Hong Kong company or Chinese company: which one does your business need?
We register companies in both places, so we have no side in this choice. What we do have is ten years of watching founders pick wrong and then spend a year working around the mistake. This page is the conversation we run with clients before any paperwork starts.
Four situations
Which of these is you?
Most structure questions land in one of four shapes. Start with yours.
Buying from China, selling abroad
- “We buy in Shenzhen and sell in Riyadh.”
- “Our factory is Chinese. Our customers are not.”
This is the most common setup we see, and it has the simplest answer: a Hong Kong company covers it. Your HK company signs the purchase contract as a foreign buyer, and the supplier runs the export side. The goods ship straight from the factory to your customer’s country. Chinese suppliers have worked with Hong Kong companies for decades – your payments read as routine on their side. The whole thing registers and runs remotely.
Our read: Hong Kong. Registered in 3–5 business days, with no office or staff requirement. Company formation in Hong Kong →
Selling into China, or operating inside it
- “My customers are Chinese companies, and they need fapiao.”
- “We are hiring people in Guangzhou.”
Once the business operates inside the mainland, a Hong Kong company stops being enough – it cannot issue Chinese VAT invoices or hire mainland staff. The standard answer is a WFOE: a mainland company that is fully yours. It signs local contracts and issues the invoices Chinese customers need, and it hires under Chinese labor law. The requirements are physical – a real office for a trading company and at least one person on payroll, with accounting that runs monthly. A WFOE is a commitment to the market, and it should be sized like one.
Our read: a Chinese company (WFOE). Expect 20–40 business days including document legalization. Company formation in China →
Between the two
- “Our China volume doubled this year.”
- “Do we finally need our own Chinese company?”
There is a number we use to start this conversation: around $2 million a month in trade turnover. Below it, a Chinese company usually costs more than it returns – the fixed substance costs eat a normal 2–4% trade margin. Above it, the math changes, and the doors are real: suppliers who do not export at all, contracts you can enforce in a Chinese court, local trademark protection that works, and the export VAT refund at volumes where it pays.
The number is a starting point. Your margin structure can move it, and that is exactly what we work out on a call.
Our read: run the threshold math before you commit. Book a call →
Just paying Chinese suppliers
- “I have three orders a year.”
- “Do I need a company at all?”
Maybe not yet. At occasional-order volume, an export agent or a trading company can run the China side for a fee, and an entity of your own is overhead you do not need. The moment orders become regular – monthly, with growing sums – your own company starts paying for itself: cleaner contracts, and banking in your company’s own name. For most founders that company is in Hong Kong, and the mainland question comes back later, at real volume.
Our read: wait until orders are regular, then start with Hong Kong. What HK formation involves →
The two entities
What each company is built for
They are different tools. The question is which job you need done.
Hong Kong private limited company
A trading and holding vehicle the whole world recognizes. It invoices customers in any country and holds multi-currency accounts, and you can run it from anywhere – no office or staff requirement, and no resident director.
What it cannot do is operate inside the mainland: no Chinese VAT invoices, no mainland hiring. For everything cross-border, it is the default we start from.
Registration: fully remote, 3–5 business days. One annual reporting cycle.
Chinese company (WFOE)
A company inside China that is 100% foreign-owned – yours, with no local partner. It gives you what no offshore entity can: fapiao for Chinese customers, employment under local labor law, eligibility for the export VAT refund, and standing with counterparties who want a local name on the contract.
The price of that presence is substance – an office that exists, people on payroll, accounting that runs monthly, and a regulator that checks all of it.
Registration: 20–40 business days including document legalization. Monthly filings from day one.
The real differences
Five factors that decide it
Tax rates get the attention. These five decide the outcome more often.
Which banks will read your file
The two systems fail in opposite places. In Hong Kong, opening the account is the hard part – with a difficult passport, usually much harder – but once you are in, operations are predictable: the compliance bar you cleared at entry is roughly the bar you live with. In mainland China it is reversed. Banks open accounts for WFOEs without much drama, but every cross-border payment afterwards moves through review and documentation, because the currency is controlled.
In Hong Kong the work is getting in. In China the work starts after. The passport-by-passport detail lives on our banking pages: Hong Kong and China.
What your counterparties can accept
Chinese suppliers have no problem with Hong Kong money – an HK company on the contract is normal business on their side. Most international buyers read Hong Kong the same way: an established financial center with a public companies registry.
A mainland company sends a different signal – local commitment. Chinese government agencies and domestic B2B customers usually take a WFOE more seriously, and some will only put a local entity on the contract. If your growth depends on Chinese domestic customers, this one factor can decide the whole question.
What year two looks like
A Hong Kong company runs one annual cycle: a business registration renewal and an annual return, plus the statutory audit and the profits tax filing. The audit is mandatory for every HK company regardless of size – Singapore exempts small companies, Hong Kong does not. It is light work when the books are clean, and it happens once a year.
A WFOE never goes quiet. Tax filings run monthly and VAT declarations quarterly, with an audit and annual report at year-end – and the substance has to stay alive the whole time: the office keeps costing rent, the employee keeps drawing salary. We have seen founders open a WFOE “just in case” and pay a working company’s costs for a shell that earns nothing. A WFOE you are not using is a cost you are carrying, every month.
Taxes, and taking profits home
Hong Kong keeps it short. Profits tax is 8.25% on the first HKD 2 million of profit and 16.5% above that; there is no VAT and no tax on dividends. If profits are genuinely sourced outside Hong Kong, an offshore claim can bring the rate to zero – it is decided by the tax office case by case, and it has to be earned with documentation.
Mainland numbers are bigger, and the exits are guarded. Corporate income tax is 25% (15% for qualifying high-tech companies), VAT runs at 13% on goods and 6% on services, and dividends leaving China carry a withholding tax – 10% as the standard rate. Before any dividend moves at all, the company needs a completed annual audit, tax clearance from the tax bureau, a board resolution, and a filing with the currency regulator. Money comes out of China on a schedule, through paperwork. Plan for it.
One mainland advantage is real: the export VAT refund. If your Chinese company buys or makes goods domestically and exports them, a large share of the VAT comes back. It takes real substance and clean books running six to twelve months before the first refund lands, and the extra margin is typically 2–4% – about what an export agent charges for the same work. So treat the refund as a bonus for bigger traders. It is not a business model for a small or new company.
What it takes to close down
Closing a Hong Kong company is a formal deregistration – a few filings and a final clean tax position, then it is done. Closing a WFOE is a project of eight to twelve months, in which the tax bureau audits the company’s whole history and the law requires a published creditor notice before anything closes.
Founders rarely ask about the exit on the way in. Ask. If your China plan has a real chance of changing within two years, the cost of unwinding belongs in today’s decision.
Side by side
The structural comparison
The facts that stay true regardless of your case.
| Hong Kong company | Chinese company (WFOE) | |
|---|---|---|
| Built for | Cross-border trade and holding | Operations inside mainland China |
| Operates inside the mainland | No | Yes |
| Runs fully remotely | Yes | No – office and payroll required |
| Registration | 3–5 business days | 20–40 business days |
| Reporting cycle | Annual | Monthly filings, annual audit |
| Statutory audit | Annual, every company | Annual |
| Profits / income tax | 8.25% / 16.5% two-tier | 25% standard; 15% qualifying high-tech |
| VAT | None | 13% goods · 6% services |
| Dividends out | No dividend tax | 10% standard withholding, after tax clearance |
| Export VAT refund | Not applicable | Available, with substance |
| Closing down | Formal deregistration | 8–12 months, full tax audit |
Service costs are missing from this table on purpose: they depend on your case, and we quote them on a call rather than publish averages that fit nobody.
Edge cases
When the answer is neither
Three situations fall outside the table above.
You already picked, and it no longer fits
You opened in Hong Kong, and the mainland side keeps growing – customers want fapiao, or a supplier wants a local contract. That path has its own page, with the sequencing worked out.
Expanding into China →You were handed the whole project
You are a manager at an international corporation with a mandate to launch operations in China or Hong Kong. The entity choice is one line in a much bigger plan – banking, accounting, office, the first compliance year – and you need one contractor accountable for the end-to-end result.
Protected Setup →At real scale, some businesses run both
An HK company for the cross-border side and a WFOE for the mainland side can coexist – at volumes that justify two sets of substance. Whether yours is there is a short conversation, and we will say so plainly if it is not.
Book a call →Common questions
What founders ask about this choice
The short answers. The full set lives on the FAQ page.
Can a Hong Kong company buy from Chinese suppliers without any Chinese entity?
Yes – this is the standard model. Your HK company buys as a foreign purchaser, and the supplier handles the export side. It works well while your Chinese counterparty can run export efficiently. A mainland entity becomes worth discussing when a supplier or customer requires a local company on the contract, or when export VAT refunds grow large enough to justify the substance cost.
Do I deal with Hong Kong customs if goods go straight from China to my buyer?
Usually no. In the standard model the goods move directly from China to the destination country, while the HK company handles the contracts and the payments. The goods never enter Hong Kong, so its customs is not involved. If you consolidate or re-export through Hong Kong physically, customs procedures do apply – that variant is worth a call.
I hold a difficult passport. Which of the two is easier?
The jurisdiction follows the business – where your suppliers and contracts live. What the passport changes is the banking path: which institutions will read your file, and how much preparation the application needs. Mainland China adds one extra step for some nationalities – foreign-investment screening can take longer for founders from countries on its watchlist. That rarely changes the answer, and it does mean starting the paperwork earlier.
How fast can I start in each?
Hong Kong: 3–5 business days, fully remote. Mainland China: 20–40 business days, mostly driven by document legalization in your home country and the bank’s address checks. Neither needs you on a plane for the registration itself.
Can I run a WFOE without living in China?
It is possible, and it is heavier than founders expect. The company needs a legal representative and an accountant, and the registered office has to be real. If you never visit, a local manager runs the daily side for you – which works, at a management cost and a trust cost. Most founders who run things remotely keep the company in Hong Kong instead, and revisit the mainland question when the volume demands it.
Book a call with USG
Thirty minutes. You describe the business and its volumes, and you leave with a structure answer and the banking path that goes with it.
Book a call →