How to Navigate Chemical Regulations in China: 2026 Guide for Foreign Brands
China’s chemical regulatory system now governs over 45,000 substances and imposes a critical 2026 re-registration deadline for all new chemical substances first notified before the revised China REACH took effect. For foreign brands selling raw materials, intermediates, or finished chemical products into China, compliance means navigating two parallel frameworks: the Measures for Environmental Management of New Chemical Substances (中国新化学物质环境管理办法, China REACH, zhōngguó xīn huàxué wùzhì huánjìng guǎnlǐ bànfǎ) and the Regulations on the Safety Management of Hazardous Chemicals (危险化学品安全管理条例, Hazardous Chemicals Regulations, wēixiǎn huàxué pǐn ānquán guǎnlǐ tiáolì). Missing the 2026 re-registration window can block market access entirely.
Understanding the Regulatory Landscape in 2026
China’s chemical regulations have evolved rapidly. The original 2010 Measures were replaced by a substantially revised version in January 2021, which itself enters a decisive enforcement phase in 2026. Foreign brands currently face three interconnected requirements: re-registration of legacy substances, annual reporting for registered substances, and hazardous chemical classification under the Globally Harmonized System (GHS) with Chinese-specific deviations.
The key agencies are the Ministry of Ecology and Environment (生态环境部, MEE, shēngtài huánjìng bù) for environmental registration and the Ministry of Emergency Management (应急管理部, MEM, yìngjí guǎnlǐ bù) for safety permits. In 2024, MEE processed over 2,300 new chemical registrations from foreign applicants — up 18% from 2023 — and rejected 6% due to incomplete data packages. China Customs (海关, hǎiguān) enforces at the border using a centralized database linked to MEE’s registration system, meaning unregistered substances are physically blocked.
The 2026 Re-Registration Deadline
All new chemical substances that received a registration certificate under the pre-2021 framework must be re-registered by December 31, 2026. This affects an estimated 12,000 to 15,000 certificates held by foreign companies. Re-registration requires updated toxicity data, a compliant safety data sheet (SDS) in Chinese with 16 GHS sections, and a risk assessment report prepared by a qualified domestic institution. The application window opened in January 2024, giving companies three years — but the average MEE review cycle is 9 to 14 months, so brands starting now face a tight timeline.
| Phase | Deadline | Action Required | Estimated Cost (RMB) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Data gap analysis | Q2 2025 | Audit existing registration vs. 2021+ data requirements | 30,000–80,000 |
| Toxicity testing | Q1 2026 | Commission Chinese-certified lab for missing endpoints | 150,000–500,000 |
| Risk assessment report | Q3 2026 | Engage qualified domestic institute | 80,000–200,000 |
| Application submission | Q4 2026 | File via MEE e-platform with full documentation | 10,000 (filing fee) |
| MEE review | 9–14 months | Respond to queries, potential additional testing | 50,000–150,000 |
| Total estimate | 320,000–930,000 |
China REACH: Registration Types and Compliance Paths
The 2021 China REACH divides new chemical substances into two registration tracks. For substances manufactured or imported in quantities below 1 ton per year and with low hazard potential, a simpler notification process applies (类通知, class notification, lèi tōngzhī). Above 1 ton per year, or for any quantity of a substance classified as persistent, bioaccumulative, and toxic (PBT) or very persistent and very bioaccumulative (vPvB), a full registration (常规登记, regular registration, chángguī dēngjì) is mandatory. The full registration requires a dossier similar to EU REACH but with Chinese-specific exposure scenarios.
Foreign brands cannot apply directly. All registrations must be submitted by a Chinese agent (中国代理人, zhōngguó dàilǐrén) — a legally registered entity in China that assumes joint legal liability. This agent must be a domestic WFOE or a trading company with an import license. In 2024, MEE published a list of 172 registered agents, up from 139 in 2022, reflecting growing demand. However, 19% of foreign applicants reported delays because their agent lacked specific toxicology expertise — a common pitfall for specialty chemical brands.
Annual Reporting and Record-Keeping
Once registered, all certificate holders must submit an annual report to MEE by March 31 each year, detailing the exact tonnage imported or manufactured, any new uses, and any changes in hazard classification. Failure to file for two consecutive years can trigger a certificate suspension. In 2025, MEE suspended 47 certificates for non-reporting — 12 of which involved foreign companies. The penalty for late filing is RMB 10,000 to 50,000 per substance, plus potential revocation if the substance is involved in an incident.
Hazardous Chemical Management: The 2026 Updates
Beyond China REACH, foreign brands shipping hazardous chemicals must comply with the Hazardous Chemicals Regulations and its supporting catalog — the Catalogue of Hazardous Chemicals (危险化学品目录, wēixiǎn huàxué pǐn mùlù), currently listing 2,828 substances. In 2025, MEE and MEM jointly proposed adding 47 new entries to the catalogue, effective January 2026, including several per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and lithium-ion battery electrolytes. Brands handling these substances must apply for a Hazardous Chemical Permit (危险化学品经营许可证, wēixiǎn huàxué pǐn jīngyíng xǔkězhèng) before importing.
Key 2026 updates: First, China is aligning its GHS classification more closely with the UN’s 8th revised edition, which introduces new hazard categories for desensitized explosives and aerosols. Second, electronic SDSs in XML format will become mandatory for bulk imports at major ports like Shanghai and Ningbo. Third, penalties for misclassification have increased: MEE can now fine up to RMB 500,000 per substance, plus confiscation of the non-compliant shipment. In 2025, China Customs inspected 1,472 chemical shipments and found 11% non-compliant, resulting in delays averaging 42 days.
Decision Framework: Choose Your Compliance Path
Every foreign brand should choose its approach based on substance volume, hazard profile, and market strategy.
If your substance is imported in quantities under 1 ton per year, has no PBT/vPvB concerns, and you have a stable Chinese agent, choose the class notification (simplified) path. This is faster (3–5 months) and costs roughly one-third of a full registration. If your substance exceeds 1 ton per year, is classified as hazardous, or you plan to expand to new Chinese provinces, choose the regular registration path — it costs more upfront but grants nationwide access and avoids rework when volumes grow. If your substance is new, unlisted in any database, and you lack domestic toxicity data, choose a phased expert review by commissioning a pre-notification study with a Chinese university — this reduces rejection risk by an estimated 40% versus blind submission.
Three Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them
NEXT STEPS
1. Audit your current registrations — Conduct a data gap analysis against the 2021+ requirements to determine which of your substances need re-registration by 2026. Our step-by-step guide Chemical Registration Audit for China 2026 provides a checklist and timeline template.
2. Set up a WFOE or appoint a qualified domestic agent — Without a Chinese legal entity or authorized agent, you cannot hold a registration certificate. Read our comparison WFOE vs. Import Agent for Chemical Brands to decide which structure suits your volume and liability tolerance.
3. Prepare your SDS and labelling for 2026 GHS updates — The new hazard categories and electronic SDS mandate take effect January 1, 2026. Use our template China GHS SDS 2026 Compliance Template to get compliant before customs stops your shipment.
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