How to Choose an Industrial Park in Anhui: Selection 2026 Guide for Foreign Investors
Last Updated: July 2026 | Content Type: Guide | Topic: Anhui Investment & Industrial Parks
- Introduction: Why Industrial Park Selection Matters
- Anhui’s Industrial Park Landscape in 2026
- 10 Selection Criteria for Foreign Investors
- Profile of Top Parks in Anhui
- Industry-to-Park Matching Guide
- Comparing Incentive Packages
- Pre-Visit Evaluation Checklist
- Negotiation Tips for Park Entry
- Frequently Asked Questions
1. Introduction: Why Industrial Park Selection Matters
Choosing the right industrial park is one of the most consequential decisions a foreign investor makes when entering Anhui Province. The park you select will directly impact your operational costs, tax burden, logistics efficiency, talent availability, and access to government incentives. A poor choice can cost millions in missed subsidies, higher operating costs, and logistics inefficiencies over the life of your investment.
Anhui Province has over 100 provincial-level and national-level development zones, each with distinct specializations, incentive structures, and infrastructure profiles. This guide provides a systematic framework for evaluating and selecting the optimal industrial park for your specific investment needs in 2026.
2. Anhui’s Industrial Park Landscape in 2026
Anhui’s development zone system is hierarchical, with each level offering different benefits and regulatory environments:
| Park Level | Number in Anhui | Key Characteristics | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| National-Level ETDZ | 7 (incl. Hefei, Wuhu, Bengbu, Ma’anshan, Anqing, Chuzhou, Tongling) | Highest level of government support, most comprehensive infrastructure, broadest incentive packages | Large-scale manufacturing, high-tech, export-oriented industries |
| National-Level High-Tech Zone | 6 (incl. Hefei, Wuhu, Bengbu, Ma’anshan, Tongling) | Focus on R&D, innovation, technology commercialization; proximity to universities and research institutes | R&D centers, AI, biotech, new materials, software development |
| Provincial-Level Development Zones | 85+ | Varying quality and specialization; often more flexible on entry requirements; lower land costs | Mid-sized manufacturers, logistics, processing industries |
| Anhui Pilot Free Trade Zone (FTZ) | 3 zones (Hefei, Wuhu, Bengbu) | Special policies: shorter Negative List, simplified customs, freer capital account, innovative regulatory pilots | Trade, finance, cross-border e-commerce, supply chain management |
| Specialized Industrial Parks | Many (EV battery, AI, photovoltaic, agricultural processing, etc.) | Industry-specific infrastructure, supply chain clustering, targeted incentives | Companies in specific value chains (EVs, solar, food processing) |
3. Ten Selection Criteria for Foreign Investors
Use these 10 weighted criteria to systematically evaluate candidate parks. Weight the scores according to your specific business priorities:
1️⃣ Industry Fit
Does the park specialize in your industry? Does it have relevant supply chain clusters, specialized infrastructure (e.g., clean rooms, heavy power, waste treatment), and a track record of hosting similar enterprises?
2️⃣ Incentive Package
What subsidies, tax rebates, rent reductions, and grants are offered? How are they delivered (upfront vs. post-investment)? Are they guaranteed in writing?
3️⃣ Infrastructure Quality
Power reliability (dual-grid? backup generators?), water/wastewater capacity, gas supply, telecommunications, industrial internet connectivity, road and port access.
4️⃣ Logistics & Transportation
Distance to Hefei Xinqiao International Airport, nearest port (Nanjing Port/Shanghai Port via Yangtze River), expressway access, railway freight stations. Export-oriented companies should prioritize proximity to the Yangtze River waterway.
5️⃣ Talent Availability
Proximity to universities and vocational schools in Anhui (USTC, Hefei University of Technology, Anhui University, etc.), local workforce quality, recruitment support from park management, availability of housing for expatriate staff.
6️⃣ Cost Structure
Land price/lease rate per sqm, property management fees, utilities costs (electricity per kWh, water, gas), labor costs in the area, and any hidden surcharges.
7️⃣ Regulatory Environment
Ease of obtaining permits and licenses, environmental impact assessment (EIA) requirements, fire safety approvals, construction permits. Some parks offer “commitment-based” approval (承诺制审批) that streamlines the process.
8️⃣ Foreign Investor Track Record
Number of existing foreign-invested enterprises in the park. A park with an established FIE community has better understanding of foreign investor needs, bilingual services, and smoother bureaucratic processes.
9️⃣ Living Environment
International schools, medical facilities, expat housing, shopping, and recreation. Hefei and Wuhu offer the most developed expat infrastructure in Anhui.
🔟 Future Expansion Potential
Is land available for future expansion? Does the park have a long-term development plan? Can you reserve adjacent plots?
4. Profile of Top Parks in Anhui
Hefei National High-Tech Industry Development Zone (合肥高新区)
Established: 1990 | Area: 128 sq km | Foreign FIEs: 400+
Specialization: Artificial Intelligence, integrated circuits, biopharma, new energy, quantum technology
Key Advantages: Home to University of Science and Technology of China (USTC), the Institute of Artificial Intelligence, and numerous national labs. Strong government support with 3-year rent-free periods for qualifying high-tech FIEs. Excellent international school options. Direct expressway access to Hefei Xinqiao Airport (30 min).
Incentive Highlights: Up to 3-year rent exemption for R&D centers; corporate income tax reduction to 15% for qualifying high-tech enterprises (standard rate is 25%); R&D expense super-deduction up to 200%; talent recruitment subsidy of ¥5,000–¥20,000 per employee; patent filing subsidies.
Best For: AI, semiconductor, biotech, and advanced R&D enterprises. Not ideal for heavy manufacturing due to restrictions on industrial emissions.
Hefei Economic and Technological Development Zone (合肥经开区)
Established: 1993 | Area: 80 sq km | Foreign FIEs: 350+
Specialization: Automotive (HeFei is a key NIO, JAC, and BYD supply chain hub), home appliances, machinery, food processing, new materials
Key Advantages: Comprehensive industrial base with excellent logistics (adjacent to Hefei Port and expressway network). Strong supply chain clusters in EV manufacturing. Well-established foreign investor community including German, Japanese, and US companies.
Incentive Highlights: Rental subsidies of 30–50% for first 2 years; VAT rebates for export-oriented manufacturers; customs duty exemptions for imported equipment used in processing trade; talent housing subsidies.
Best For: Automotive and EV supply chain companies; advanced manufacturing; home appliance manufacturers; medium to large-scale industrial operations.
Wuhu Economic and Technological Development Zone (芜湖经开区)
Established: 1993 | Area: 78 sq km | Foreign FIEs: 200+
Specialization: Automobile manufacturing (Chery HQ), robotics and intelligent manufacturing, new materials, electronic components
Key Advantages: Strategic location on the Yangtze River — Wuhu Port is one of the largest inland river ports in China, with direct container shipping to Shanghai (36 hours). Chery’s global headquarters provides extensive automotive supply chain opportunities. Growing robotics cluster.
Incentive Highlights: Land price discounts for key industries; export tax rebate priority processing; dedicated foreign investment service desk; port handling fee reductions for high-volume exporters.
Best For: Automotive supply chain; robotics and automation manufacturers; river- and sea-export-oriented manufacturing; materials processing.
Bengbu High-Tech Industrial Development Zone (蚌埠高新区)
Established: 2010 | Area: 60 sq km | Foreign FIEs: 80+
Specialization: Silica-based new materials (glass, silicon), electronic information, equipment manufacturing, bio-pharmaceuticals
Key Advantages: Home to China’s premier silica and glass research institutes. Lower land and labor costs compared to Hefei and Wuhu (30–40% less). Part of the Anhui FTZ. Growing focus on specialty glass for display panels and photovoltaic applications.
Incentive Highlights: Significant land price discounts (up to 50% for priority industries); 2-year full rent exemption followed by 50% reduction for 2 years; fast-track approval for environmental impact assessments; R&D equipment subsidy up to 20%.
Best For: Glass, silicon, and new materials enterprises; electronics manufacturing; cost-sensitive manufacturing operations that don’t require Hefei’s talent pool.
Ma’anshan Economic and Technological Development Zone (马鞍山经开区)
Established: 1995 | Area: 55 sq km | Foreign FIEs: 120+
Specialization: Steel and metal processing, equipment manufacturing, chemical engineering, logistics
Key Advantages: Closest Anhui city to Nanjing (30 min by high-speed rail) and Shanghai (1.5 hrs by rail). Strong industrial base in steel (Ma’anshan Iron & Steel) and metal fabrication. Excellent Yangtze River port facilities. Lower operating costs than Hefei.
Incentive Highlights: Rent subsidies for manufacturing enterprises; preferential electricity rates for heavy industrial users; logistics subsidy for export-oriented companies using Ma’anshan Port; talent recruitment and training subsidies.
Best For: Metal processing, heavy manufacturing, chemical processing, logistics companies needing proximity to the Yangtze River Delta.
5. Industry-to-Park Matching Guide
| Your Industry | Recommended Parks (Ranked) | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Artificial Intelligence / Software | Hefei High-Tech Zone (1st), Wuhu Robotics Park (2nd) | USTC talent pipeline; AI cluster; R&D incentives; incubator programs |
| Electric Vehicle / Battery | Hefei ETDZ (1st), Wuhu ETDZ (2nd) | NIO, JAC, BYD supply chain; EV battery cluster; existing supplier ecosystem |
| Biotech / Pharmaceuticals | Hefei High-Tech Zone (1st), Bengbu High-Tech (2nd) | Research institutes; clean room infrastructure; clinical trial support |
| Renewable Energy / Solar | Hefei ETDZ (1st), Tongling ETDZ (2nd) | Photovoltaic manufacturing cluster; preferential power pricing; export logistics |
| Food Processing / Agriculture | Chuzhou (1st), Hefei ETDZ (2nd), Xuancheng (3rd) | Agricultural raw material base; cold chain logistics; lower land costs |
| Textiles / Garments | Anqing ETDZ (1st), Fuyang (2nd) | Traditional textile base; lower labor costs; established supply chain |
| Logistics / Warehousing | Hefei Logistics Park (1st), Wuhu Port Zone (2nd), Ma’anshan Port (3rd) | Proximity to Yangtze River; multimodal transport infrastructure; FTZ benefits |
| Semiconductor / IC Design | Hefei High-Tech Zone (1st), Wuhu (2nd) | IC design ecosystem; talent pool; chip manufacturing pilot lines; government funding |
6. Comparing Incentive Packages
Anhui’s industrial parks compete aggressively for foreign investment. While incentive packages vary, here is a typical comparison of what you can expect to negotiate:
| Incentive Type | National-Level Parks | Provincial-Level Parks | Anhui FTZ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent Subsidy | Up to 3 years free (high-tech) | 1–2 years free, then 50% reduction | Up to 3 years free (negotiable) |
| Land Price Discount | Up to 50% for priority industries | 20–40% discount | Negotiable, may include land as capital contribution |
| Corporate Income Tax | 15% for high-tech enterprises | 15% only if high-tech certified | 15% for encouraged industries; additional local retention rebates |
| Equipment Subsidy | 10–20% of equipment cost | 5–15% of equipment cost | 15–25% of equipment cost |
| R&D Grant | Up to ¥5M for qualifying projects | Up to ¥2M for qualifying projects | Up to ¥10M (major projects) |
| Talent Subsidy | ¥5K–¥20K per hire (senior positions) | ¥2K–¥10K per hire | ¥10K–¥30K per hire; housing subsidies for overseas talent |
| Customs Duties | Standard national exemptions | Standard national exemptions | Expanded duty-free scope; deferred duty payment for processing trade |
| Administrative Support | Dedicated FIE service desk | Shared service window | One-stop service desk; faster approval timelines |
7. Pre-Visit Evaluation Checklist
Before visiting candidate parks, prepare the following:
- Business Profile Document (1 page): Clearly describe your company, proposed investment amount, job creation projections, estimated output value, land/space requirements, and power/utility needs.
- Industry Classification: Pre-determine whether your industry is on the encouraged, permitted, or restricted list. Check both the national Negative List and Anhui provincial industry catalog.
- Financial Projections: Have a clear budget for your planned investment (CAPEX and OPEX for first 3 years) to evaluate whether park incentives are competitive.
- Required Infrastructure Specifications: Document your specific requirements — power capacity (kVA), water consumption (tons/day), wastewater treatment, gas pressure, clean room standards, floor loading, ceiling height.
- Logistics Profile: Calculate expected import/export volumes, preferred transport modes (road, rail, river, air), and target delivery destinations.
- HR Plan: Estimate staffing numbers (local and expatriate), skills required, and expected salary ranges to discuss recruitment support.
- Questionnaire for Park Management: Prepare a written set of 15–20 questions covering incentives, infrastructure, regulations, and community amenities.
- Comparative Scorecard: Create a spreadsheet with the 10 criteria from Section 3 to score each park consistently.
8. Negotiation Tips for Park Entry
Securing favorable terms from Anhui industrial parks requires strategic negotiation. Use these tactics:
- Create competition: Visit and express serious interest to at least three parks. Let each know you are evaluating multiple options. Parks compete for investment quotas and will offer better terms when they know you have alternatives.
- Leverage your investment size: Park management has targets for total investment amount (fixed asset investment) and job creation. Emphasize your committed investment and projected employment numbers when negotiating.
- Negotiate the “package” not individual items: Rather than negotiating rent separately, negotiate a total incentive package. Parks can be more flexible on the total “value” of incentives than on individual line items.
- Include performance-based escalators: Propose that incentives increase (e.g., higher rent subsidy) if you exceed hiring or investment targets. This aligns your interests with the park’s.
- Ask about “matching” incentives: Some Anhui parks have matching programs where they will match (or partially match) incentive offers from competing parks. This is particularly common in Hefei and Wuhu.
- Consider FTZ location premium: If your business benefits from FTZ policies (cross-border trade, simplified customs, freer capital flows), the premium for FTZ-located space is often worth paying. Negotiate based on total cost-benefit, not just headline rent.
- Request a due diligence period: Ask for 60–90 days for due diligence in the Investment Agreement, during which you can investigate infrastructure, verify incentive delivery, and speak to existing foreign investors in the park.
- Get commitments in the Investment Agreement: Ensure the signed agreement includes: specific rent amounts and subsidy periods, tax rebate procedures, infrastructure delivery timelines, penalty clauses for non-delivery, and dispute resolution mechanisms.
9. Frequently Asked Questions
Q1: Can I register a company outside an industrial park in Anhui?
Yes. You can register a company at any commercial address in Anhui. However, registering outside an industrial park means you will not have access to park-specific incentives (rent subsidies, tax rebates, priority approvals). For manufacturing, heavy equipment, or large-scale operations, industrial park location is strongly recommended.
Q2: What is the minimum space requirement in Anhui industrial parks?
Space requirements vary by park. National-level parks generally expect minimum investments of ¥50–100 million in fixed assets. Provincial-level parks may accept investments as low as ¥10–20 million. Some parks offer incubator spaces for smaller foreign tech startups with as little as 50–200 sqm.
Q3: How long does it take to secure a lease and start construction?
In well-managed parks with existing standard factory buildings (标准厂房), you can sign a lease and move in within 2–4 weeks. For custom-built facilities, the process (design approval, construction permit, EIA, construction) typically takes 6–12 months. FTZ parks offer the fastest timelines.
Q4: Are there parks in Anhui specifically for small foreign investors?
Yes. Several provincial-level parks and specialized incubator zones cater to smaller foreign investors. The Hefei High-Tech Zone has an International Incubator (国际孵化器) that offers 50–300 sqm spaces for foreign tech startups at subsidized rates (as low as ¥20–50/sqm/month). Chuzhou and Xuancheng also offer affordable options for smaller operations.
Q5: Can a foreign company buy land in Anhui industrial parks?
Yes. Foreign-invested enterprises (WFOEs and JVs) can purchase land use rights in Chinese industrial parks (land in China is state-owned; what you purchase is a use right of typically 50 years for industrial land). The transfer of land use rights is conducted through a public tender, auction, or listing process on the local land market. Industrial park management can guide you through the process.
Q6: Do Anhui parks provide assistance with employee recruitment and training?
Yes, most national-level parks offer significant HR support including: job fair participation (free or subsidized), recruitment advertising on park platforms, partnership with local universities for internship programs, training subsidies (¥500–¥2,000 per employee trained), and expatriate work permit facilitation.
Q7: How environmentally strict are Anhui industrial parks?
Environmental compliance is taken seriously in Anhui, particularly in parks near the Yangtze River and major lakes (Chaohu Lake). Heavy polluting industries face stringent EIA requirements. However, parks specializing in your industry will have pre-approved EIA frameworks that can streamline the process for standard operations. Always discuss environmental requirements with the park management before signing.
Q8: Can I change parks after establishing operations?
Relocating between parks is possible but costly. It requires deregistration from the original park, potential claw-back of incentives received, negotiating exit terms, and re-registering in the new park. We recommend choosing carefully the first time. If you anticipate growth, reserve expansion space from the beginning or choose a park with clear expansion policies.
This guide was prepared in July 2026. Industrial park policies, incentives, and leadership change over time. Always verify current conditions with the park management and seek professional advice tailored to your specific investment plan. Park profiles reflect publicly available information and may not capture the most recent changes.