in pilot cities must comply with three core e-CNY corporate wallet mandates:

  1. Wallet activation within 60 days: The corporate e-CNY wallet must be operational within 60 calendar days of business license issuance at one of 18 designated commercial banks.
  2. Supplier payments of RMB 500,000 or more must be routed through the e-CNY wallet rather than standard wire transfers for tax receipt compliance.
  3. Tax payments via e-CNY to district-level tax bureaus that have enabled e-CNY collection — currently covering 47% of district-level tax offices nationwide — unlocking same-day tax receipt confirmation.

Why This Matters for Foreign Businesses

The e-CNY wallet requirement adds approximately 5 to 8 working days to the post-registration bank account setup process, which previously averaged 10 to 15 working days. This pushes the total post-registration operational timeline from 50 to 55 working days for a standard WFOE setup.

Operational costs increase marginally: the designated banks charge an average of RMB 200 per month for corporate e-CNY wallet maintenance, plus transaction fees of 0.1% on e-CNY payments exceeding RMB 1 million monthly. By comparison, standard corporate bank accounts charge RMB 50 per month for maintenance and 0.05% on wire transfers exceeding RMB 1 million monthly — making e-CNY 0.05 percentage points more expensive for high-volume transactors.

The tax payment advantage partially offsets the cost: WFOEs using e-CNY for quarterly corporate income tax (企业所得税, qǐyèsuǒdéshuì) payments in pilot cities receive same-day tax receipt confirmation, compared to the standard 2 to 3 business day confirmation for wire transfers. This reduces tax compliance processing time by approximately 6 to 8 days per quarter.

Implementation Considerations

Not all commercial banks offer equal e-CNY corporate wallet functionality. ICBC, China Construction Bank, and Bank of China — the three largest state-owned banks — have fully integrated e-CNY corporate wallets across all 15 pilot city branches. Among joint-stock banks, China Merchants Bank and Shanghai Pudong Development Bank have the widest pilot city coverage with 14 and 12 cities respectively.

Foreign banks operating in China — HSBC, Standard Chartered, and Citibank — are not yet designated e-CNY corporate wallet providers. WFOEs banking primarily with foreign institutions must open a supplementary account at a designated domestic bank specifically for e-CNY wallet functionality, adding an estimated 3 to 5 working days to the setup process.

The e-CNY wallet cannot currently be used for cross-border transactions. All international payments — supplier payments to overseas entities, profit repatriation (利润汇出, lìrùn huìchū) to parent companies, and royalty payments — must continue to use standard wire transfer channels through the SAFE (State Administration of Foreign Exchange / 国家外汇管理局, guójiā wàihuì guǎnlǐ jú) reporting system.

What You Should Do

Factor the additional 5 to 8 working days for e-CNY wallet setup into your WFOE registration timeline. If you are registering a WFOE with capital above RMB 10 million in a pilot city, engage your bank at the same time as your company name approval — do not wait until after business license issuance.

For existing WFOEs with capital above RMB 10 million, start the e-CNY corporate wallet application process by Q2 2027 to meet the January 1, 2028 deadline comfortably. Banks report that wallet applications take 15 to 20 business days from submission to activation, with peak processing delays expected in Q4 2027 as the deadline approaches.

Evaluate whether the RMB 10 million capital threshold applies to your entity. Registered capital for China WFOEs is typically stated in the Articles of Association and confirmed at the time of business license issuance. If your registered capital is close to the threshold, consider whether voluntary compliance might be beneficial for tax receipt timing advantages even below the mandated level.

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