How to Register a Company in Anhui: 2026 Guide for Foreign Firms
Table of Contents
- Overview of Company Registration in Anhui
- Choosing the Right Legal Form
- Registered Capital and Contribution Requirements
- Required Documents and Notarization
- Step-by-Step Registration Process
- Expected Timeline and Costs
- Anhui-Specific Incentives for Foreign Investors
- Post-Registration Compliance
- Frequently Asked Questions
1. Overview of Company Registration in Anhui
Anhui Province, strategically positioned in the Yangtze River Delta region, has emerged as one of China’s most attractive destinations for foreign direct investment. In 2026, Anhui continues to streamline its company registration procedures through digital reform initiatives, making it easier than ever for foreign firms to establish a legal presence in the province.
The company registration process in Anhui follows China’s national framework governed by the Company Law of the People’s Republic of China, the Foreign Investment Law (effective since 2020), and provincial implementation regulations. Under the current system, most foreign-invested enterprises (FIEs) benefit from national treatment — meaning they enjoy the same registration procedures as domestic companies, with additional documentation requirements to verify the foreign investment nature of the entity.
Anhui has been at the forefront of administrative simplification. Through the “One-Stop Service” initiative (yi zhan shi fuwu), the province has consolidated company registration, tax registration, social security registration, and customs registration into a single digital process. In Hefei, Wuhu, and other major cities, the entire registration process can be completed through the Anhui Government Service Network (安徽政务服务网) without requiring physical presence at government offices.
2. Choosing the Right Legal Form
Foreign investors in Anhui can choose from several legal forms depending on their business objectives, liability considerations, and operational scope. The most common structures are:
| Legal Form | Min. Capital | Liability | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise (WFOE) | No statutory minimum | Limited liability | Manufacturing, trading, R&D centers |
| Joint Venture (JV) | No statutory minimum | Limited liability | Regulated industries, local partnerships |
| Representative Office (RO) | No capital required | Parent company liable | Market research, liaison activities |
| Foreign-Invested Limited Partnership | No statutory minimum | GP: unlimited; LP: limited | Private equity, venture capital |
| Foreign-Invested Company Limited by Shares | RMB 5 million | Limited liability | Larger manufacturing, IPO preparation |
WFOE remains the most popular choice for foreign investors in Anhui, accounting for over 80% of new FIE registrations in 2025-2026. It offers full management control, operational flexibility, and the ability to repatriate profits. Joint ventures are primarily used in industries where local partnership is compulsory or strategically advantageous, such as certain value-added telecommunications services.
Representative offices are restricted to non-profit-making activities and cannot issue invoices or sign contracts directly. They are suitable only for market exploration and liaison purposes.
3. Registered Capital and Contribution Requirements
China’s 2014 Company Law amendments eliminated the statutory minimum registered capital requirement for most company types, including WFOEs. There is no minimum registered capital for limited liability companies established by foreign investors in Anhui, except in specific regulated industries that maintain their own capital requirements.
However, sufficient registered capital must be declared based on the nature and scale of the proposed business operations. The Anhui Market Supervision Bureau evaluates whether the declared capital is reasonable relative to the business scope. Excessively low capital for a high-investment business may result in registration rejection.
Capital Contribution Methods
- Cash (RMB): Most common. Foreign currency can be converted to RMB after registration through the company’s capital account.
- Cash (Foreign Currency): Permitted. Funds must be remitted from overseas and converted through designated banks.
- In-Kind Contributions: Machinery, equipment, intellectual property, or land use rights. Must be valued by a qualified Chinese appraisal firm.
- Technology/Know-How: Permitted with valuation by a recognized third-party appraiser. Maximum percentage is no longer restricted under current law.
The contribution period is generally specified in the company’s articles of association. While the current Company Law does not mandate a fixed deadline, most Anhui-based FIEs adopt a 5-10 year contribution schedule. The Anhui authorities expect at least 20-30% of the registered capital to be contributed within the first year of registration.
4. Required Documents and Notarization
Foreign investors must prepare and submit the following documents for company registration in Anhui:
| Document | Requirements | Notarization Needed |
|---|---|---|
| Application for Registration | Standard form from AMR system | No |
| Articles of Association | Chinese language, notarized | Yes (for authenticity) |
| Feasibility Study Report | Business plan, market analysis | No |
| Investor Identity Documents | Certificate of Incorporation (parent) | Yes, by Chinese embassy/consulate |
| Bank Reference Letter | From parent company’s bank | Yes |
| Lease Agreement / Property Certificate | Registered business address in Anhui | No (but must be registered) |
| Legal Representative ID | Passport copy, appointment letter | Passport needs certified copy |
| Board of Directors Resolution | Appointing legal rep, supervisor | Yes |
Notarization and Legalization: All foreign-issued documents must be notarized in the country of origin and then legalized by the Chinese embassy or consulate in that country. China acceded to the Hague Apostille Convention in November 2023, which simplified the process for countries that are also signatories. For companies from Hague Convention member states, an apostille from the relevant authority replaces the traditional embassy legalization process, reducing both time and cost.
Translation Requirements: All documents not in Chinese must be accompanied by a certified Chinese translation. The translation must be done by a registered translation company in China or by a notarized translator. Anhui accepts translations from any company with a valid business license covering translation services.
5. Step-by-Step Registration Process
Phase 1: Pre-Registration (Week 1-2)
- Company Name Pre-Approval: Submit 3-5 proposed company names (Chinese only, with English optional) through the Anhui AMR online system. Name format: [City] + [Brand] + [Industry] + “Co., Ltd.” Rejection rate is approximately 30% for duplicate or similar names. Names containing “China” or “Group” require additional approval at the national level.
- Prepare and Notarize Documents: Engage a Chinese law firm to draft the Articles of Association and other corporate documents. Begin the notarization and apostille process for foreign documents.
- Register Business Address: Secure a lease agreement or property purchase contract for your registered office in Anhui. Virtual offices are generally not accepted for WFOE registration; a physical office space is required.
Phase 2: Online Submission (Week 3)
- Submit Application: Log into the Anhui Government Service Network (zwdt.ah.gov.cn), complete the FIE registration application, and upload all scanned documents. The system performs an automated completeness check before forwarding to human review.
- Pay Registration Fees: The standard registration fee is RMB 0 (free of charge). However, there may be nominal charges for name pre-approval (RMB 50) and certificate printing (RMB 10-20).
Phase 3: Review and Approval (Week 3-4)
- AMR Review: The Anhui Administration for Market Regulation reviews the application, typically within 3-5 working days. The authority may request supplementary documents or clarifications, which must be submitted within 15 days.
- Business License Issuance: Upon approval, the “Unified Social Credit Code” business license is issued electronically and by physical mail. This single license replaces the previous five separate licenses (business, tax, organ code, statistics, and social security).
Phase 4: Post-Registration Setup (Week 4-8)
- Company Seal Carving: Official company seals (company seal, financial seal, legal representative seal, invoice seal, and contract seal) must be carved at a公安-recognized seal carver. Cost: approximately RMB 200-500 per seal.
- Bank Account Opening: Open a basic deposit account at a Chinese bank. Foreign-invested enterprises need both a RMB basic account and a foreign currency capital account. Major banks in Anhui with strong FIE experience include Bank of China, HSBC, Standard Chartered, and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China.
- Tax Registration: Register with the Anhui Tax Service Bureau for corporate income tax, VAT, and other applicable taxes. The Unified Social Credit Code is now used as the tax registration number.
- Customs Registration: If the business involves import/export activities, register with Hefei Customs District.
- Foreign Exchange Registration: Register with the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) Anhui branch for capital account management and profit repatriation.
6. Expected Timeline and Costs
| Phase | Duration | Estimated Cost (RMB) |
|---|---|---|
| Name Pre-Approval | 1-3 working days | 0-50 |
| Document Preparation & Notarization | 1-3 weeks | 3,000-15,000 |
| Business License Application | 3-5 working days | 0 |
| Company Seal Carving | 1-2 working days | 1,000-2,500 |
| Bank Account Opening | 3-7 working days | 0-500 |
| Tax Registration | 1-3 working days | 0 |
| Customs Registration (if applicable) | 3-5 working days | 0 |
| Foreign Exchange Registration | 5-10 working days | 0 |
| Total (estimated) | 3-6 weeks | 4,000-18,000 |
Professional service fees are additional. Engaging a local law firm or corporate service provider typically costs RMB 15,000-40,000 for full registration support, including document drafting, notarization assistance, and government liaison.
7. Anhui-Specific Incentives for Foreign Investors
Anhui Province offers a range of incentives specifically designed to attract foreign investment. These complement the national-level incentives available to all FIEs in China:
- Registered Capital Subsidies: Foreign enterprises investing over USD 10 million in registered capital may receive a one-time subsidy of 1-2% of the registered capital, capped at RMB 5 million.
- Rent Subsidies: Newly registered FIEs in designated industrial parks may qualify for rent exemptions for the first 2-3 years, followed by subsidized rent for an additional 2 years.
- Tax Rebates: FIE headquarters established in Anhui can benefit from corporate income tax rebates for reinvested profits (up to 40% of the reinvested amount).
- R&D Incentives: Foreign-invested R&D centers qualify for additional deductions on R&D expenses (175-200% of qualifying expenses).
- Talent Subsidies: Subsidies for foreign expert hiring, housing allowances, and relocation support for senior management.
- Streamlined Approvals: FIEs in priority industries (new energy, AI, semiconductors, biomedicine, new materials) benefit from fast-track registration and dedicated service windows.
For a detailed breakdown of available incentives by industry and investment amount, refer to the Anhui Investment Promotion Bureau’s 2026 Foreign Investment Guide or consult with the Anhui Foreign Investment Service Center (电话: 0551-62601188).
8. Post-Registration Compliance
After successful company registration, foreign-invested enterprises in Anhui must maintain ongoing compliance with the following requirements:
- Annual Reporting: Submit an annual report to the Market Supervision Bureau between January 1 and June 30 each year, covering financial data, changes in registered information, and business activities.
- Tax Filings: Monthly/quarterly filings for VAT, corporate income tax, stamp duty, and other applicable taxes. Anhui uses the national Golden Tax System for electronic filing.
- Foreign Investment Information Report: FIEs must submit quarterly and annual reports through the Ministry of Commerce’s foreign investment reporting system.
- Capital Account Supervision: All capital contributions and profit repatriations must be reported to SAFE Anhui and documented through designated banks.
- Labor and Social Security: Register employees with the Anhui Social Security Bureau, contribute to pension, medical, unemployment, work injury, and maternity insurance funds on behalf of employees.
- Annual Audit: FIEs must engage a qualified Chinese CPA firm for annual statutory audit and submit the audit report to the AMR.
9. Frequently Asked Questions
Can a foreign individual register a company in Anhui?
Yes. Foreign individuals can register a WFOE or serve as shareholders in a foreign-invested enterprise in Anhui. The same documentation requirements apply, with the individual’s passport and bank reference letter replacing the parent company’s corporate documents.
Is a physical office address mandatory in Anhui?
Yes. A physical office address in Anhui is required for WFOE registration. Virtual offices and “mailbox companies” are generally not accepted. However, some industrial parks and incubators offer shared office spaces suitable for FIE registration. Certain FTZ zones in Anhui have recently piloted “address registration commitments” that may allow more flexibility.
Can I change the registered address after incorporation?
Yes. A change of registered address within Anhui requires filing with the local AMR office. Moving between cities within Anhui is possible but requires registration with the new city’s AMR. Moving to a different province requires new registration procedures.
What is the corporate income tax rate for FIEs in Anhui?
The standard corporate income tax rate is 25%. However, qualifying foreign-invested enterprises — including those in encouraged industries, high-tech enterprises, and certain industrial parks — can benefit from reduced rates of 15% (for encouraged industries with 70%+ qualifying revenue) and various tax holidays.
Do I need a local Chinese partner?
For most industries, no. The Foreign Investment Law grants national treatment to foreign investors, allowing 100% foreign ownership in all industries not on the Negative List. Only certain restricted sectors (e.g., some value-added telecom services, certain education and media businesses) require a joint venture structure with a Chinese partner.
Can I repatriate profits from my Anhui company?
Yes. Profits can be repatriated after payment of corporate income tax (25% standard, lower for qualifying enterprises), statutory reserve contributions (10% of after-tax profit until reserves reach 50% of registered capital), and completion of the annual audit. Repatriation requires documentary evidence including the audit report, tax payment certificates, and board resolution, processed through the designated bank.