The new VAT Law in China and its Implementation Regulations took effect on January 1, 2026, formally concluding the “provisional” system in place since 1993 and establishing a stable, law-based framework.
Businesses must prepare to ensure seamless compliance and mitigate potential risks to cash flow and profitability. This article outlines the key changes and actionable steps for your organization.
For busy executives, the key changes are:
Based on the official documents from the State Council and the joint announcements by the Ministry of Finance and the State Taxation Administration, the following table summarizes the major policy changes and their implications for your business operations.
|
Aspect |
Previous Regime (VAT Provisional Regulations) |
New Regime (VAT Law & Implementation Regulations) |
Business Impact & Action Point |
|
Legal Status |
Administrative regulations (“Provisional Regulations”). |
Formally enacted national law with detailed supporting Regulations. |
Enhanced legal certainty and long-term stability for tax planning. |
|
Treatment of “Abnormal Losses” |
Definition was less specific in scope. |
Clearly defined to include losses from theft, misplacement, spoilage, or confiscation/destruction due to violations. Input VAT on such losses is non-deductible. |
Strengthens internal control requirements. Businesses must review inventory and asset management procedures to protect input VAT credits. |
|
Personal Residential Property Sales |
Policy was based on “Campaign to Replace Business Tax with VAT” circulars. |
Codified into law: Full VAT payment (at 3% rate) for sales within 2 years of purchase; Exemption for sales after 2 years or more. |
Provides clarity and stability for individuals and real estate transactions. |
|
Input VAT Apportionment (for mixed use) |
Rules existed but are now formally elevated to law. |
Formalized requirement: For input VAT not directly attributable (e.g., used for both taxable and tax-exempt sales), deduction must be calculated based on sales ratio, with an annual reconciliation. |
Businesses with complex or exempt income streams must ensure robust tracking and calculation methodologies are in place. |
The Implementation Regulations provide much-needed clarity on several operational fronts:
The new law recalibrates the scope of VAT-free activities, signalling a clear policy direction by removing exemptions for two specific sectors:
This shift reflects an intention to focus exemptions on core public welfare services (such as non-profit healthcare and education) and aligns with broader social policies. Businesses in the affected sectors must immediately assess the impact of this change and incorporate the new tax cost into their financial planning and pricing strategies.
Furthermore, the law mandates that all VAT preferential policies must be publicly catalogued with transparent criteria and undergo periodic government evaluation. This indicates the landscape of tax incentives will become more dynamic and subject to change, requiring businesses to stay informed on updates.
To ensure a smooth transition and maintain compliance under the new legal framework, we advise taking these key actions:
The Announcement on Adjusting Export VAT Refund Policies for PV and Other Product details targeted changes beyond the broader VAT law. The following summary highlights the main changes and their direct impact on specific industries.
|
Policy Area |
Specific Change |
Concrete Example |
Impact on Business |
|
Export VAT Refunds |
1. Cancellation for specific products. |
1. Photovoltaic (PV) Products: Export VAT refund is fully canceled from April 1, 2026. |
Increased Export Cost: The cost of PV modules is estimated to rise. This directly reduces profit margins or forces price renegotiations with overseas buyers. |
|
Rush to Export |
A 3-month buffer period before the policy takes effect. |
To lock in the current refund rate, overseas buyers are rushing orders requiring shipment before April 1, 2026. Some Chinese manufacturers are reportedly canceling holidays and ramping up production. |
Short-Term Volatility: Expect a spike in Q1 2026 export volumes and supply chain activity, potentially followed by a contraction as the cost increase takes effect. |
|
Policy Rationale & Long-Term Outlook |
To end “internal competition externalized” and reduce trade friction risks. |
Chinese industry associations state that refunds were being used in cut-throat price competition, essentially subsidizing foreign buyers and inviting anti-dumping probes. |
Industry Reshuffle: Policy aims to squeeze out low-end, price-dependent. Competitive pressure will shift from subsidy reliance to technology, quality, and real cost control. |
Beyond immediate compliance, the new law introduces several critical operational changes with strategic implications that require board-level attention:
The “RMB 5 Million” Rule for Capital Assets
A pivotal change is the new treatment of mixed-use, long-term assets (e.g., a building used for both taxable and non-taxable operations).
Investors in manufacturing must verify their products’ refund eligibility immediately. Sectors historically facing restrictions (e.g., certain resource-intensive products) should be particularly vigilant and must ensure compliance, as fraudulent refund claims will be met with severe penalties.
|
Special Commodity Code |
Policy Meaning |
Tax Treatment |
Key Action for Exporters |
|
1 |
Prohibited for Export or No Refund |
Subject to Full Domestic VAT (treated as domestic sale) |
Immediate Review: Verify product code status before finalising export contracts. |
|
2 |
Exempt Goods |
Eligible for VAT Exemption |
Standard procedure remains, but ensure goods correctly classified. |
The enactment of the VAT Law and its Implementation Regulations represents more than just a legal upgrade; it is the foundation for the next chapter of China’s tax administration. For businesses, proactively adapting to this new environment is not merely a compliance task but a strategic opportunity to optimize tax positions and operational resilience.
The transition to the new VAT law is more than a compliance exercise; it’s an opportunity to review and strengthen your financial operations. Fidinam’s team of dedicated tax and business advisors is equipped to guide you through every step of this change, ensuring not just adherence but optimization.
We offer tailored support through the following services:
Ready to assess your readiness for the 2026 VAT changes? Contact our Tax Advisory team today for a confidential consultation. We will help you turn this regulatory change into a moment of strategic advantage.
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