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onshore vs offshore financing China

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Onshore vs Offshore Financing in China, Practical Guide for Borrowers and Lenders

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 month ago

Every CFO, group treasurer, and in-house counsel with a China-connected borrowing need faces the same threshold question: should the debt be raised onshore (denominated in CNY, booked through domestic banks or the interbank bond market) or offshore (denominated in CNH, USD, or HKD, structured through Hong Kong or another international centre)? The choice of onshore vs offshore financing China determines which regulators you answer to, what security you can grant, how much withholding tax you pay, and how quickly you can enforce if things go wrong.

With the 2025 launch of Northbound Bond Connect repo, HKMA collateral-reuse enhancements, and ongoing NDRC and SAFE cross-border facilitation packages, the trade-offs have shifted materially, making a fresh, dimension-by-dimension analysis essential for any cross-border lending decision in China in 2026.

What Is Onshore and Offshore Financing in China?

Onshore financing refers to debt raised within mainland China, denominated in CNY, and governed by PRC law. The borrower is typically a PRC-incorporated entity, a wholly foreign-owned enterprise (WFOE), joint venture, state-owned enterprise (SOE), or domestic private company. Lenders include PRC-licensed commercial banks, policy banks, and institutional investors participating through the China Interbank Bond Market (CIBM) or exchange-traded bond markets. Foreign institutional investors can access onshore instruments through Bond Connect, QFII/RQFII, and CIBM Direct channels.

Offshore financing refers to debt raised outside mainland China, typically booked in Hong Kong, Singapore, London, or New York. Instruments are denominated in CNH (offshore RMB), USD, HKD, or EUR. Borrowers are usually offshore SPVs, overseas holding companies, or non-PRC subsidiaries of Chinese groups. Lenders are international banks, bond investors, and syndicate participants. Offshore deals are commonly governed by English or New York law, with arbitration or foreign court jurisdiction clauses.

The distinction matters because each route triggers a different regulatory regime, tax treatment, security package, and enforcement pathway. The sections below break the decision into its component dimensions.

Option A: Onshore Financing, What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

Typical onshore instruments

  • Domestic bank loans. CNY-denominated term loans and revolving credit facilities from PRC commercial banks, with pricing typically benchmarked to the Loan Prime Rate (LPR).
  • Interbank market bonds. Medium-term notes (MTNs) and commercial paper issued on the CIBM, regulated by the PBoC and NAFMII.
  • Exchange-traded bonds. Corporate bonds and enterprise bonds listed on the Shanghai or Shenzhen stock exchanges, supervised by the CSRC.
  • Panda bonds. CNY-denominated bonds issued by a foreign entity within the PRC onshore market, an increasingly used hybrid route.

Who can borrow

Onshore financing China is available primarily to entities incorporated in the PRC. Foreign-invested enterprises (WFOEs, joint ventures) can borrow from domestic banks subject to their registered total investment and debt-to-equity ratios, or via the SAFE macro-prudential cross-border financing framework. Offshore parent companies do not borrow directly onshore; instead, they channel funding through their PRC subsidiaries. SOEs and large private-sector issuers with domestic credit ratings access the bond markets at competitive yields.

Practical legal considerations

Onshore financing offers direct access to security over PRC-situs assets, real estate mortgages, pledges over bank accounts, receivables, and equity interests, all of which require registration with designated PRC authorities to be perfected. Enforcement runs through PRC courts, which can move quickly to seize registered collateral. The trade-off: onshore borrowers must navigate NDRC registration requirements for medium- and long-term foreign debt, comply with SAFE foreign-exchange filing obligations, and manage domestic reporting to tax authorities. For borrowers with substantial onshore operations and assets, these compliance burdens are justified by the stronger enforceability and often lower funding cost.

Option B: Offshore Financing, What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

Typical offshore instruments

  • Offshore syndicated loans. USD- or CNH-denominated facilities arranged by international banks, commonly governed by LMA-standard English-law documentation.
  • Eurobonds and offshore notes. Reg S or Reg S/144A offerings listed in Hong Kong, Singapore, or London, accessing the global investor base.
  • CNH bilateral and club loans. Smaller facilities in offshore RMB extended by Hong Kong or international banks.
  • Intercompany loans. Offshore parent-to-onshore subsidiary lending, subject to SAFE cross-border debt registration and macro-prudential limits.

Who can lend and borrow

Offshore financing China suits overseas holding companies, offshore SPVs established for acquisition or project finance, and non-PRC entities that need China-related credit exposure without entering the domestic regulatory perimeter. International banks, institutional bondholders, and private-credit funds are the typical lenders. Purely offshore structures avoid most NDRC registration requirements, though where loan proceeds are remitted into the PRC or where an onshore entity provides a guarantee, SAFE and NDRC filings can still be triggered.

Practical legal considerations

Offshore deals offer flexibility on governing law, English or New York law is standard, and dispute resolution, with HKIAC, SIAC, or LCIA arbitration clauses providing predictable outcomes for international lenders. The principal weakness is security: offshore lenders cannot directly hold or register mortgages over onshore PRC assets. Instead, they rely on complex structures, pledges over the equity of offshore holding companies, offshore account charges, keepwell deeds, or equity interest pledges in onshore subsidiaries (which themselves require SAFE registration). Enforcement of foreign arbitral awards in the PRC is possible under the New York Convention, but recognition proceedings add time and uncertainty. Cross-border lending into China thus demands careful structuring to bridge the gap between offshore documentation and onshore asset recovery.

Onshore vs Offshore Financing China, Side-by-Side Comparison

Dimension Onshore Financing (Option A) Offshore Financing (Option B)
Typical instruments Domestic bank loans, interbank bonds (MTNs, CP), exchange bonds, Panda bonds Offshore syndicated loans, Eurobonds, USD/HKD/CNH loans, offshore notes
Currency / FX CNY (onshore), full domestic liquidity; limited CNH convertibility CNH, USD, HKD, EUR, multi-currency investor base
Eligibility / Borrower PRC-incorporated entities; domestic issuer registration required Offshore SPVs, overseas subsidiaries, non-resident issuers
Regulatory approvals NDRC registration for medium/long-term foreign debt; SAFE FX filings; CSRC/NAFMII/exchange approvals for bonds Fewer onshore approvals for purely offshore borrowings; use of proceeds in PRC may trigger NDRC/SAFE filings
Cost (pricing) Often lower for strong onshore credits; pricing tracks LPR and domestic bond yields Typically higher yields reflecting China credit spread and currency premium
Tax & withholding Interest generally subject to withholding tax (commonly 10%, subject to treaty); bond-interest exemptions have applied through 2025, verify current SAT status Withholding exposure depends on whether interest is China-sourced; treaty relief varies by jurisdiction
Security & collateral Direct registration of mortgages, pledges over bank accounts, receivables, equity, strong priority Complex offshore structures required; limited direct access to onshore assets
Enforceability PRC courts enforce registered security directly; faster asset seizure Foreign judgments/awards require recognition in PRC; enforcement can be slower
Dispute resolution PRC law / PRC courts, preferred for onshore asset enforcement English/NY law + international arbitration, preferred for international lender predictability
Timing / execution Onshore approvals may slow execution; domestic placement can be fast for rated issuers Faster market issuance offshore; FX remittance into PRC still requires SAFE filings
Reporting & compliance Ongoing SAFE/NDRC reporting, domestic tax filings, regulatory updates Offshore regulatory reporting; additional PRC filings only if proceeds enter mainland

The table reveals two governing trade-offs. First, security and enforcement favour onshore structures: lenders who need collateral over PRC-situs assets should start with onshore financing. Second, flexibility and speed favour offshore structures: borrowers targeting an international investor base, English-law documentation, and faster execution will gravitate offshore, accepting that security over mainland assets will require additional structuring layers.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis: Onshore vs Offshore Financing China

Tax and withholding

Tax treatment is often the dimension that swings the cost comparison most dramatically. China-sourced interest paid to a non-resident lender is generally subject to both enterprise income tax (withheld at source) and, in many cases, VAT. The standard withholding rate is 10% of gross interest, though this may be reduced under an applicable double tax treaty. Certain bond-interest exemptions for foreign institutional investors holding onshore bonds were in force through 2025; whether these have been extended for 2026 must be confirmed against the latest SAT and MOF circulars before closing any deal.

Tax Item Onshore Financing Offshore Financing
Withholding tax on interest (non-resident) Generally 10% (subject to treaty reduction); verify current SAT guidance Applies if interest is China-sourced (paid by onshore entity or guaranteed by one); treaty relief varies
VAT / local taxes Bond-interest exemptions applied through 2025 for certain foreign holders, confirm 2026 status with tax counsel VAT treatment depends on place of provision and instrument; cross-border flows require case-by-case analysis
Indicative yield (market-dependent) Onshore high-grade bond yields in the 2–4% range (varies by credit and maturity; see JP Morgan, ASIFMA market reports) Offshore yields for comparable China credit may carry a 50–200 bps premium reflecting currency and credit spread
Compliance costs Domestic tax registration, agent withholding obligations, ongoing bookkeeping Tax structuring fees, treaty documentation, additional compliance if funds move onshore

Practical point: model the all-in cost of each route including withholding, VAT, and hedging costs before committing. A seemingly cheaper onshore yield can be eroded by withholding that is not treaty-reduced; an offshore issuance can look expensive until CNH hedging costs are factored in.

Cost and market access

Pricing is driven by five factors: domestic liquidity conditions (PBoC monetary policy and interbank liquidity), credit quality of the issuer, currency denomination, investor-base depth, and repo market access. Since the launch of the Northbound Bond Connect repo in February 2025, offshore investors holding onshore bonds can now use them as collateral in offshore repo transactions. Industry observers expect this to compress onshore yields further by deepening foreign demand for CIBM-listed bonds.

For a practical illustration: on a three-year CNY 500 million borrowing, a 100 bps difference between an onshore and an offshore rate translates to approximately CNY 5 million per year in additional interest cost. Add withholding tax on top (if the onshore option routes interest to a non-resident parent), and the gap narrows or reverses. The lesson: run the numbers in both currencies, net of tax and hedging, before choosing.

Regulatory burden and approvals, NDRC, SAFE, CSRC

The regulatory approval pathway is the single most common reason borrowers engage counsel early. The key filing obligations break down as follows:

  • NDRC foreign debt registration. Under the NDRC measures effective 10 February 2023, PRC enterprises borrowing medium- and long-term foreign debt (original maturity exceeding one year) must register with the NDRC before drawdown. Registration requires submission of the borrower’s board resolution, use-of-proceeds statement, financial statements, and loan documentation summary. Processing typically takes several weeks; failure to register can render the borrowing non-compliant and trigger penalties.
  • SAFE filings. Cross-border debt must be registered with SAFE under the applicable macro-prudential framework. SAFE sets maximum outstanding cross-border borrowing limits tied to the borrower’s net assets or total investment. SAFE has issued facilitation packages in 2024–2025 to streamline reporting for qualifying entities.
  • CSRC / NAFMII / exchange approvals. Onshore bond issuance requires approval or registration with the relevant authority depending on the market: NAFMII for interbank bonds, CSRC for exchange-listed corporate bonds.
  • Offshore structures. Purely offshore borrowings generally bypass NDRC registration, unless the proceeds are remitted into the PRC, or an onshore entity provides a guarantee or keepwell deed that the NDRC may view as creating a foreign debt obligation.

Security, collateral, and enforceability

This is where onshore and offshore financing diverge most sharply.

  • Onshore lenders can take and register mortgages over PRC real estate (at the local housing authority), pledges over bank accounts (at the depositary bank), pledges over receivables (at the PBoC Credit Reference Centre), and equity pledges (at the relevant AIC/AMR). Registration creates priority and enables enforcement through PRC courts, including attachment and auction of collateral.
  • Offshore lenders cannot directly register security over onshore assets. They rely instead on structural security: pledges over the equity of offshore holding companies, charges over offshore accounts, and contractual arrangements (keepwell deeds, equity interest purchase undertakings). These provide economic comfort but carry enforcement risk, a keepwell deed, for example, is not a guarantee under PRC law and may not be directly enforceable against onshore assets.

The 2025 Bond Connect repo enhancements enable offshore investors to use onshore bonds as collateral for offshore repo, a form of collateral reuse facilitated by HKMA’s Central Moneymarkets Unit (CMU). This is not the same as granting a traditional pledge over the bonds, it is a repo transaction, but it significantly improves liquidity and funding efficiency for holders of onshore bonds.

Governing law, dispute resolution, and practical enforcement

The governing-law decision is not a formality, it determines which courts can hear disputes and which enforcement tools are available.

  • PRC law and PRC courts: Essential when onshore security is part of the deal. Only PRC courts can order attachment and foreclosure of PRC-registered collateral. Speed advantage for enforcement over local assets.
  • English or New York law with international arbitration: Preferred by international lenders for doctrinal predictability, developed case law on finance documents, and neutral dispute resolution. Arbitral awards rendered under the New York Convention are enforceable in the PRC through recognition proceedings in the relevant Intermediate People’s Court, though the process adds months and occasionally encounters practical obstacles.

Recommended approach: use a split-law structure where the security documents over onshore assets are governed by PRC law (for enforceability), while the facility agreement or bond indenture is governed by English or New York law (for lender comfort). This is standard practice in cross-border lending into China and should be considered for any transaction involving both onshore collateral and an international lender base.

What Changes in 2026, Policy Reforms That Shift the Onshore vs Offshore Calculus

Three reform streams since 2024 have materially altered the onshore vs offshore financing China decision:

  • Northbound Bond Connect repo and collateral reuse. Launched on 10 February 2025 following a joint announcement by the HKMA and PBoC, the Northbound repo arrangement allows offshore investors to enter into repo transactions using onshore RMB bonds held in CMU accounts. In July 2025, the HKMA announced further enhancements including expanded eligible collateral and multi-currency settlement. The likely practical effect: offshore holders of onshore bonds now have a significantly improved liquidity tool, which increases the attractiveness of onshore bond investment and can tighten onshore credit spreads.
  • NDRC foreign debt registration clarifications. Since the revised NDRC measures took effect on 10 February 2023, the NDRC has issued ongoing Q&A guidance (including the July 2024 FAQs) clarifying registration scope, positive-list sectors, and use-of-proceeds restrictions. Early indications suggest that registration processing has become more predictable for qualifying borrowers, though the requirement itself has not been relaxed.
  • SAFE cross-border facilitation packages. Through 2024 and 2025, SAFE has issued successive measures to streamline FX registration and reporting for cross-border financing. These include simplified documentation for qualifying FIEs and expanded macro-prudential borrowing limits. Practitioners should check the latest SAFE circulars for any parameter changes applicable to their specific transaction size and entity type.

For borrowers, these reforms mean that the cost-access-liquidity argument for onshore bonds has strengthened, particularly for issuers with strong domestic credit ratings. For offshore lenders, the repo enhancements reduce the liquidity penalty of holding onshore instruments, making a hybrid approach (onshore issuance with offshore repo funding) increasingly viable.

Decision Framework: When to Use Onshore vs Offshore Financing

If your priority is… Choose
Lower all-in borrowing cost, and borrower is an onshore PRC entity with domestic assets available as collateral Onshore financing
Access to a global investor base, English-law documentation, and structuring outside PRC jurisdiction Offshore financing
Need to grant enforceable, registered security over PRC real estate, bank accounts, or receivables Onshore financing, and engage local counsel immediately for registration
Speed to market and ability to use international arbitration for dispute resolution Offshore financing
Want to use onshore bonds as collateral in offshore repo via Bond Connect Hybrid approach, onshore bond issuance with Northbound repo
Tax treaty relief for non-resident creditors is critical and source characterisation is uncertain Model both options; obtain a tax ruling where possible; engage tax counsel
Borrower is an offshore SPV with no PRC-incorporated subsidiary Offshore financing, onshore route is not available without a PRC entity
NDRC and SAFE compliance are already familiar and borrower has existing domestic banking relationships Onshore financing, leverage existing regulatory track record

Choose onshore when:

  • The borrower is a PRC-incorporated entity with domestic assets to pledge.
  • Lower onshore yields justify the regulatory compliance cost.
  • Enforcement over PRC-situs collateral is a non-negotiable lender requirement.
  • The borrower already holds NDRC/SAFE registrations from prior transactions.

Choose offshore when:

  • The borrower is an offshore holding company or SPV without a direct PRC subsidiary.
  • International lenders require English-law documentation and international arbitration.
  • Speed to market outweighs the cost premium.
  • The borrower needs multi-currency flexibility (USD, HKD, EUR).
  • Security over onshore assets is not available or not required.

When (and Why) to Engage a Lawyer for This Decision

The onshore vs offshore financing China decision moves from a desk exercise to a matter requiring professional legal advice when any of the following triggers are present:

  • NDRC foreign debt registration is required. Medium- and long-term external borrowings by PRC entities require NDRC registration before drawdown. Counsel is needed to prepare and file the registration application, draft the use-of-proceeds statement, and manage regulatory dialogue.
  • Security over onshore PRC assets is part of the deal. Registering mortgages, pledges, and equity interests requires PRC-qualified counsel who can navigate local registration authorities and ensure priority is perfected.
  • Withholding tax structuring or treaty reliance is material. Reducing withholding tax from the statutory rate to a treaty rate requires proper documentation, beneficial-ownership analysis, and potentially an advance ruling from the tax authority.
  • The governing-law or dispute-resolution clause involves enforcement risk. Any financing where onshore assets must be reached through offshore documentation needs a split-law structure designed by counsel experienced in both PRC and international finance law.
  • SAFE filings or macro-prudential limit calculations are required. Getting the FX registration wrong can delay drawdown indefinitely or create compliance exposure for the borrower’s PRC subsidiary.

Before the first consultation, prepare: the group corporate structure chart, latest audited financials of the borrowing entity, a summary term sheet for the proposed financing, details of any existing NDRC/SAFE registrations, and a list of PRC-situs assets available for security.

Conclusion: Making the Onshore vs Offshore Financing China Decision

The choice between onshore and offshore financing in China is not a binary cost calculation, it is a multi-dimensional decision driven by entity structure, collateral location, regulatory tolerance, tax position, and lender requirements. For PRC-incorporated borrowers with domestic assets and existing regulatory relationships, onshore financing delivers lower yields and stronger enforceability. For offshore SPVs, international syndications, and transactions requiring English-law predictability, offshore financing remains the natural route. The 2025 Bond Connect repo and SAFE facilitation reforms have created a viable hybrid middle ground that sophisticated borrowers and lenders should evaluate.

Whichever route you choose, the decision should be made with qualified counsel who can navigate the NDRC, SAFE, and tax dimensions that determine whether your chosen structure actually works in practice. Find a Banking & Finance lawyer in China to begin that assessment.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Martin Hu at MHP Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), Rules and Regulations
  2. National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), Foreign Debt Registration FAQs
  3. Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), Northbound Bond Connect Repo Announcement (January 2025)
  4. Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA), Bond Connect Repo Enhancements (July 2025)
  5. Deloitte, China Tax Highlights 2025
  6. South China Morning Post, China to Allow Foreign Investors to Take Onshore Bonds Offshore
  7. Reed Smith, New Guidelines for Foreign Debts of Chinese Enterprises
  8. Bond Connect, Cross-Boundary Bond Repo Trading and Clearing Mechanism
  9. JP Morgan Asset Management, China Onshore and Offshore Bond Market Opportunities

FAQs

What is the difference between onshore and offshore financing in China?
Onshore financing is debt raised within mainland China, denominated in CNY, governed by PRC law, and subject to domestic regulatory approvals (NDRC, SAFE, CSRC). Offshore financing is debt raised outside mainland China, typically in Hong Kong, denominated in CNH, USD, or HKD, governed by English or New York law, and subject to the regulatory framework of the offshore jurisdiction.
The answer is situational. Onshore yields for high-grade credits have generally been lower than comparable offshore yields, which carry a currency and credit-spread premium. However, after accounting for withholding tax, VAT, FX hedging costs, and regulatory compliance expenses, the all-in cost differential may narrow or reverse. Market reports from JP Morgan and ASIFMA provide useful benchmark comparisons, but borrowers must model both routes using current rates and their specific tax position.
Yes. The Northbound Bond Connect repo arrangement, launched on 10 February 2025 and enhanced by the HKMA in July 2025, allows offshore investors to use onshore RMB bonds as collateral for offshore repo transactions. This effectively enables foreign holders to fund their onshore bond positions through offshore channels, improving liquidity without requiring the bonds to leave the onshore custody system.
Choose onshore when the borrower is a PRC entity, onshore assets are available as collateral, the borrower has or can obtain NDRC/SAFE registrations, and lower domestic yields justify the compliance cost. Choose offshore when the borrower is an offshore SPV, international lenders require English-law documentation, speed and multi-currency flexibility are priorities, or security over mainland assets is not required.
Engage counsel when NDRC registration is required, when security must be registered over PRC assets, when withholding tax structuring or treaty-rate applications are material, when a split governing-law structure is needed, or when SAFE FX filings are triggered. Any of these situations involves regulatory risk that justifies early legal involvement.
Refinancing from offshore to onshore is generally possible but triggers fresh NDRC registration, SAFE FX filings, and potential tax consequences (including deemed disposal or assignment issues). The transition is not seamless, plan for a parallel documentation process and allow several months for regulatory approvals. Consult both PRC and offshore counsel before committing to a restructure.
If an offshore lender discovers that its keepwell deed or offshore equity pledge does not give effective recourse to onshore assets, the practical consequences can be severe: the lender may be unable to enforce in the PRC without first obtaining a New York Convention recognition order, and even then, execution against specific mainland assets may require a separate PRC court process. Mitigate this risk by insisting on PRC-law security documents over onshore collateral, registered at the appropriate authority, from the outset.
China has signed tax treaties with over 100 jurisdictions, many of which reduce the withholding tax on interest from the statutory rate to a lower treaty rate. The applicable rate depends on the treaty, the beneficial-ownership analysis, and the type of instrument. Treaty relief is not automatic, the creditor must apply with supporting documentation, and the PRC tax authority must confirm eligibility. Engage tax counsel to assess treaty availability before structuring the financing.

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Onshore vs Offshore Financing in China, Practical Guide for Borrowers and Lenders

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