Our Expert in China
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Last updated: May 17, 2026
The China foreign investment negative list has undergone its most consequential round of cuts since 2020, removing all remaining manufacturing‑sector restrictions and trimming the national list from 31 to 29 restricted measures effective November 1, 2024. Running in parallel, the revised Foreign Trade Law, promulgated on December 27, 2025 and effective March 1, 2026, introduces strengthened national‑security, export‑control and cross‑border‑data provisions that every foreign investor must now build into transaction documents. Together with draft strategic investment measures circulated in early 2026, these 2026 China FDI reforms create a regulatory environment that is simultaneously more open on market access and more rigorous on compliance, fundamentally changing how deal teams plan foreign investment in China.
Three immediate actions for investors:
China’s current reform wave is not a single event but a coordinated policy package spanning three instruments. Understanding the sequencing is essential for deal‑structuring timelines and compliance planning.
| Date | Instrument | Primary Effect |
|---|---|---|
| November 1, 2024 | 2024 Negative List (NDRC/MOFCOM) | Manufacturing fully opened; national list reduced from 31 to 29 items |
| March 1, 2026 | Revised Foreign Trade Law (NPC) | New export‑control, data‑transfer and national‑security provisions in force |
| Q1–Q2 2026 (draft) | Draft Strategic Investment Measures | Proposed additional review triggers for critical‑tech acquisitions (not yet effective) |
China’s foreign‑investment regulatory architecture rests on three pillars that operate concurrently. The Foreign Investment Law (effective January 1, 2020) is the overarching statute governing market access, national treatment and investor protections. The China foreign investment negative list is the implementing instrument that specifies which sectors remain restricted (requiring a Chinese‑majority JV partner) or prohibited (closed to foreign capital entirely). The Foreign Trade Law governs the cross‑border movement of goods, technology and data, and its 2026 revision significantly tightens national‑security review and export‑control compliance.
Enforcement responsibilities are divided across agencies. NDRC and MOFCOM jointly issue and administer the negative list. MOFCOM manages FDI registration and the national online filing system, while the State Council’s security‑review office (operating under NDRC and MOFCOM) handles national‑security reviews for sensitive transactions. The NPC’s revision of the Foreign Trade Law adds a layer of trade‑compliance obligations enforced through customs authorities and MOFCOM’s trade‑investigation divisions.
For deal teams, the practical implication is clear: market‑access clearance under the negative list does not eliminate the need for separate export‑control, data‑security and competition filings. Each instrument must be checked independently during due diligence.
China uses a negative‑list model: any sector not listed is presumed open to foreign investment on the same terms as domestic investors. This contrasts with a positive‑list approach (used by some jurisdictions), where only specifically enumerated sectors are open. The practical effect is that each reduction in the China negative list automatically expands market access without requiring affirmative government approval for new sectors. Investors should always reference the most current edition of the negative list rather than relying on general sector guidance.
The 2024 edition of the negative list delivered the most significant liberalisation in manufacturing. Every remaining restriction, including printing, Chinese medicine formulas and certain rare‑earth processing requirements, was removed. Industry observers expect the trend to continue, with early indications suggesting that further service‑sector relaxations may follow in 2025–2026 editions.
However, material foreign ownership restrictions in China persist across several sectors. The table below summarises the current position based on the 2024 Negative List.
| Sector | Pre‑2024 Restriction | 2024–2026 Status / Investor Action |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturing (all sub‑sectors) | Restrictions on printing, traditional Chinese medicine formulas, rare‑earth smelting | Fully opened. 100 % foreign ownership permitted. No JV requirement. |
| Telecommunications (basic services) | Foreign equity capped at 49 % | Restricted. JV with Chinese‑majority partner still required for basic telecom services. |
| Value‑added telecom (excluding e‑commerce) | Foreign equity capped at 50 % | Restricted. Ownership ceiling remains; sector‑specific licensing also applies. |
| Air transport / general aviation | Foreign equity capped; Chinese party must hold controlling interest | Restricted. Chinese‑side controlling interest and at least one Chinese representative on the board required. |
| Publishing, broadcasting, film | Prohibited or restricted | Prohibited or restricted. News agencies, radio/TV stations, and certain film production remain closed. |
| Mining (rare earths, radioactive minerals) | Prohibited | Prohibited. Exploration and mining of rare earths and radioactive minerals remain off‑limits. |
| Legal services | Limited to representative offices; no practice of Chinese law | Restricted. Foreign law firms may not practise Chinese law or form partnerships with Chinese firms (pilot programmes in FTZs offer limited exceptions). |
Investors targeting any sector still on the negative list must structure entry through a Sino‑foreign joint venture with a Chinese‑majority partner, unless a specific Free Trade Zone (FTZ) negative list provides a narrower restriction.
With manufacturing and many service sectors now fully open under the China negative list, foreign investors have a broader choice of entry structures. The optimal vehicle depends on the target sector, ownership objectives, regulatory exposure and exit timeline.
Recommended protective deal terms for any structure include:
The filing landscape for foreign investment in China combines a streamlined registration process for unrestricted sectors with more intensive review pathways for sensitive transactions. The following table maps the core obligations by entity type.
| Entity Type | Filing / Approval Required (2026) | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Wholly Foreign‑Owned Enterprise (WFOE) | FDI registration via MOFCOM online system; sector licences where applicable; security review if tech/critical infrastructure | 2–12 weeks (varies by licensing authority) |
| Sino‑Foreign Joint Venture | FDI registration; MOFCOM/State‑level approval if sector is on negative list; security review triggers apply | 4–16 weeks |
| Acquisition of Chinese Target | Merger control filing (Anti‑Monopoly Bureau); FDI registration; security review if strategic assets involved | 6–24 weeks (due diligence + parallel filings) |
Practical filing steps for all entity types:
China’s security review mechanism applies to foreign investments that may affect national security. The following factors typically trigger a review:
Reviews are conducted by a working mechanism under NDRC and MOFCOM. The process is not subject to a fixed statutory timeline, but industry observers report that straightforward cases conclude within 60 to 90 days while complex reviews may extend well beyond that range.
Draft measures circulated in early 2026 propose additional filing requirements for transactions involving critical technologies and key infrastructure. If adopted, these strategic investment measures in China would create a parallel notification obligation, distinct from the existing security‑review mechanism. The likely practical effect would be mandatory pre‑closing filings for foreign acquisitions above specified thresholds in designated technology sectors. Because these measures remain in draft form, investors should monitor official channels and build regulatory‑change contingency provisions into their deal documentation.
The revised Foreign Trade Law, effective March 1, 2026, materially affects how foreign‑invested enterprises manage cross‑border operations. The key changes fall into four categories relevant to deal teams and in‑house counsel.
Contract drafting checklist items under the revised Foreign Trade Law:
Successful foreign investment in China increasingly depends on proactive regulator engagement rather than a file‑and‑wait approach. Practical strategies include the following.
The 2026 China FDI reforms represent a pivotal shift: the China foreign investment negative list is shorter than at any point in its history, opening entire manufacturing and service sub‑sectors to full foreign ownership, while the revised Foreign Trade Law and draft strategic investment measures introduce new compliance obligations that demand careful structuring. Investors who act now, confirming sector eligibility, mapping their filing obligations and embedding trade‑law compliance into their deal documentation, will be positioned to capture newly accessible opportunities while managing the heightened regulatory complexity. Those seeking guidance on structuring, filings or regulator engagement for a specific transaction can find a qualified China FDI lawyer through our directory.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sharon Zhu at Hansheng Law Offices, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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