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HEAD-TO-HEAD TAX COMPARISON · 2026

COUNTRY A UK VS COUNTRY B China

Side-by-side analysis of income tax, effective rates, and take-home pay for UK and China in 2026.

OVERVIEW
UK and China share the same top income tax rate of 45%, but their tax systems diverge significantly in structure, treatment of foreign nationals, and social contributions. China's individual income tax (IIT) is progressive (3–45%) with a basic deduction of CNY 60,000/year (~£6,600) — lower than the UK's £12,570. The critical advantage for foreign nationals in China: the '6-year rule' (formerly 5-year rule) means foreign residents who have not been in China for 183+ days in any of the prior six consecutive tax years are only taxed on Chinese-source income. Once the 6-year threshold is crossed, worldwide income becomes subject to Chinese IIT. For British expats on standard 3–5 year assignments in Shanghai or Beijing, only China-sourced employment income is taxable. At £80,000 income from a Chinese employer, Chinese IIT is approximately £21,400 vs UK approximately £23,618 — China is marginally cheaper at this level. However, China's social contributions (~10.5% employee) are lower than UK NI (8%) only at specific income levels, and China's contribution base caps create complexity. Foreign expert allowances (housing, education, flights home) can be exempt from Chinese IIT under specific conditions, significantly reducing effective tax rates for qualifying expats.
Section 01

The Big Picture

Top-line rates and effective take-home for a typical earner — including income tax, social contributions, and applicable surcharges.
🇬🇧
COUNTRY A
UK
TAX RATE
20–45%
Income Tax + 8% NI
Progressive 20%/40%/45%; personal allowance £12,570; 60% trap £100K–£125,140; NI 8% on £12,570–£50,270, 2% above
🇨🇳
COUNTRY B
China
TAX RATE
3–45%
IIT — 7 Brackets
Progressive 3%–45% (top 45% at CNY 960,000+/year, ~£105,000); basic deduction CNY 60,000/year (~£6,600); employee social: pension 8%, medical 2%, unemployment 0.5%=~10.5%; foreign nationals: first 183 days only Chinese-source income; 6-year rule for worldwide income
TYPICAL ANNUAL DIFFERENCE
Moving from ChinaUK at At £80,000 (China resident, Chinese-source income only)
~£2,218/year
That's ~£185/month back in your pocket
Section 02

Tax Savings by Income Level

Net take-home after all income tax, social contributions, and surcharges — for a single employee with no dependents.
GROSS INCOME
🇬🇧 GB TAX
🇨🇳 CN TAX
SAVINGS
10-YEAR
£40,000
~£7,032 income tax + ~£2,186 NI = ~£9,218 total
~£5,800 Chinese IIT (3–20% brackets on CNY ~366K) + ~£4,200 social (10.5%) = ~£10,000 total
UK saves ~£782/year at £40K
~£7,820
£60,000
~£13,432 income tax + ~£3,386 NI = ~£16,818 total
~£10,200 Chinese IIT (entering 25–30% brackets on CNY ~550K) + ~£6,300 social = ~£16,500 total
Broadly equal at £60K; China marginally cheaper by ~£318
~£3,180
£80,000
~£19,432 income tax + ~£4,186 NI = ~£23,618 total
~£15,400 Chinese IIT (30–35% brackets on CNY ~733K) + ~£6,000 social (partially capped) = ~£21,400 total
China saves ~£2,218/year at £80K
~£22,180
£100,000
~£32,432 income tax (60% trap) + ~£4,386 NI = ~£36,818 total
~£21,800 Chinese IIT (35–40% brackets on CNY ~916K) + ~£5,800 social = ~£27,600 total
China saves ~£9,218/year at £100K — UK 60% trap amplifies advantage
~£92,180
£120,000
~£41,932 income tax (45% additional rate) + ~£4,586 NI = ~£46,518 total
~£28,800 Chinese IIT (45% top rate applies at CNY 960K+, ~£105K) + ~£5,800 social = ~£34,600 total
China saves ~£11,918/year at £120K; similar top rate (45%) but UK NI and 60% trap zone add significant cost
~£119,180
💡

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🇬🇧

UK Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • Higher personal allowance — UK £12,570 vs China CNY 60,000 (~£6,600); more income is sheltered from tax in the UK for lower earners
  • NHS healthcare — free at point of use; China requires private health insurance for expats (£800–£2,500/year for good coverage); public Chinese hospitals are accessible but language barriers and quality variations mean private is essential
  • No 6-year worldwide income rule — UK residents are taxed on worldwide income from the outset; China's 6-year rule requires careful planning but presents both an opportunity (initial years: Chinese-source only) and a cliff (year 6: worldwide income exposure)
  • Simpler tax compliance — UK PAYE system is largely automatic; Chinese IIT requires annual reconciliation filings from 2019, and foreign nationals must navigate both Chinese and UK reporting obligations
− CONS
  • 60% effective trap — UK's £100,000–£125,140 personal allowance taper; China has no equivalent trap in its progressive schedule
  • NI 8% on £12,570–£50,270 adds to income tax; China's 10.5% social contributions are moderately higher but the cap system creates different outcomes at various income levels
  • Top rate 45% at £125,140 vs China's 45% at CNY 960,000 (~£105,000) — China's top rate kicks in at a slightly lower threshold, but the 60% trap means effective UK rates are higher in the £100K–£125K zone
  • High London cost of living — Shanghai or Beijing expat packages typically include housing and education allowances that are partially or fully exempt from Chinese IIT, significantly reducing effective rates for qualifying expats
🇨🇳

China Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • Foreign expert allowances exempt from IIT — qualifying foreign national expenses can be exempt from Chinese IIT: housing allowance, children's school fees, home leave flights, language training, and meals/laundry allowances. These exemptions can reduce an expat's effective IIT rate substantially
  • 6-year rule protects foreign income — foreign nationals who have not been in China for 183+ days in any year in the prior 6 tax years only pay IIT on Chinese-source income; most 3–5 year expat assignments fall within this window
  • No personal income CGT on listed share sales — Chinese-listed A-shares are currently exempt from individual capital gains tax for individuals (though dividends are taxed); UK charges 18–24% CGT
  • Shanghai and Beijing career opportunities — China's major economic hubs offer senior roles in finance (HSBC, JP Morgan, Goldman Shanghai), tech (Alibaba, Tencent, ByteDance), and manufacturing that can be materially career-advancing
− CONS
  • 45% top rate kicks in at CNY 960,000 (~£105,000) — top rate threshold is similar to UK's £125,140 additional rate threshold, meaning high earners face comparable or higher Chinese IIT at top incomes
  • 6-year rule creates worldwide income cliff — after 6 consecutive years of China residency (183+ days each year), worldwide income becomes fully subject to Chinese IIT; expats staying beyond 5 years face significant tax planning requirements to reset the clock
  • Social contributions complex for foreign nationals — China's social insurance system applies to foreign employees (pension, medical, unemployment, work injury, maternity) but contribution amounts, exemptions, and portability vary by location and nationality treaty
  • Tax compliance burden — annual IIT reconciliation since 2019 adds administrative complexity; foreign nationals often need local tax advisors; dual compliance with Chinese and UK reporting increases costs
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What is China's 6-year rule for foreign nationals?

China's 6-year rule (updated in 2019) determines whether foreign residents are taxed on worldwide income or Chinese-source income only. Foreign nationals who have not been resident in China (≥183 days) for any single year in the prior 6 consecutive tax years are only subject to Chinese IIT on China-source income. Once a foreigner has been resident for 6 consecutive tax years without a continuous absence of 30+ days or a single absence of 90+ days, they become liable for IIT on worldwide income. Most standard 3–5 year expat assignments fall within the protection window.

What foreign expert allowances are exempt from Chinese IIT?

Qualifying foreign national allowances exempt from Chinese IIT include: housing allowance (provided by employer), children's education expenses at qualifying schools, home leave flights (reasonable), language training costs, and laundry/meal allowances. These exemptions are not unlimited — they must be reasonable and documented. The practical impact is significant: an expat with a £20,000 housing allowance and £15,000 school fees can exempt £35,000+ from Chinese IIT annually, substantially reducing effective rates.

How do UK and Chinese income tax rates compare at £100,000?

At £100,000: UK charges approximately £32,432 income tax (in the 60% personal allowance trap zone) + £4,386 NI = £36,818 total. China on equivalent income (~CNY 916,000/year): approximately £21,800 Chinese IIT (35–40% bracket range) + £5,800 social contributions = £27,600 total. China saves approximately £9,218/year at this income level. The UK's 60% effective rate trap (£100K–£125K) is the key reason China wins decisively here.

Is there a UK-China double tax treaty?

Yes. The UK-China Double Taxation Agreement (1984, updated by protocol 2013) prevents double taxation. Employment income is taxed where the work is performed. UK professionals in China pay Chinese IIT on China-source income and can claim a Foreign Tax Credit against any UK tax liability. The treaty also covers dividends (10% withholding), interest (10%), and royalties (10% reduced rates). The UK-China DTA does not eliminate the 6-year rule — that is a matter of Chinese domestic law.

How does China's social insurance apply to British expats?

Since 2011, China requires foreign employees to participate in the social insurance system: pension (8% employee), medical insurance (2%), and unemployment insurance (0.5%) = 10.5% employee total (rates vary slightly by city). Some British expats may claim exemption under the UK-China Social Security Agreement if the UK employer has sent them on a temporary assignment (typically up to 5 years). After the exemption period or for local hires, full Chinese social contributions apply. Portability of Chinese pension rights is limited — pension funds are refundable on departure.

Is Shanghai or Beijing better for British expats tax-wise?

Tax rates are identical in Shanghai and Beijing (both apply national Chinese IIT rates). The difference is in cost structures: Shanghai expat housing tends to be slightly more expensive than Beijing, but both cities have comparable international school costs (£15,000–£30,000/year). The IIT exemption on housing and school allowances applies equally. From a tax perspective, Shanghai's Pudong free trade zone historically offered some preferential foreign enterprise incentives, but individual IIT rates are identical. Career and lifestyle considerations dominate the Shanghai vs Beijing choice.