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Access Financial | China

Hire, Place and Work in China - Compliantly

With Access Financial, managing your workforce in China becomes simple and stress-free. Leave local regulations, complex tax requirements, immigration and international payroll to us — so you can focus on growing your business.

Solutions available in this country:

EOR

We are passionate about empowering businesses and contractors to work compliantly - and keep more of what they earn.

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China
Total population:~1.413 billion (2026) (the world’s most populous country after India)
Capital:Beijing
CurrencyChinese yuan (CNY)
Total number of expats:Approximately 1.43 million foreign residents
Local Language(s):Mandarin
Weather:China spans multiple climate zones. Summers are generally hot and humid, with eastern coastal regions prone to heavy rain, tropical storms, and typhoons. Inland areas see drier summers. Winters vary from mild in the south to very cold in the north, with wet spells and occasional frost or snow.
Biggest cities:Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou and Shenzhen, Chengdu, Chongqing

Minimum salary levels

China sets minimum wages locally. As of January 2026, Shanghai has the highest monthly minimum wage at RMB 2,740 (≈US$378), followed by Jiangsu and Zhejiang at RMB 2,660 and Beijing at RMB 2,540.

Country Overview

Mainland China is a dynamic destination for expatriates, offering a powerful economy, rich cultural heritage, and modern cities alongside ancient traditions. As the world’s second-largest economy and one of its oldest civilisations, China provides vast opportunities for career development across sectors from technology and finance to manufacturing and life sciences.

China is home to approximately 1.413 billion people and around 1.43 million foreign residents. Major economic hubs include Shanghai, Beijing, Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Chengdu, and Chongqing. China operates a strict points-based work permit system, classifying foreign workers into Categories A, B, and C — all foreign nationals require proper work authorisation to be employed.

*This guide is intended for general informational purposes only and should not be viewed as legal or tax advice. The information discussed may change frequently, and Access Financial cannot guarantee that all content remains current at all times.

2026 Key Legislative Updates

Foreigner’s Work Permit salary thresholds strictly enforced from February 2026 (Category A: 6× local average salary; Category B: 4×). A 25% Z-visa fee discount applies through 31 December 2026. The new unified VAT Law took effect 1 January 2026, codifying the 13%, 9% and 6% rates. Expat tax-exempt allowances extended to 31 December 2027. Fines for illegal work now up to RMB 50,000 (worker) / RMB 100,000 (employer).

Contracts

Employment in China is governed by the Labour Contract Law, which sets out the types of contracts permitted, mandatory terms, and termination procedures. All employees must have a written employment contract within one month of starting work.

Contract Types

Contract TypeDurationKey Features
Fixed-TermSpecified end dateMost common for expatriates; typically 1–2 years, renewable
Open-Ended (Indefinite)IndefiniteNo set end date; required after 10 years’ service or two renewals
Project-BasedTask completionEnds when a specific task or project is completed; rare in practice
Part-TimeOngoingUp to 24 hrs/week with one employer; no probation allowed

Fixed-Term to Open-Ended — Two-Renewal Rule

If a fixed-term contract is renewed twice consecutively, on the third renewal it must become open-ended (unless special circumstances apply). Employees with 10+ years’ service with the same employer may also request an open-ended contract.

What Your Contract Must Include

Mandatory Terms

  • Full name and address of both parties
  • Contract term (fixed, open-ended, or project)
  • Job description and place of work
  • Working hours, rest days, and leave
  • Salary and pay frequency
  • Social insurance contributions
  • Workplace health and safety conditions
  • Other terms required by law

Common Additional Clauses

  • Probation period
  • Confidentiality / NDA provisions
  • Intellectual property assignment
  • Non-compete restrictions (with compensation)
  • Training repayment clauses
  • Bonus and commission structure
  • Performance review procedures

Access Financial drafts Chinese-compliant employment contracts and manages onboarding for EOR engagements.

Working Hours & Overtime

China’s statutory standard working hours are 8 hours per day and 40 hours per week — typically Monday to Friday. Overtime is regulated and must be compensated at premium rates. The “996” working culture (9am–9pm, 6 days per week), once widespread in tech, was ruled illegal by the Supreme People’s Court in 2021.

ParameterRuleNotes
Standard working hours8 hrs/day, 40 hrs/weekTypically Monday–Friday, 9am–6pm with 1-hour lunch
Overtime limit36 hrs/monthStatutory monthly cap on overtime hours
Weekday overtime150% of normal payFor hours worked beyond standard schedule
Rest day overtime200% of normal payIf no compensatory time off is given
Public holiday work300% of normal payNo substitution permitted; cash only
Weekly restAt least 1 dayPer 7-day period — mandatory

Flexible Working Hour Systems

Employers may apply for the Comprehensive Working Hour System or Non-Fixed Working Hour System for certain roles (executives, sales, drivers, etc.). These require approval from the local labour bureau and alter how overtime is calculated.

Probation Period

Probation periods are regulated by the Labour Contract Law and are linked to the length of the employment contract. Probation pay must be at least 80% of the agreed salary, and never below the local minimum wage.

Contract lengthMaximum probationNotes
Under 3 monthsNone permittedNo probation allowed for very short contracts
3 months to under 1 yearUp to 1 monthPay at least 80% of agreed salary
1 year to under 3 yearsUp to 2 monthsNotice during probation: 3 days
3+ years or open-endedUp to 6 monthsSingle probation per employee per employer
Part-time workNone permittedProbation not allowed for hourly part-time roles

Immigration & Work Visas

China maintains a strict visa regime. Nearly all foreign nationals require a visa to enter mainland China, and working in China absolutely requires the correct work authorisation. There is no equivalent to free movement — each foreigner must have a valid visa and Foreigner’s Work Permit.

Digital Work Permit System — December 2024

Physical Foreigner’s Work Permit cards eliminated from 1 December 2024. Work authorisation is now integrated into the electronic social security card, accessible via mobile app. Visa-free transit covers 55 nationalities at 65 ports (240 hours); a 30-day unilateral visa waiver covers 50 countries (UK and Canada added February 2026).

Work Permit Categories (2026)

From February 2026, salary thresholds for the Foreigner’s Work Permit are strictly enforced. Foreign workers are classified into three categories based on qualifications, salary, age, and skill level.

Visa / PermitSalary ThresholdSponsor?Duration
Z Visa (Work)Tied to CategoryYes (employer)Single entry, 30 days; converts to Residence Permit
Category A (High-end Talent)6× local average salaryYesUp to 5 years; fast-track processing
Category B (Professional)4× local average salaryYesUp to 2 years; age cap 60 strictly applied
R Visa (Talent)No fixed minimumEndorsementUp to 5 years; multiple entry
M Visa (Business)N/A — not for employmentNo30–60 days per entry; multiple entry possible
S1 / S2 (Family)N/AWorker’s permitMatches worker’s residence permit
Source: National Immigration Administration, 2026. Beijing Category B threshold ≈ RMB 47,700/month; Category A ≈ RMB 71,600/month.
FeeCostNotes
Z Visa applicationFrom USD 30 (with 25% discount)25% discount applies through 31 December 2026
Foreigner’s Work PermitNo application feeProcessed via SAFEA online system; 4–8 weeks total
Residence Permit (1 year)RMB 400Issued by local Public Security Bureau; 7–15 working days
Medical examinationRMB 500–1,000At authorised health centre in China
Penalty for illegal workUp to RMB 50,000 / 100,000Worker / employer respectively — strictly enforced

AF’s immigration team manages Z visa applications, Foreigner’s Work Permits, Residence Permits, and family S1 visas across China.

Leave Entitlements

China’s statutory leave entitlements are modest by international standards but are typically supplemented by employer policies, particularly at multinational firms.

Annual Leave

Paid annual leave is granted after a full year of cumulative work experience (not necessarily with one employer) and increases with total years of service.

Total work experienceStatutory leaveNotes
Less than 1 year0 daysNo statutory entitlement; employer may grant pro-rata
1 to under 10 years5 days/yearStatutory minimum; in addition to public holidays
10 to under 20 years10 days/yearCumulative work history across employers counts
20+ years15 days/yearStatutory maximum
Multinational standard10–15 days from year oneMany employers offer above the statutory floor

Parental Leave

Leave typeDurationPayNotes
Maternity (national)98 daysFull salary or maternity allowanceIncludes 15 days before due date
Maternity (Beijing/Shanghai)158 daysMaternity allowance via insurance fundProvince-level extensions common
Paternity5–15 daysFull payShanghai 10 days; Beijing 15 days
Parental Leave (Beijing/Shanghai)5 days/yearFull payEach parent, until child turns 3 (since 2022)
Marriage Leave3 days (national)Full paySome provinces extend to 10–15 days
Bereavement Leave1–3 daysFull payFor immediate family

Sick Leave

ParameterRule
Sick pay rate60–100% of salary (depending on length of service)
Minimum sick payNot below 80% of local minimum wage
Sick leave period3 months (under 5 years) up to 24 months (20+ years)
Medical certificateRequired from approved hospital
Sick leave duration depends on years of service and total length of employment with current employer. Source: Ministry of Human Resources & Social Security.

Public Holidays 2026

China has 7 statutory public holidays in 2026, totalling 13 rest days. The State Council often designates weekends as compensatory working days to create longer breaks. The 9-day Spring Festival in 2026 is the longest in PRC history.

DateDayHolidayDuration
1–3 JanuaryThu–SatNew Year’s Day3 days
15–23 FebruarySun–MonSpring Festival (Chinese New Year)9 days (longest ever)
4–6 AprilSat–MonQingming Festival (Tomb-Sweeping)3 days
1–5 MayFri–TueLabour Day5 days
19–21 JuneFri–SunDragon Boat Festival3 days
25–27 SeptemberFri–SunMid-Autumn Festival3 days
1–7 OctoberThu–WedNational Day (Golden Week)7 days
Source: General Office of the State Council, 4 November 2025. Six weekend days are designated as compensatory workdays in 2026.

Notice Periods

Notice requirements under China’s Labour Contract Law differ for employee resignation and employer-initiated termination. Most professional contracts specify the statutory notice or longer.

ScenarioStatutory noticeNotes
Employee resignation (during probation)3 daysWritten notice required
Employee resignation (post-probation)30 daysWritten notice to employer
Employer termination with cause (non-misconduct)30 days or 1 month pay in lieuPlus severance pay
Immediate termination for serious misconductNoneNo severance; high evidentiary bar
Economic redundancy / restructuring30 days + procedural requirementsMust notify labour bureau if 20+ employees
Source: Labour Contract Law of the PRC. Pay-in-lieu of notice is taxable as regular income.

Termination & Severance

Chinese labour law strongly protects employees. Employers can only unilaterally terminate for specific statutory reasons, and severance is generally required. Many separations are resolved by mutual agreement to avoid disputes.

Length of serviceSeverance payCap (2026)
Less than 6 months½ month’s average payCapped at 3× local average wage
6 months to under 1 year1 month’s average payCounted as one full year
1 year and above1 month’s pay per year of serviceMaximum 12 years for high earners
Shanghai monthly capRMB 36,5493× Shanghai average wage 2025/26
Beijing severance capRMB 44,6193× Beijing average wage 2025/26
Severance includes average regular bonuses and allowances over the prior 12 months. Source: Labour Contract Law, Articles 46–47.

Wrongful Dismissal — Double Severance

If an employer terminates without lawful cause, the employee can claim double severance (2× the standard formula) or reinstatement. Document fair processes carefully — labour arbitration in China is free for employees and frequently sides with the worker.

Social Insurance

China’s social security system, known as the “Five Insurances and One Fund”, covers pension, medical, unemployment, work injury, and maternity insurance, plus the Housing Provident Fund. Since 2011, foreign employees are generally required to participate unless exempt under a bilateral agreement.

Pension Refund on Departure

Foreign employees can claim a refund of their personal pension contributions when permanently leaving China. The employer’s portion remains in the pool. Apply via the local social security bureau after deregistering your work permit and visa.

Employer Contributions (Shanghai, indicative)

ContributionRateNotes
Pension16%Largest single component
Medical Insurance~9.5%Includes maternity insurance (merged)
Unemployment Insurance0.5%Funds short-term benefits
Work Injury Insurance0.16–1.52%Varies by industry risk classification
Housing Provident Fund5–7%Separate scheme; matched by employee
Total employer cost~25–27%Beijing 26.5–28.2%; varies by city and base
Contribution base capped at 3× city average wage. Shanghai cap: RMB 36,549/month; Beijing cap: RMB 33,891/month (2025/26). Source: Ministry of Human Resources & Social Security.

Employee Contributions

ContributionRateThreshold
Pension8%Refundable to expats on departure
Medical Insurance2%Grants access to public hospitals
Unemployment Insurance0.5%Up to 3× city average wage
Housing Provident Fund5–7%Refundable on permanent departure
Total employee deduction~10.5% (+ HPF)Consistent across Beijing and Shanghai
Source: MOHRSS, 2026. Bilateral agreements (e.g. Germany, South Korea, Japan, UK) may exempt expats from certain contributions.

Income Tax

China’s tax year is the calendar year (1 January to 31 December). Employers withhold Individual Income Tax (IIT) monthly via the PAYE-style system, with annual reconciliation between 1 March and 30 June of the following year.

Individual Income Tax Bands 2026

BandAnnual Taxable Income (CNY)RateQuick Deduction (CNY)
10 – 36,0003%0
236,001 – 144,00010%2,520
3144,001 – 300,00020%16,920
4300,001 – 420,00025%31,920
5420,001 – 660,00030%52,920
6660,001 – 960,00035%85,920
7Above 960,00045%181,920
Standard deduction: RMB 60,000/year (RMB 5,000/month) for all tax residents. Source: State Taxation Administration, 2026.

Expat Tax-Exempt Allowances — Extended to 2027

Foreign nationals may continue to claim tax-exempt benefits (housing, children’s education, language training, home leave) until 31 December 2027. Alternatively, expats can opt for the resident special additional deductions (children’s education, mortgage interest, rent, elderly care).

VAT (2026 — New Unified Law)

Rate%Applies to
Standard13%Most goods, manufacturing, leasing tangible property
Reduced9%Transport, construction, real estate, agricultural products
Services6%Most services including consulting, finance, IT, R&D
Small-scale taxpayer1% (reduced)Reduced rate extended to 31 December 2027
Zero rate0%Exports of goods and qualifying services
New unified VAT Law took effect 1 January 2026, codifying existing rates. Source: State Taxation Administration.

Let Access Financial handle your China payroll — seamlessly and compliantly, with local specialists in Shanghai and Shenzhen on call.

Benefits

China’s statutory benefits centre on the Five Insurances and Housing Provident Fund. To attract foreign talent, employers commonly add private health cover, housing allowances, and other supplemental benefits.

Mandatory Statutory Benefits

BenefitRate / AmountNotes
Pension Insurance24% total16% employer + 8% employee
Medical Insurance~11.5% total~9.5% employer + 2% employee (incl. maternity)
Unemployment Insurance1% total0.5% each side
Work Injury Insurance0.16–1.52%Employer only; rate by industry risk
Housing Provident Fund10–14% total5–7% each side; refundable on departure
Annual Leave5–15 days/yearBased on cumulative work experience
Severance Pay1 month per year of serviceCapped at 3× local average wage

Market-Standard Supplemental Benefits

BenefitPrevalenceTypical provision
Private Medical InsuranceStandard for expatsInternational plans (Bupa, Cigna, AXA, IMG)
Housing AllowanceCommonRMB 8,000–20,000/month in tier-1 cities
Annual Home Leave FlightsCommon for expats1–2 trips/year for employee and family
International School TuitionFor senior expatsRMB 150,000–300,000/year per child
Annual Bonus (13th month)Very commonOften 1–3 months’ salary at Chinese New Year
Meal & Transport AllowanceStandardRMB 500–2,000/month, often tax-exempt
Language TrainingCommon for expatsMandarin classes; tax-exempt under expat regime

Pension System

China’s basic pension system is part of social security, with contributions from both employer and employee. Foreigners are generally required to participate but can typically reclaim their personal contributions when they leave China permanently.

Parameter2026Notes
Employer contribution16%Of contribution base (up to 3× city average wage)
Employee contribution8%Refundable to expats on departure
Minimum vesting15 yearsRequired to draw monthly pension at retirement
Statutory retirement ageRising progressivelyPhased reform: 63 (men), 55–58 (women) by 2040
Personal pension account8% of salaryRefundable lump sum on permanent departure
Contribution base cap (Shanghai)RMB 36,549/month3× Shanghai average wage 2025/26
Contribution base cap (Beijing)RMB 33,891/month3× Beijing average wage 2025/26
Bilateral totalisation agreements may exempt expats from certain contributions. Source: MOHRSS, 2026.

Insurances

Public health insurance is mandatory via social security. Most expatriates also hold private international health cover for access to Western-standard facilities and overseas treatment.

InsuranceCoverageRequired by
Public Medical InsuranceOutpatient ~70% / Inpatient ~85% (after deductible)Social Insurance Law 2011
Work Injury InsuranceWorkplace accidents and occupational diseaseEmployer-only contribution; mandatory
Motor Insurance (compulsory)Third-party liabilityRoad Traffic Safety Law

Professional Indemnity Insurance — Contractors

Independent consultants in engineering, financial advisory, or technology may want PII cover to protect against negligence claims. While not legally mandatory for individuals in China, it is often required contractually by end-clients. AF can advise on appropriate cover for your sector.

Private Health Insurance

ProviderTypical annual cost (individual)Type
Bupa GlobalUSD 3,000–6,000International, comprehensive
Cigna GlobalUSD 2,500–5,500International, modular
AXA / IMGUSD 2,000–5,000International, mid-tier
Local China plans (Ping An, PICC)RMB 5,000–15,000Domestic, in-network only

AF Solutions

Access Financial operates from Shanghai and Shenzhen and supports end-clients, recruitment agencies, and contractors across mainland China.

For End-Clients

Managing a contingent workforce in China can be complex. Our solutions streamline workforce management, making it simple, compliant, and cost-effective.

For Recruiters

We offer a complete suite of services, allowing you to simply, compliantly, and efficiently place your candidates in China, with minimum fuss.

For Contractors

Focus on what you do best and let us take care of your payroll, tax compliance, social security, and immigration needs in China.

Free consultation

FAQ

Find answers to our most frequently asked questions below.

What solutions do you offer in China?

In China, Access Financial provides one compliant engagement model:

Employed/EOR (umbrella): We become the legal employer of your employees in China. Your business retains full control of the day-to-day work and deliverables, while we carry the employment, payroll, and tax liability.

When should a company consider using an EOR?

An EOR is especially useful in a range of scenarios. It is the most efficient route when you want to convert existing contractors into compliant employees and reduce misclassification risk, or when you need to hire talent in a country where you do not have a local entity. It also allows you to onboard quickly without going through a lengthy and complex company registration process, while ensuring full compliance with local employment law, payroll, and tax regulations. Beyond these core use cases, an EOR is equally valuable when you are testing a new market before committing to a long-term investment, or when you simply need temporary or project-based hires abroad.

Can we hire both local nationals and foreign employees through an EOR?

Yes. Our EOR services cover both local nationals and foreign hires. For foreign nationals, additional visa or work permit requirements apply, and we can support the application process end-to-end — including sponsorship in jurisdictions where we hold the relevant licence.

Is permanent establishment (PE) risk avoided?

An EOR is a third-party business that legally employs international workers on your behalf, creating a clear layer of separation between your company and the staff based in other countries. The EOR becomes the legal employer for those workers, so although the employees continue to deliver services to your business, the legal distancing helps mitigate many common PE risks. That said, PE is determined by the facts on the ground (the nature of the activity, contract-signing authority, where revenue is generated, and so on), not solely by who issues the payslip. We therefore recommend reviewing each engagement with our specialists to confirm the appropriate structure.

What is your pricing model?

Our standard management fee is 5% of the contract value, with a minimum of €550. We also offer volume discounts on bulk engagements. To discuss pricing for your specific scenario, please get in touch with our team here: https://accessfinancial.com/#get-started.