How to Implement a Severance Pay Policy Under China Labor Law: Complete Guide

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How to Implement a Severance Pay Policy Under China Labor Law: Complete Guide

Severance pay (经济补偿金, economic compensation, jīngjì bǔcháng jīn) is a mandatory payment under the PRC Labor Contract Law when an employer terminates employment under specific conditions. As of 2025, the standard formula grants one month of salary for each full year of service, with a statutory cap of three times the local average monthly wage for high-income employees. This guide breaks down the calculation rules, triggering events, policy design, and common compliance pitfalls you need to know to build a legally sound severance framework in China.

Understanding Severance Pay Under China Labor Law

China’s severance pay system is governed primarily by Articles 46 and 47 of the PRC Labor Contract Law (劳动合同法, láodòng hétóng fǎ), effective since 2008. Unlike at‑will employment jurisdictions, China requires employers to pay severance only in specified situations — most commonly when the employer initiates termination without fault of the employee, or when a fixed‑term contract is not renewed.

The obligation to pay severance is non‑negotiable in these statutory scenarios. You cannot contract out of it, even with a signed waiver. Courts and labor arbitration committees uniformly strike down any agreement that attempts to reduce or eliminate statutory severance.

Three key numbers define every severance calculation: (1) the employee’s monthly average salary over the 12 months prior to termination, (2) the number of full years of service, and (3) the local average monthly wage published annually by each province or city. For 2024, Shanghai’s average monthly wage was approximately RMB 12,183, while Beijing’s was about RMB 11,530. These figures directly cap severance for high earners.

Calculation Methods and Key Numbers

The basic formula is straightforward: Severance = Monthly Average Salary × Years of Service. However, three adjustments matter enormously in practice:

  • Partial years: If the employee worked 6 months or more but less than 1 year, count it as 1 year. If less than 6 months, pay 0.5 month of salary.
  • Salary cap: If the employee’s monthly salary exceeds 3× the local average monthly wage, use the capped figure (3× local average) instead of actual salary.
  • Year cap: For employees hired before January 1, 2008, years of service after 2008 are counted under the new law; pre‑2008 years follow older rules that may cap at 12 months in certain situations.

Here is a real‑world example: An employee in Beijing with 8 years and 7 months of service earning RMB 25,000 per month. Beijing’s local average monthly wage is ~RMB 11,530, so 3× = RMB 34,590. Since RMB 25,000 is below the cap, the actual salary is used. The service period is 9 full years (7 months rounds up), so severance = RMB 25,000 × 9 = RMB 225,000.

When Severance Pay Is (and Isn’t) Required

Understanding the triggering events is the single most important step in policy design. Below is a comparison table of common termination scenarios and their severance implications.

Termination Scenario Severance Required? Basis Typical Example
Employer terminates without cause (e.g., redundancy, restructuring) Yes Article 46(4) Company downsizes due to revenue decline
Mutual agreement to terminate Yes Article 46(2) Employer and employee agree to part ways
Employee resigns voluntarily No Article 37 Employee quits for a better offer
Termination for serious misconduct No Article 39 Theft, fraud, gross negligence
Fixed‑term contract expires and employer does not renew Yes Article 46(5) One‑year contract ends, company chooses not to extend
Employee terminates due to employer violation (e.g., unpaid wages) Yes Article 38 + 46 Employer fails to pay salary for 2 months

Two scenarios deserve special attention. First, when a company is acquired or undergoes a change in ownership, severance is generally not triggered if the employee continues working under the same terms — but if the new employer imposes materially worse conditions, the employee may resign and claim severance. Second, when an employee reaches retirement age and the contract ends naturally, no severance is owed.

Special Rules for High‑Income Employees

The cap at 3× the local average monthly wage applies only to employees whose monthly salary exceeds that threshold. For 2024, that means if an employee in Shanghai earns more than RMB 36,549 (3 × RMB 12,183), their severance is calculated using RMB 36,549 as the base salary — not their actual earnings. Additionally, for such employees, the maximum number of years counted is capped at 12 years of service.

This dual cap (salary cap + year cap) was designed by lawmakers to prevent excessive payouts to senior executives. However, it creates a trap for foreign‑invested enterprises that offer generous packages: you may owe far less than the actual salary times years formula suggests, but you must prove the cap applies by citing the local average wage statistic.

For example, a GM in Shenzhen earning RMB 60,000/month with 15 years of service would have severance calculated as: Cap salary = 3 × Shenzhen average wage (approx. RMB 12,300) = RMB 36,900. Years capped at 12. So severance = RMB 36,900 × 12 = RMB 442,800 — instead of RMB 60,000 × 15 = RMB 900,000 without the cap.

Decision Framework for Structuring Your Policy

When designing an internal severance policy, China law gives you room to be more generous than the statutory minimum, but never less. Use this decision framework to choose your approach:

If your company has fewer than 50 employees in China and operates on a tight budget: Stick strictly to the statutory formula. Draft a policy that mirrors Articles 46 and 47 exactly. This minimizes cost and legal risk. Ensure your HR team has a clear checklist of triggering events.

If your company has 50–200 employees and wants to offer competitive packages for key talent: Consider a tiered policy that matches statutory amounts for rank‑and‑file roles, but offers a multiplier (e.g., 1.2× or 1.5× statutory) for senior staff or critical technical hires. Make sure the policy states clearly that extra amounts are discretionary and not contractual entitlements.

If your company has 200+ employees or operates in a high‑turnover industry like tech or manufacturing: Invest in a formal Severance Policy Manual approved by your China legal counsel. Include clear procedures for documenting terminations, calculating exact severance, handling dispute resolution, and maintaining auditable records. Proactively budget severance liabilities as part of annual planning.

If your company uses contract workers through a staffing agency: Be aware that the staffing agency is the legal employer for severance purposes. Your company should contractually require the agency to follow statutory severance rules and indemnify you for any non‑compliance.

Common Pitfalls in Severance Pay Implementation

Pitfall: Failing to include bonuses, commissions, and allowances in the monthly salary calculation. Many employers use only base salary, but the law requires including all regular monetary compensation. Cost: Disputes can result in additional payments of RMB 20,000–100,000 per employee plus 50% penalty if found willful. Fix: Calculate the “average monthly salary” as the total of all cash compensation (excluding one‑off payments) over the last 12 months divided by 12.
Pitfall: Terminating an employee for misconduct without first conducting a proper investigation or obtaining evidence. Article 39 requires clear proof — a written policy that was violated, documented evidence, and a disciplinary process. Without this, termination is deemed without cause and severance is owed. Cost: Severance plus reinstatement risk or additional compensation of RMB 30,000–200,000. Fix: Create a standardized disciplinary investigation process with witness statements, photos, or system logs, and obtain a signed acknowledgment of company policies.
Pitfall: Not paying severance within the statutory timeframe (usually by the last day of employment). Late payment triggers a 50% additional penalty under Article 85 of the Labor Contract Law. Cost: If the severance owed is RMB 50,000, the penalty adds RMB 25,000 or more. Fix: Process severance as part of the final payroll run and confirm payment before issuing the termination certificate.

Step‑by‑Step Implementation Checklist

  1. Document your policy — Draft a written Severance Policy in both Chinese and English. Reference the Labor Contract Law articles explicitly.
  2. Train HR and managers — Ensure all decision‑makers understand which termination scenarios trigger severance and how to calculate correctly.
  3. Maintain accurate records — Keep 12 months of payslips, attendance records, performance reviews, and any disciplinary documentation for every employee.
  4. Budget annually — Estimate potential severance liabilities based on headcount and tenure. Include this in your China entity’s annual budget review.
  5. Engage legal counsel — Have a qualified China labor lawyer review your policy every 12–18 months, especially after any amendment to local labor regulations.
  6. Handle terminations consistently — Apply the policy uniformly across all roles to avoid discrimination claims.

NEXT STEPS

To move from planning to action, take these three steps within the next 30 days:

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