Essential China Business License Post-Registration Compliance Calendar

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Essential China Business License Post-Registration Compliance Calendar

Once your 营业执照 (business license, yíngyè zhízhào) is issued, you face a structured compliance calendar requiring at least 18 distinct filings per year for a standard 外商独资企业 (Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise, WFOE, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè). Missing even one deadline can trigger fines, audit flags, or blacklisting. This resource maps the post-registration compliance year so you can budget time and budget ahead.

China’s regulatory environment enforces strict timelines: monthly tax returns must be filed by the 15th of the following month; the annual report must be submitted by June 30; and social insurance payments are due monthly by the 15th. Late filing penalties for tax alone range from RMB 100–10,000 per occurrence, plus a daily surcharge of 0.05% on overdue amounts. Compare this to a typical WFOE’s first-year compliance burden of about 40–50 admin hours if done internally, versus 15–20 hours with a dedicated compliance partner.

1. The Annual Compliance Cycle at a Glance

Post-registration compliance is not a one-time event. It follows a repeating 12-month rhythm broken into daily, monthly, quarterly, and annual obligations. The key anchor point is the annual report (年报, niánbào), submitted to the State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) between January 1 and June 30 each year. This report updates revenue, employees, shareholders, and capital status.

For WFOEs, annual audit by a Chinese-certified CPA firm must also be completed before June 30. The audit cost typically ranges from RMB 8,000–25,000 depending on company size and transaction volume. Combine that with tax reconciliation (汇算清缴, huìsuàn qīngjiǎo) — due by May 31 — and you have a compressed window from March to June where nearly 60% of your annual compliance workload lands.

Beyond national deadlines, many cities add local requirements. Shenzhen and Shanghai, for example, require annual foreign exchange (外汇, wàihuì) reporting by mid-January, while Beijing imposes a separate employee average salary declaration in July that affects social insurance base adjustments.

2. Monthly, Quarterly, and Annual Obligations — A Data-Driven Breakdown

Below is a consolidated compliance calendar with deadlines and typical action owners. Use this table to assign responsibility before the year starts.

Frequency Obligation Deadline Regulatory Body Typical Cost (RMB)
Monthly Value-Added Tax (VAT) filing 15th of following month State Tax Bureau RMB 0–500 (self-file) or service fee
Monthly Social insurance + housing fund payment 15th–20th of current month Local HR Bureau ~RMB 3,000–10,000/employee/year
Monthly Withholding individual income tax (IIT) 15th of following month State Tax Bureau RMB 0 (included in payroll)
Quarterly Corporate income tax (CIT) prepayment 15th of month after quarter-end State Tax Bureau Based on 25% rate before credits
Quarterly Customs duty / import VAT (if active) 15th of month after quarter-end General Administration of Customs Varies by declaration volume
Annual SAMR annual report Jan 1–Jun 30 Market Regulation Bureau RMB 0 (self-file) or RMB 500–2,000 (agency)
Annual Tax reconciliation (CIT final settlement) May 31 State Tax Bureau RMB 3,000–10,000 (CPA)
Annual Statutory audit (financial statements) Jun 30 Ministry of Finance (via CPA) RMB 8,000–25,000
Annual Foreign exchange reporting (SAFE) Mar 31 (Q1 report) / Jun 30 (annual) State Administration of Foreign Exchange RMB 0–1,500 (agency)

Most companies hire a local accounting firm (代理记账, dàilǐ jìzhàng) at RMB 2,000–5,000/month to handle monthly filings. This is cheaper than a full-time accountant (RMB 8,000–15,000/month salary plus social insurance) and reduces missed deadlines.

3. Decision Framework: Who Needs What Type of Compliance Support

Use this decision guide to choose the right compliance approach for your WFOE or representative office.

If your monthly transaction volume is fewer than 30 invoices and you have no import/export activity, choose a shared accounting service (代理记账) at ~RMB 2,500/month. If your company imports goods, has intercompany loans, or employs more than 10 staff, choose a dedicated compliance consultant or in-house accountant to manage SAFE reporting, customs declarations, and payroll-linked obligations.

If you operate in a Free Trade Zone (FTZ) such as Shanghai FTZ or Qianhai, choose a local compliance partner familiar with simplified reporting formats. If you are a 代表处 (Representative Office, dàibiǎo chù), your compliance is simpler — no VAT or CIT filing, but you must submit an annual expense report and Chinese audit by May 31.

4. Three Common Pitfalls (and How to Avoid Them)

Pitfall: Missing the annual report deadline because the legal representative was out of the country during June.
Cost: Late submission triggers a public “abnormal operation” listing and a fine of RMB 5,000–50,000. Banking and visa applications can be frozen.
Fix: Set a recurring calendar alert on January 1 and complete the online filing by March 31. Authorize a local finance manager to file using the company’s electronic ID (CA certificate).
Pitfall: Filing VAT incorrectly due to misunderstanding of “small-scale taxpayer” vs “general taxpayer” status.
Cost: Incorrect rate application (e.g., 3% vs 13%) can lead to backdated tax bills plus penalties equal to 50%–100% of the underpaid amount.
Fix: Clarify your status with the tax bureau during registration. Most WFOEs are automatically classified as general taxpayers, but if annual revenue stays below RMB 5 million, you can apply to switch.
Pitfall: Forgetting to update social insurance bases when employee average salary changes in July.
Cost: Underpayment accumulates across all employees; the total liability can reach RMB 10,000–30,000 per year. The local HR bureau can fine up to 3× the unpaid amount.
Fix: When the local government announces the new average wage (typically in July), update your payroll system within 15 days. Most accounting firms will do this if you provide the salary data.

NEXT STEPS

  1. Map your first 12 months. Download our WFOE Compliance Calendar Template and fill in your specific deadlines based on city, industry, and taxpayer type.
  2. Choose your compliance partner. Read our Accounting Firm vs In-House Guide to match cost and transaction volume with the right service level.
  3. Prepare for your first annual audit. Start gathering 2024 financial records now. See our Audit Preparation Checklist to avoid last-minute scrambles in April and May.

— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.

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