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proof of claim deadline

Proof of Claim Deadline in China: Bar Dates, Creditor Notice, Late‑claim Relief & Voting Rights

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Missing the proof of claim deadline in a Chinese bankruptcy case can permanently extinguish a creditor’s right to share in distributions, vote on a reorganisation plan, or challenge the treatment of competing claims. Under the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law of the People’s Republic of China (EBL), the administrator sets a bar date, typically between 30 and 120 days after the public notice of case acceptance, and every known and unknown creditor must file within that window. This guide walks B2B creditors, bondholders, trade suppliers, and their insolvency counsel through the exact timelines, notice mechanics, step-by-step filing requirements, late-claim remedies, and voting-rights implications that govern proof-of-claim procedure in China today.

If you are a creditor, do these three things now:

  1. Verify that you have received a formal notice (written or electronic) from the court-appointed administrator and confirm the exact bar date.
  2. Preserve every piece of evidence, contracts, invoices, delivery receipts, correspondence, and notice records.
  3. Prepare and submit your proof of claim, with certified Chinese translations where required, well before the stated creditor claim deadline.

What Is a Proof of Claim Deadline in China?

A proof of claim deadline, commonly called the “bar date”, is the final date by which a creditor must formally declare its claim to the bankruptcy administrator. In PRC practice, the bar date is not a single statutory default; instead, the court sets it in its acceptance ruling and the administrator publishes it in the claim-declaration notice. The legal foundation sits in Article 45 of the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law, which requires the People’s Court to determine the deadline for creditor claim declarations at the time the case is accepted. Article 48 of the EBL then prescribes what each declaration must contain: the amount, supporting evidence, and whether the claim is secured.

The practical effect is that the bar date can differ from case to case. Industry observers note that most intermediate People’s Courts set the window at 30 to 60 days after the administrator’s notice for known creditors, while the statutory ceiling under Article 45 allows up to 30 days for known creditors and between 30 and 90 days for unknown creditors (counted from the date of public announcement). Understanding where your case falls on this spectrum, and acting early, is the single most important step a creditor can take.

Statutory Anchor, Enterprise Bankruptcy Law, Article 48

Article 48 of the EBL stipulates that a creditor declaring a claim shall provide written proof of the claim and its amount, as well as any evidence of security interests. When the claim is an employee wage or benefit claim, the administrator is required to review it without a separate filing requirement. For all other creditors, the obligation to file rests squarely on the claimant. Failure to file before the bar date carries consequences addressed below, but the statute does leave a narrow path for late-claim relief under Article 56.

Typical Timelines and Who Must File

Timing depends on the type of insolvency proceeding. China’s EBL encompasses three main procedures, reorganisation (chongzheng), liquidation (pochan qingsuan), and compromise/conciliation (hejie), each of which may trigger a different bar-date window in practice. The table below summarises the creditor claim deadline China creditors typically face.

Procedure Type Bar Date Trigger Typical Filing Window (Practice Note)
Reorganisation (PRC) Court acceptance ruling + administrator’s written notice Usually 30–60 days after official notice; local practice varies, verify the court notice in every case.
Liquidation (formal) Liquidator’s notice / court order Typically 30–60 days; some local courts (e.g., Shenzhen Intermediate Court) have set 30-day windows.
Compromise / conciliation Administrator or court call for claims Often 15–45 days following publication, check the case-specific notice carefully.

Every entity that holds a pre-petition claim must file, banks, bondholders, trade creditors, service providers, and governmental units alike. Secured creditors must declare their security interest alongside the underlying claim; failing to do so risks having the security treated as unregistered during distribution.

Governmental Units and Special Deadlines

Tax authorities and social-insurance agencies are also bound by the proof of claim deadline, although in practice administrators proactively verify outstanding tax and social-insurance obligations from public records. Creditors should not assume that a governmental unit’s claim has been filed on their behalf. Where tax credits or refunds offset amounts owed, filing a claim preserves the creditor’s right to assert the net position.

How to Declare Creditor Claims in China, Step-by-Step Checklist

The process to declare creditor claims in China is straightforward in concept but demanding in detail. The following checklist covers what administrators expect at a minimum, drawn from the requirements of Enterprise Bankruptcy Law China Article 48 and prevailing court practice.

  1. Prepare the claim declaration form. Use the template issued by the administrator (often available on the court’s electronic filing portal). If no template is provided, draft a written statement that includes the creditor’s legal name, registered address, contact person, claim amount, and legal basis.
  2. Attach supporting evidence. This typically includes the original or certified copy of contracts, purchase orders, invoices, delivery confirmations, statements of account, court judgments or arbitral awards (if any), and evidence of any security interest (mortgage registration, pledge agreements, etc.).
  3. Provide proof of the creditor’s legal status. For domestic entities, include a current business licence extract. For foreign creditors, the equivalent certificate of incorporation, notarised and apostilled or consular-legalised as required.
  4. Submit certified Chinese translations. All documents in a foreign language must be accompanied by a Chinese translation. Many administrators require the translation to be certified by a PRC-licensed translation agency.
  5. Authorise a local representative or counsel. A power of attorney, notarised and, for foreign-issued documents, legalised, is necessary if a PRC lawyer or agent will file on the creditor’s behalf.
  6. File within the bar date. Submit the complete package to the administrator by the deadline stated in the notice. Filing methods include in-person delivery to the administrator’s office, postal delivery (retain tracking receipts), or electronic submission through the court’s online portal where available.
  7. Obtain acknowledgement of receipt. Request a stamped receipt or electronic confirmation. This is your primary evidence that the claim was filed on time.

Practice tip: File early. Administrators frequently need to seek clarification or request supplementary documents. Filing in the final days of the window leaves no margin for administrative back-and-forth.

Context, Who Can File for Bankruptcy in China?

Under the EBL, both debtors and creditors may apply to the People’s Court for bankruptcy. An enterprise legal person that cannot pay debts as they fall due and whose assets are insufficient to pay all debts, or that clearly lacks the ability to pay, may be subject to a bankruptcy application. Creditors holding mature claims can initiate the process independently. For a broader overview of how PRC bankruptcy cases begin, the Global Law Experts lawyer directory includes practitioners who advise on PRC insolvency filings.

Notice Mechanics, How to Verify You Were Properly Notified

The quality of notice directly affects a creditor’s remedies if the proof of claim deadline is missed. Under Article 14 of the EBL, the People’s Court must notify all known creditors within 25 days of accepting the bankruptcy application, and must publish a public announcement for unknown creditors. The administrator separately issues a claim-declaration notice that specifies the bar date, the filing address, required documents, and the date of the first creditors’ meeting.

In modern PRC practice, many intermediate courts also publish notices through the National Enterprise Bankruptcy Information Disclosure Platform. Creditors should monitor this platform actively and take screenshots with timestamps as evidence. For known creditors, the administrator is expected to deliver notice by registered mail, courier, or, where the creditor has consented, through the court’s electronic service system.

Recommended evidence to collect and preserve includes:

  • Registered mail or courier receipts showing the creditor’s address and delivery confirmation.
  • Screenshots of the e-service portal with date stamps and case reference numbers.
  • Administrator emails or letters with attachments and timestamps.
  • Public announcement records from the court’s official website or the national disclosure platform.

What to Do If You Never Received Notice

If you discover a bankruptcy case only after the bar date has passed and you never received the required notice, act immediately. Lack of proper notice is one of the strongest grounds for late-claim relief under PRC law. Gather all evidence showing that the administrator had your correct contact details (e.g., the debtor’s accounts payable records, prior correspondence) and that no notice was received. Then file a motion with the administrator, and, if necessary, directly with the court, to have your claim declared and admitted.

Late Proof of Claim in China, Remedies and Relief

Filing a late proof of claim in China is not automatically fatal, but the remedies are narrow and the consequences are real. Article 56 of the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law provides that a creditor who fails to declare a claim within the bar date period may still do so before the final distribution. However, late-filing creditors bear the costs of verification and examination, and, critically, they may not exercise voting rights on any plan or resolution that was adopted before their claim was admitted.

The likely practical effect is that late claimants lose their voice in reorganisation-plan votes and may receive only what remains after timely-filed claims have been satisfied from earlier distributions. This makes the proof of claim deadline a hard-edged procedural gate, even though the statute technically allows post-bar-date filing.

Grounds that PRC courts have recognised for admitting late claims include:

  • No proper notice: The creditor was a known creditor but the administrator failed to deliver notice in accordance with Article 14 of the EBL.
  • Ambiguous or defective notice: The notice was issued but contained incorrect bar-date information or was sent to the wrong address.
  • Force majeure or excusable delay: Circumstances genuinely beyond the creditor’s control prevented timely filing, natural disasters, severe illness of a sole proprietor, or government-imposed restrictions.

Steps to follow when a claim is late:

  1. Preserve all evidence of the underlying claim and the circumstances that caused the delay.
  2. File an immediate written motion with the administrator requesting admission of the late claim, attaching the standard proof-of-claim documentation and an explanation of the delay.
  3. If the administrator rejects the motion, escalate by filing directly with the supervising People’s Court.
  4. Seek provisional recognition of the claim so that it is at least registered for future distributions, even if voting rights on prior resolutions are lost.

How Long Do You Have to Object to a Proof of Claim?

Objection timeframes are case-specific. After the administrator publishes the preliminary list of verified claims, any debtor or creditor may raise an objection. Practice generally requires the objection to be filed before the creditors’ meeting at which the claim list is to be confirmed. Where a formal hearing is scheduled, the court’s notice will specify the deadline, commonly 15 to 30 days from the date of service. Creditors who disagree with a disallowance should file a lawsuit with the People’s Court within the time limit stipulated by the court’s ruling.

Objections, Verification and Claim Allowance Process

Once claims are filed, the administrator undertakes a verification process. Under Article 57 of the EBL, the administrator compiles a register of creditors’ claims and submits it to the People’s Court for record. This register is then made available to all creditors for review. Claims may be allowed in full, allowed in part, or disallowed.

Common grounds for disallowance include:

  • Insufficient or contradictory documentary evidence.
  • Claims barred by the statute of limitations.
  • Claims arising from transactions that have been avoided or set aside by the administrator (e.g., preferential transfers under Article 31 or fraudulent conveyances under Article 33).
  • Incorrect calculation of interest, penalties, or amounts due.

If a claim is disallowed or reduced, the creditor may raise an objection at the creditors’ meeting. If the objection is not resolved, the creditor has the right to file a civil lawsuit with the People’s Court to establish the claim. This judicial remedy is a critical safeguard, creditors should not treat an administrator’s disallowance as final without exploring the litigation option.

How to Contest Disallowance and Preserve Appeal Rights

To contest a disallowance, a creditor should: (a) formally object in writing before the creditors’ meeting, citing the specific evidence that supports the claim; (b) if unresolved, file a claim-confirmation lawsuit (zhaiquan queren zhisu) with the People’s Court within the deadline set by the court, typically 15 days from the creditors’ meeting resolution; and (c) preserve all original evidence and correspondence for trial.

Creditors’ Meetings and Voting Rights, Secured vs Unsecured

The creditors’ meeting is the central forum for collective decision-making in a PRC bankruptcy. Under Article 59 of the EBL, all creditors with verified and admitted claims are entitled to attend and vote. Voting weight is determined by the amount of the admitted claim, larger claims carry proportionally more influence.

A resolution at the creditors’ meeting in China requires approval by a majority of voting creditors whose aggregate claims represent more than half of the total unsecured claims present at the meeting. Reorganisation plans require an additional level of approval: each creditor class must approve the plan separately.

Secured Creditor Voting Rights in China

Secured creditors occupy a distinctive position. Under Article 59, a secured creditor does not have voting rights on matters relating to distributions from unsecured assets, their recovery is limited to the value of the collateral. However, if the value of the collateral is less than the secured claim, the deficiency is treated as an unsecured claim and the creditor votes in the unsecured class to that extent.

The priority of claims in China follows this general order under the EBL:

  1. Secured claims, satisfied from the specific collateral.
  2. Bankruptcy expenses and common-benefit debts, paid from unsecured estate assets before distributions to ordinary creditors.
  3. Employee wages, social insurance, and statutory compensation, super-priority in unsecured distributions.
  4. Tax claims, paid after employee claims.
  5. Ordinary unsecured claims, paid pro rata from remaining assets.

Secured creditors are not automatically the “highest priority” in a holistic sense, employee claims enjoy super-priority on unsecured assets, and the practical recovery of a secured creditor depends entirely on the value and liquidity of the collateral.

Practical Examples and Templates

Example 1, Trade creditor with missed notice: A Hong Kong–based electronics supplier learns of its mainland buyer’s bankruptcy 45 days after the bar date. The supplier was a known creditor (listed in the debtor’s accounts payable) but received no notice. The supplier’s PRC counsel files a late claim under Article 56, attaching the purchase contracts, delivery receipts, and evidence that no notice was sent. The administrator admits the claim for future distributions, though the supplier cannot vote on the reorganisation plan already adopted.

Example 2, Secured creditor voting scenario: A domestic bank holds a mortgage over the debtor’s factory, securing a loan of RMB 50 million. The factory is appraised at RMB 35 million. The bank files its proof of claim declaring the full RMB 50 million with evidence of the mortgage registration. The RMB 35 million secured portion is satisfied from collateral proceeds; the RMB 15 million deficiency is admitted as an unsecured claim, and the bank votes in the unsecured class on that amount.

Checklist for Foreign Creditors

Cross-border claims require additional preparation. Foreign creditors should work through the following steps as early as possible after learning of a PRC debtor’s insolvency:

  • Engage PRC-qualified counsel immediately, local representation is essential for filings, attending creditors’ meetings, and responding to administrator queries.
  • Notarise and legalise corporate documents. Certificates of incorporation, powers of attorney, and board resolutions authorising the claim filing must be notarised in the home jurisdiction and then consular-legalised (or apostilled, if the Hague Apostille Convention applies) for use in China.
  • Prepare certified Chinese translations of all supporting documents through a PRC-licensed translation agency.
  • Confirm the electronic filing option. Many courts now accept online filings, check with the administrator or the court’s website for portal access instructions.
  • Monitor the National Enterprise Bankruptcy Information Disclosure Platform for case updates, distribution announcements, and creditors’ meeting schedules.
  • Allow extra time. Notarisation, legalisation, and translation can take weeks. Begin document preparation as soon as a potential insolvency is identified, do not wait for formal notice.

Conclusion & Next Steps

The proof of claim deadline is the single most consequential procedural date for any creditor in a PRC bankruptcy. Missing it means losing voting rights, bearing additional costs, and potentially receiving nothing if the estate is fully distributed. The path to protection is clear: verify the bar date from the court or administrator’s official notice, file a complete and well-documented claim early, preserve all notice records, and, if the deadline has already passed, seek late-claim relief under Article 56 of the Enterprise Bankruptcy Law without delay. For creditors navigating PRC insolvency proceedings, experienced local counsel is indispensable. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory can help connect you with bankruptcy specialists practising in China.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Zhang Duchao at Zhong Lun Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Enterprise Bankruptcy Law (official English text), State Council / gov.cn
  2. Law.asia, China bankruptcy overview
  3. Cleary Gottlieb, firm briefing on PRC insolvency
  4. Thompson Hine, Bankruptcy Proof of Claim Basics
  5. Nolo, Proof of Claim in Bankruptcy
  6. Law.Cornell, Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure, Rule 3002
  7. Phelps LLP, Late Filing / Missed Claim Guidance

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Proof of Claim Deadline in China: Bar Dates, Creditor Notice, Late‑claim Relief & Voting Rights

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