China Personal Income Tax Calculator 2025
Calculate your personal income tax in China instantly. This comprehensive calculator supports progressive tax rates (3-45%), special deductions (child education, elderly care, housing interest, medical expenses), social security contributions, and annual reconciliation for resident and non-resident individuals. Updated with the latest 2025 tax regulations from the State Administration of Taxation.
Salary & Wage Income Calculator
Deductions & Allowances
Business Income Tax Calculator
Other Income Types Calculator
Tax Rate: 20% (with 20% expense deduction)
Tax Rate: 20% (20% expense + 30% bonus deduction)
Tax Rate: 20% (flat rate)
Deduction: CNY 800 or 20% of income
Tax Rate: 20% on capital gain
Your Tax Calculation Results
Detailed Tax Breakdown
| Description | Amount (CNY ¥) |
|---|
Understanding China's Personal Income Tax System
China's Personal Income Tax (PIT) system applies to both residents and non-residents, with progressive rates ranging from 3% to 45% depending on income level. The system distinguishes between comprehensive income (combining wages, salaries, and certain service income), business income, and other income categories, each with specific tax rates and deduction rules administered by the State Administration of Taxation.
Progressive Rates
Resident comprehensive income uses 7 tax brackets from 3% to 45% based on cumulative annual income. Non-residents use monthly brackets with rates from 3% to 45%.
Standard Deduction
CNY 60,000 per year (CNY 5,000 per month) for all residents and non-residents earning salaries and wages.
Special Deductions
Social insurance contributions, Housing Fund, corporate annuities, commercial health insurance, and other mandatory contributions.
Additional Deductions
Child education (CNY 2,000/month), elderly support (CNY 1,500-3,000/month), mortgage interest, rental expense, medical costs, and continuing education.
Personal Income Tax Rates for Residents 2025
| Annual Taxable Income (CNY ¥) | Tax Rate (%) | Quick Deduction (CNY ¥) |
|---|---|---|
| ≤ 36,000 | 3% | 0 |
| 36,001 - 144,000 | 10% | 2,520 |
| 144,001 - 300,000 | 20% | 16,920 |
| 300,001 - 420,000 | 25% | 31,920 |
| 420,001 - 660,000 | 30% | 52,920 |
| 660,001 - 960,000 | 35% | 85,920 |
| > 960,000 | 45% | 181,920 |
Quick Deduction Explanation: The quick deduction is a simplified calculation method to avoid calculating tax incrementally. It's subtracted from the calculated tax to arrive at the final tax amount. Formula: Tax = (Taxable Income × Tax Rate) - Quick Deduction
How to Calculate Personal Income Tax in China
For Resident Individuals - Annual Comprehensive Income
Basic PIT Calculation Formula
For Non-Resident Individuals - Monthly Calculation
Non-residents earn a CNY 5,000 monthly deduction instead of the annual CNY 60,000. Special additional deductions (child education, elderly care, etc.) are only available for non-residents if they meet specific requirements and during applicable periods.
Special Deductions and Additional Deductions
Standard Deductions
Residents: CNY 60,000 per year (CNY 5,000 monthly for withholding purposes). Non-Residents: CNY 5,000 per month. These are fixed deductions applied to all comprehensive income regardless of actual living expenses.
Special Deductions (Pre-Tax)
Special deductions reduce taxable income before tax calculation and include mandatory contributions:
- Social Insurance: Basic pension, unemployment, medical, work-related injury, and maternity insurance contributions
- Housing Fund: Statutory Housing Fund contributions (up to 12% of salary)
- Corporate Annuities: Employer and employee contributions to qualified corporate annuity plans
- Commercial Insurance: Premiums for tax-deferred commercial health insurance and commercial endowment insurance
Special Additional Deductions (Post-Tax Filing Only)
| Deduction Item | Monthly Deduction | Annual Cap | Eligibility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Child Education Expenses | CNY 2,000 per child | CNY 24,000 per child/year | Children in pre-school, primary, secondary, or higher education |
| Nursing Care Under Age 3 | CNY 2,000 per child | CNY 24,000 per child/year | Children born after January 1, 2022 |
| Continuing Education | CNY 400/month or CNY 3,600/year | CNY 4,800 lifetime | Diploma education programs (up to 4 years), professional qualifications (CNY 3,600 in certification year) |
| Mortgage Interest (Home Loan) | CNY 1,000 | CNY 12,000/year (up to 240 months) | First home loan under taxpayer or spouse's name, during loan repayment period |
| Housing Rental Expense | CNY 800, 1,100, or 1,500 | CNY 9,600-18,000/year | No house in work city; varies by city tier (small, medium, large) |
| Elderly Care Support | CNY 1,500-3,000 | CNY 18,000-36,000/year | Supporting parents over age 60; CNY 3,000 if only child, CNY 1,500 if multiple children splitting support |
| Major Medical Expenses | N/A (annual) | Up to CNY 80,000/year | Self-paid medical expenses above CNY 15,000 in a year; only applicable years with medical costs |
Tax Calculations by Income Type
Salary and Wage Income
The most common form of comprehensive income for residents, calculated using the cumulative withholding method with annual reconciliation between March 1 and June 30.
Business Income (Sole Proprietorship & Partnerships)
| Annual Net Income (CNY ¥) | Tax Rate (%) |
|---|---|
| ≤ 30,000 | 5% |
| 30,001 - 90,000 | 10% |
| 90,001 - 300,000 | 20% |
| 300,001 - 500,000 | 30% |
| > 500,000 | 35% |
Business losses can be carried forward for five years to offset future business income. Personal deductions of CNY 60,000 annually can be claimed by sole proprietors and partners against total income, avoiding double deductions with employees.
Labor Service Remuneration
Income from independent services receives a 20% expense deduction before applying the 20% flat tax rate. When payments are between CNY 4,000 and CNY 20,000, an additional 10% discount applies; between CNY 20,000 and CNY 50,000, an additional 20% discount applies.
Author's Remuneration and Royalties
Subject to 20% expense deduction plus an additional 30% discount on the remaining taxable income. This means actual tax is effectively 0.2 × (income × 0.8) = 14% for most authors. Special calculation: up to 30% of net income is deductible.
Dividends, Interest, and Bonus Income
Subject to a flat 20% tax rate with no deductions except certain state bond interest is exempt. This rate applies regardless of taxpayer status or total income level.
Rental Income
Monthly rental income is subject to a flat 10% tax rate (for residents; non-residents face 20%) with either CNY 800 monthly deduction or 20% of gross rent, whichever is greater. Maintenance costs, property taxes, insurance, and management fees are deductible.
Property Transfer Gains (Capital Gains)
Taxed at a flat 20% rate on the gain (sale price minus original cost and reasonable expenses). Certain property transfers, such as primary residences held for specific periods, may receive preferential treatment or exemptions.
Resident vs. Non-Resident Taxation
| Aspect | Resident Individual | Non-Resident Individual |
|---|---|---|
| Residency Criteria | Domicile in China OR ≥183 days/year | <183 days/year in China |
| Tax Liability | Worldwide income | China-sourced income only |
| Deduction | CNY 60,000/year (CNY 5,000/month) | CNY 5,000/month |
| Calculation Method | Cumulative annual withholding | Monthly or per-transaction basis |
| Tax Rates | 3% - 45% (annual brackets) | 3% - 45% (monthly brackets) |
| Special Additional Deductions | Available (child education, elderly care, housing, etc.) | Limited availability (case-by-case) |
| Annual Reconciliation | Required (March 1 - June 30) | Generally not required |
| Multiple Income Sources | Aggregated for taxation | Computed separately by income type |
Six-Year Rule: Foreign nationals without domicile in China have a six-year grace period (beginning January 1, 2019) before being classified as residents. Once classified as resident for 183+ days per year for six consecutive years, they become subject to worldwide income taxation.
Cumulative Withholding Method for Residents
Employers use the cumulative withholding method to calculate monthly tax for residents, ensuring that employees pay the correct progressive tax rate based on their cumulative income from January through the current month. This prevents over-taxation in early months when cumulative income is lower and under-taxation in later months.
Cumulative Withholding Formula
If the calculated amount is negative, no tax is withheld and no refund is issued until the annual settlement. This method ensures progressive taxation accuracy throughout the year, with final reconciliation after year-end.
Annual Tax Reconciliation and Settlement
Resident taxpayers must complete annual tax settlement between March 1 and June 30 of the following year. This process recalculates total tax payable for the year and compares it with total taxes withheld monthly, resulting in either a refund or additional payment.
Reconciliation Requirements
Reconciliation is required if: (1) deriving comprehensive income from two or more sources with balance exceeding CNY 60,000 after deductions; (2) deriving labor services, author's remuneration, or royalties with balance exceeding CNY 60,000; (3) total monthly tax paid is less than actual tax payable; (4) eligible for tax refund; or (5) any other circumstances requiring adjustment per State Council provisions.
Special Tax-Exempt Income and Benefits
Certain income types are completely exempted from personal income tax under Chinese law, including government awards, state bond interest, uniform government subsidies, welfare benefits, insurance claims, military separation payments, state-issued pension income, and income earned by diplomatic/consular personnel under treaty provisions.
Additionally, employers can provide certain tax-exempt fringe benefits to foreign employees including housing allowances, meal fees, laundry fees, education expenses, language training, relocation costs, business travel reimbursement, and home visit allowances. These benefits must be properly documented and approved by local tax authorities (policy extended through December 31, 2027).
Related Tax Calculators
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Official Sources and References
- State Administration of Taxation of China - Official Website
- China Briefing - Individual Income Tax Comprehensive Guide
- PwC Tax Summaries - China Personal Income Tax
- PwC - China PIT Deductions
- Ministry of Finance of China
- Shanghai Government - Personal Income Tax Policies
- Beijing Municipal Government - Tax Information
- MS Advisory - China Tax Rates 2025
Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates based on current tax regulations as of 2025. The Individual Income Tax Law regulations are subject to change. Special additional deductions, tax-exempt fringe benefits for foreigners, and regional incentives may vary by city and employer approval. For specific tax advice and planning, consult qualified Chinese tax professionals or certified public accountants familiar with current PIT regulations.