Preparing a China business license application document package requires assembling approximately 14–18 notarized, translated, and apostilled individual documents drawn from your home country and your China operations plan, depending on the company type you choose. A well-prepared document package can cut approval timelines from 12–14 weeks down to 6–8 weeks. This 2025 guide provides a complete document-by-document walkthrough, including notarization and apostille requirements under the Hague Convention (effective November 2023), certified Chinese translation procedures, SAMR online portal submission, and city-specific variations for Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, and Hainan.
Why the Document Package Matters More in 2025
China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR, 国家市场监督管理总局, guójiā shìchǎng jiāndū guǎnlǐ zǒngjú) has increased scrutiny on foreign-invested enterprise applications since the 2024 revision of the PRC Foreign Investment Law (外商投资法, wàishāng tóuzī fǎ). Rejection rates for incomplete or improperly formatted packages rose from approximately 12% in 2023 to roughly 17% in early 2025, according to industry data from Dezan Shira & Associates. The most common rejection reasons are improperly notarized foreign documents (38% of rejections), missing Chinese translations (27%), and expired identity documents (15%).
The total cost for document preparation, notarization, apostille, translation, and submission typically ranges from RMB 35,000 to RMB 65,000 for a standard Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE, 外商独资企业, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè). For a Representative Office (代表处, dàibiǎochù), the range is RMB 20,000–35,000. Budgeting correctly for these costs upfront prevents mid-process delays that can add 3–5 weeks to your timeline.
Complete Document Checklist for WFOE Application
The following table lists every document required for a standard WFOE business license application. Documents marked as requiring notarization must be notarized in the country of origin and then apostilled under the Hague Apostille Convention.
| Document | Notarization Required | Original or Copy | Preparation Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| Certificate of Incorporation (home country) | Yes | Notarized copy | 7–15 working days |
| Articles of Association / Memorandum | Yes | Notarized copy | 5–10 working days |
| Board Resolution for China Investment | Yes | Notarized original | 3–7 working days |
| Bank Reference Letter | Yes | Original | 5–10 working days |
| Legal Representative Passport Copy | Yes | Notarized copy | 3–7 working days |
| Supervisor ID Document Copy | Yes | Notarized copy | 3–7 working days |
| Manager ID Document Copy | Yes | Notarized copy | 3–7 working days |
| Lease Agreement or Property Certificate | No | Original + copy | 5–10 working days |
| Company Name Pre-Approval Certificate | No | SAMR issued | 1–3 working days |
| Registered Address Proof | No | Original | 3–5 working days |
| Investment Feasibility Study Report | No | Original | 5–10 working days |
| Shareholder Identity Documents (corporate) | Yes | Notarized copy | 7–15 working days |
Notarization and Apostille — The Hague Convention Advantage
Since November 7, 2023, China has been a party to the Hague Apostille Convention (海牙公约, hǎiyá gōngyuē), which eliminated the previous three-step consular legalization process for the 124 signatory countries. Foreign documents now require only:
- Notarization by a licensed notary public in the document’s country of origin — cost typically USD 50–150 per document
- Apostille issued by the designated competent authority in the same country (e.g., Secretary of State in the US, Foreign & Commonwealth Office in the UK) — cost typically USD 20–100 per document
- Certified Chinese translation by a registered translation company in China — cost typically RMB 200–500 per page
For non-signatory countries (approximately 40 nations not party to the Convention), the old three-step process still applies: notarization → authentication by foreign ministry → legalization by Chinese embassy/consulate. This takes 15–25 working days and costs USD 200–500 per document. Always verify your home country’s status on the Hague Conference website before beginning the process.
Certified Chinese Translation Requirements
All foreign-language documents in your application package must be translated into Chinese by a certified translation company registered with a Chinese government authority. The translation must bear the company’s official seal (公章, gōngzhāng) and a statement certifying accuracy. Key requirements include:
- Company seals on translations — The translation company’s official red seal is mandatory; translations without it will be rejected by SAMR
- Consistency across documents — Company name translations must be identical in every document; variations as small as “Shanghai Co., Ltd.” vs “Shanghai Co. Ltd.” cause rejections
- Accuracy of legal terminology — Legal terms like “articles of association” (公司章程, gōngsī zhāngchéng) and “board resolution” (董事会决议, dǒngshìhuì juéyì) must use PRC-accepted translations
- Translation timeline — Allow 2–5 working days for a standard document set of 10–15 pages; expedited service costs an additional 50–100% and takes 24 hours
SAMR Online Portal Submission Process
Since 2024, SAMR has mandated online submission of business license applications through the National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System (国家企业信用信息公示系统, guójiā qǐyè xìnyòng xìnxī gōngshì xìtǒng). The step-by-step process is:
- Company name pre-approval (名称预先核准, míngchēng yùxiān hézhǔn) — Submit 3–5 proposed Chinese names via the online portal; approval takes 1–3 working days
- Upload scanned documents — All notarized, apostilled, and translated documents must be scanned in color (300 DPI minimum) and uploaded as PDF files, each under 10 MB
- Submit application — Complete the online application form with company details, registered capital, business scope, and shareholder information
- SAMR review — The local SAMR office reviews the application within 5–10 working days; if documents are rejected, you receive specific reasons and can re-upload corrected versions
- In-person verification — After preliminary approval, the legal representative must appear in person at the SAMR office for identity verification and signature
- License issuance — Upon final approval, the business license (营业执照, yíngyè zhízhào) is issued electronically and a physical copy is mailed within 3 working days
Document Rejection Reasons and How to Avoid Them
Understanding the most common rejection reasons helps you avoid costly delays. Based on 2024–2025 SAMR data:
| Rejection Reason | Frequency | How to Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Improper notarization of foreign documents | 38% | Use a licensed notary in home country; verify apostille requirements with local competent authority |
| Missing or incomplete Chinese translations | 27% | Use a SAMR-registered translation company; include all pages including blank verso |
| Expired identity documents | 15% | Ensure passports and IDs have at least 6 months remaining validity at time of application |
| Business scope description too vague | 10% | Use exact wording from the Negative List; reference specific industry classification codes |
| Registered capital mismatch | 7% | Ensure capital amount and contribution timeline match the Articles of Association |
| Lease agreement issues | 3% | Verify property owner’s land use certificate and that the address matches the application |
City-Specific Variations
Document requirements and processing times vary significantly by city and Free Trade Zone:
- Shanghai FTZ (上海自贸区) — Fast-track processing available: 3–5 working days from complete application. Accepts virtual addresses. Online submission only. Document review is centralized at the FTZ administrative committee.
- Beijing — 8–12 working days average. Physical document submission required in addition to online upload. Stricter scrutiny on business scope descriptions — expect at least one round of revision.
- Shenzhen — 5–8 working days average. Fully digital process. Accepts electronic versions of apostilled documents (no physical copies needed for initial review).
- Hainan FTP (海南自由贸易港) — 5–10 working days. Extended capital contribution period (up to 30 years vs standard 5 years). Simplified registered capital verification — no minimum capital for most industries.
- Tier-2 cities — 10–15 working days. Less experienced reviewers may request additional documents. Consider bringing a Chinese-speaking representative to the physical counter.
Timeline and Cost Summary
The complete document preparation process, from initial notarization to license issuance, typically follows this timeline:
| Phase | Duration | Estimated Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Home country notarization | 2–5 working days | USD 50–150 per document |
| Apostille (Hague signatories) | 3–7 working days | USD 20–100 per document |
| Consular legalization (non-signatories) | 10–20 working days | USD 200–500 per document |
| Certified Chinese translation | 2–5 working days | RMB 200–500 per page |
| SAMR name pre-approval | 1–3 working days | RMB 0 (included in application fee) |
| SAMR application review | 5–10 working days | RMB 500–1,000 |
| In-person verification | 1 working day | Travel costs only |
| License issuance | 1–3 working days | RMB 0 |
| Total | 15–35 working days | RMB 35,000–65,000 |
Business License Application Document Checklist
Follow this ordered checklist to ensure you complete every step of the document preparation process without missing critical deadlines or documentation requirements:
- Verify Hague Convention status — Confirm your home country is a Hague Apostille signatory to determine whether you need the 2-step (apostille) or 3-step (legalization) certification process, saving 10–15 working days.
- Notarize all foreign documents — Engage a licensed notary public in your home country to notarize each required corporate document, identity document, and shareholder document — budget USD 50–150 per document.
- Obtain apostille or legalization — Submit notarized documents to the competent authority in your home country for apostille (3–7 working days, USD 20–100) or to the foreign ministry and Chinese embassy for legalization (10–20 working days, USD 200–500).
- Engage certified translation company — Send all apostilled/legalized documents to a SAMR-registered Chinese translation company for certified Chinese translation with official company seal — allow 2–5 working days at RMB 200–500 per page.
- Submit company name pre-approval — File 3–5 proposed Chinese company names through the SAMR online portal (名称预先核准) and await approval within 1–3 working days before completing the full application.
- Scan and upload documents — Create color scans at 300 DPI minimum of every document (notarized originals, apostille certificates, translations, leases) and upload to the SAMR online portal as individual PDF files under 10 MB each.
- Complete SAMR application — Fill in all company details, registered capital amount (post-2024 Company Law: no minimum, 5-year contribution period per Article 47), business scope descriptions matching Negative List categories, and shareholder information — allow 5–10 working days for review.
- Attend in-person verification — The legal representative must appear at the local SAMR office with original passports and company seals for identity verification and signature (schedule within 5 working days of preliminary approval).
Where to Go From Here
Based on what you just read:
- Ready to act? Read a step-by-step guide to completing this process
- Still comparing? See a side-by-side comparison of your options
- Need numbers? Try an interactive calculator for your specific situation
How to Prepare a China Business License Application Document Package: 2025 Guide — first published on China Gateway 360. Last updated: July 2026.
