In 2020, at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, a Swedish furniture company found itself unable to operate its Shanghai WFOE. International borders were closed, and the company’s legal representative — based in Sweden — could not return to China. The decision was made to deregister the company. What the client discovered was that before a deregistration could even begin, a more urgent problem needed to be solved: the company had fallen into tax non-compliance and had been placed on both the tax authority’s abnormal records list and the market supervision authority’s business abnormal records list.
The client found us through an online search. What followed was a four-step process — rebuilding compliance, resolving both blacklists, executing a remote power of attorney, and completing a full deregistration — entirely without the legal representative setting foot in China.
A Communication Breakdown on Both Sides
When the client came to us, the immediate problem was visible: tax non-compliance, abnormal records status, no functioning relationship with the accounting firm managing the company’s books. Understanding why required tracing a chain of failures that had compounded over time.
The root cause was not the pandemic — it was an accounting arrangement that was never built for international operations. A service provider reachable only through a domestic Chinese app is not a service provider for a foreign-owned business.
In China, a non-compliant company can end up on two separate abnormal records lists simultaneously. The tax abnormal records list (税务异常名录) is maintained by the tax authority and is triggered by missed filings or unpaid obligations. The business abnormal records list (经营异常名录) is maintained by the market supervision authority and is triggered by failures such as the inability to contact the registered legal representative or failure to submit annual reports. Both must be resolved before deregistration can proceed — and each has its own resolution process through a different government body.
Our first task was to establish a full picture of the company’s compliance status — what had been filed, what was missing, and what the path to resolution looked like. Unlike the previous firm, we were reachable through every channel the client needed:
Clearing Both Blacklists Before the Exit Could Begin
Deregistration in China requires clean standing with both the tax authority and the market supervision authority. A company on either abnormal records list cannot proceed with any exit process until the underlying issues are resolved and both listings are removed. This is not a formality — it is a hard prerequisite, and each list requires a separate resolution process through a different government body.
Back-Filing of Missing Tax Returns
We identified all outstanding tax periods where filings had lapsed, prepared the back-filings, and submitted them to the relevant tax authority on the company’s behalf. Each period was filed in sequence to restore the company’s tax compliance record.
Removal from Tax Abnormal Records List
With the back-filings in place, we applied to the tax authority for removal of the tax abnormal records listing. This required demonstrating that all compliance failures had been remedied and that all outstanding obligations had been addressed.
Removal from Business Abnormal Records List
Separately, we applied to the market supervision authority for removal from the business abnormal records list (经营异常名录). This listing had been triggered by the authority’s inability to reach the legal representative at the registered address. We provided the required documentation and contact verification to demonstrate the company’s legal representative was reachable and the entity remained accountable.
Tax Penalty — Reduction Applied, Balance Settled
The non-compliance had generated a tax penalty. We applied for a reduction on the client’s behalf. The penalty was reduced; a final amount of RMB 1,000 remained, which we paid on the client’s behalf to clear the outstanding balance and unblock the deregistration process.
Tax non-compliance and abnormal records listings are more common than most foreign businesses realise — and both are resolvable. Understanding your obligations is the first step.
China Tax Filing & Compliance →How a Legal Representative in Sweden Signed for a Company in Shanghai
China’s deregistration process requires the legal representative’s authorisation at multiple points. With the client unable to return to China, this required a Power of Attorney — a formal legal document executed abroad, notarised, and physically delivered to China to authorise us to act on the company’s behalf throughout the exit process.
A Power of Attorney for China company deregistration must be signed by the legal representative, notarised by a local notary in the representative’s home country, and the original document sent to China by international courier. The POA specifies the scope of authority granted — in this case, covering all steps of the tax, business registration, and bank account deregistration process. Once received in China, it serves as the legal basis for the agent to execute the full deregistration on the representative’s behalf.
The client signed and notarised the POA in Sweden and couriered the original to our Shanghai office. From that point, we held the authority to complete every remaining step without requiring any further in-person involvement from the legal representative.
Tax, Business Registration, and Bank — All Closed
With compliance restored, abnormal records cleared, and the POA in hand, we executed the full deregistration sequence. In China, this follows a fixed order: tax deregistration must be completed before the business registration can be cancelled, and the business registration must be cancelled before the corporate bank account can be closed.
Tax Deregistration
Final tax clearance obtained from the relevant tax authority, confirming all obligations had been met and the company’s tax registration could be cancelled.
Business Registration Cancellation
Company deregistration filed with the market supervision authority. Business licence cancelled and the entity formally dissolved from the commercial register.
Bank Account Closure
Corporate RMB and foreign currency accounts closed. Remaining balances handled per the client’s instructions. Bank confirmed closure and issued final account statements.
4.5 Months — Clean Exit
From initial engagement to full deregistration: four and a half months. No outstanding liabilities, no remaining obligations, no legal representative travel required at any stage.
China company deregistration involves tax, business registration, and banking — in a fixed sequence. Understanding the process before you begin saves significant time and cost.
China Company Deregistration →A Clean Exit, Entirely from Abroad
The company was removed from the tax abnormal records list, all back-filings were completed, the penalty was settled, and the entity was fully dissolved — tax registration, business licence, and bank accounts all closed. The legal representative in Sweden received confirmation of the completed deregistration without having returned to China at any point in the process.
What began as a company in non-compliance, on a blacklist, with no functioning relationship with its accounting firm, ended as a clean exit with no trailing liabilities.
In 2024, the same client returned to us to register a new company in China. Deregistration isn’t always the end of the story — sometimes it’s just a reset.
Closing a Company Remotely? It’s Possible — If You Know the Sequence.
China company deregistration is not simply a matter of filing paperwork. Non-compliance issues must be resolved first, authorisation must be structured correctly for remote execution, and the tax, registration, and banking closures must follow a specific order. Getting any step wrong adds months and cost.
If your company has fallen behind on compliance, if your legal representative cannot return to China, or if you are simply planning an orderly exit from the market, the process is manageable — with the right team handling it. We have been doing this since 2015, across industries and across jurisdictions.
Need to Close a Company in China — or Stay Compliant While You’re Still Here?
Whether you’re planning an exit, dealing with a compliance issue, or want to make sure you never end up in this situation, we can help.