Chinese e-Commerce

Most Chinese people make e-commerce purchases on a daily basis. China's physical size has driven this growth. Before e-commerce, many towns and cities in China had limited product and service supplies based on their region's availability. Now, Chinese consumers have access to products and services supplied nationally and internationally.

This article is a beginner’s guide to Chinese search engine optimisation (SEO). You may need local Chinese support as you learn more and aim to improve your internet content rankings.


Focus: e-Commerce platforms + evolution Audience: overseas businesses Last modified: v4.0 - 01 February 2026

Chinese e-Commerce

Chinese e-commerce has experienced significant success over the past decade.

Most Chinese people make e-commerce purchases on a daily basis. China's physical size has driven this growth. Before e-commerce, many towns and cities in China had limited product and service supplies based on their region's availability. Now, Chinese consumers have access to products and services supplied nationally and internationally.

The e-Commerce market has driven down consumer prices across a wide range of products and services.

Chinese e-Commerce B2B Marketplaces

 

Platform
Parent Company
Market Focus
Key Features
URL
Alibaba
阿里巴巴国际站
Alibaba Group
Global Export
World's most significant B2B platform
www.alibaba.com
1688
阿里巴巴国内站
Alibaba Group
China (Domestic B2B)
Wholesale platform for domestic businesses
www.1688.com
Global Sources
环球资源
Global Sources
Global (Export)
Verified manufacturers, electronics & trade shows
www.globalsources.com
Made-in-China
中国制造网
Focus Technology
Global (Export)
Strong in industrial, machinery, and OEM manufacturing
www.made-in-china.com
DHgate
敦煌网
DHgate
Global (Export & Wholesale)
Hybrid B2B & B2C with bulk pricing
www.dhgate.com
Yiwugo
义乌购
Yiwugo
Global (Export, Yiwu market)
Official Yiwu market online platform
www.yiwugo.com

Global Chinese e-Commerce Platforms (Cross-Border B2C & C2C)

 

Platform
Parent Company
Market Focus
Key Features
URL
AliExpress
Alibaba Group
Global Export
Dropshipping, direct retail
www.aliexpress.com
Temu
PDD Holdings
Global (US, EU, LatAm)
Ultra-low prices, factory-to-consumer
www.temu.com
Shein
Shein Group
Global (Fashion)
AI-driven fashion, influencer marketing
www.shein.com
JD Worldwide
JD.com
Global (Premium brands)
Fast logistics, trusted suppliers
www.jd.hk
Banggood
Banggood
Global (Tech & Gadgets)
Electronics, better shipping than AliExpress
www.banggood.com
DHgate
DHgate
Global (Wholesale)
Bulk pricing, direct factory sales
www.dhgate.com
Tmall
Alibaba Group
China (Premium B2C)
High-end brands, cross-border options
www.tmall.com
Lazada
Alibaba Group
Southeast Asia
Cross-border marketplace, localised operations
www.lazada.com

Chinese Social E-Commerce Platforms

 

Platform
Parent Company
Market Focus
Key Features
URL
Douyin
TikTok China
ByteDance
China
Livestream shopping, short-video commerce
www.douyin.com
Kuaishou
Kuaishou Technology
China
Heavy discount-focused live streaming
www.kuaishou.com
Xiaohongshu
(RED Book)
Xiaohongshu
China & Global (Luxury & Beauty)
Influencer-driven shopping
www.xiaohongshu.com
WeChat Mini Programs
Tencent
China & Global Brands
Group-buying discounts, social sharing
www.pinduoduo.com
Toutiao
PDD Holdings
China
Group-buying discounts, social sharing
www.toutiao.com
Weibo
Sina Corporation
China
Social commerce, influencer marketing
weibo.com
Juhuasuan
聚划算
Alibaba Group
China
Group-buying deals, flash sales
www.juhuasuan.com
Meituan
美团
Meituan
China
Local services, food delivery
www.meituan.com
Tàima 泰马
Tàima Group
China
Cross-border e-commerce, logistics
 

Summary of Chinese E-Commerce Evolution

 

Period
Key Milestones
Douyin
1999–2005
Alibaba, JD.com launch, eBay exits China, Alipay launches
2010–2015
WeChat Pay, TMall, Pinduoduo rise, mobile commerce boom
2016–2020
Global expansion (Lazada, JD Worldwide), New Retail, Singles' Day records
2020–Now
Live commerce (Douyin, Kuaishou), Shein, Temu, and government regulations

History of Chinese E-Commerce

Early Years (1990s – 2000s): The Birth of Chinese E-Commerce

Alibaba (1999): Jack Ma founded it as a B2B platform connecting Chinese manufacturers with global buyers.

JD.com (1998/2004): Started as a physical electronics store in 1998 but moved online in 2004 after the SARS epidemic.

eBay China (2003): Entered China by acquiring EachNet but struggled against local competitors.

Taobao (2003): Alibaba launched Taobao as a C2C marketplace to counter eBay, offering free listings and a better user experience.

Key Events:

  • 2003 – Taobao launches and dominates eBay China.
  • 2004 – Alipay launched to build trust in online payments.
  • 2005 – eBay China exits, selling its stake in EachNet.

Expansion & Mobile Commerce (2010s)

Tmall (2010): Alibaba introduced Tmall (天猫), a B2C marketplace for brands and retailers.

WeChat Pay (2013): Tencent expanded WeChat (Weixin) into payments, competing with Alipay.

Pinduoduo (2015): A social commerce platform focused on group buying, targeting lower-income consumers.

Key Trends:

  • Mobile shopping has grown rapidly due to the increasing availability of affordable smartphones.
  • Live streaming & influencer commerce became popular on Taobao & Douyin (TikTok China).
  • Cashless Society: Alipay & WeChat Pay Dominate Transactions.

Dominance & Global Expansion (2016–2020)

Singles' Day Sales (11.11): Became the world’s biggest shopping festival, generating over $100 billion in 2020.

Cross-border e-commerce: Platforms like TMall Global and JD Worldwide allowed foreign brands to sell directly to Chinese consumers.

New Retail: Alibaba's Hema (盒马鲜生) stores combined online & offline shopping.

International Expansion:

  • Alibaba acquired Lazada in Southeast Asia.
  • JD.com expanded to the US & Europe.
  • ByteDance (Douyin/TikTok) became an e-commerce powerhouse.

Recent Developments (2020–Present)

Douyin & Kuaishou: Short-video platforms became major live-streaming e-commerce hubs.

Shein (快时尚): A global fashion giant dominating fast fashion e-commerce.

Temu (2022): Owned by Pinduoduo, aggressively expanding in Western markets with low-cost products.

Government Regulations (2021+): The Chinese government cracked down on monopolistic practices by Alibaba & Tencent.

Chinese e-Commerce

 

Quick checklist

Use these checks to keep trust and usability high.

  • Does the full page load reliably in China (including third-party resources)?
  • Is the design responsive and readable on mobile/tablet screens?
  • Do key pages work inside the WeChat browser (not just desktop Chrome)?
  • Are contact details current and working (email, phone, address, forms)?
  • If e-commerce: can users complete the full checkout and shipping journey from China?
  • Have you kept Chinese language minimal to avoid appearing like a local agent site?
Note: “Looking Chinese” is not the goal. Trust comes from consistency, authenticity, and a smooth mobile experience.

Need help?

If you’d like help improving mobile usability and China accessibility while keeping an authentic overseas brand feel, contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Your website outside China

Only a minority of overseas business websites load reliably in mainland China. Many are slow, and many cannot be accessed at all.

If China matters to your growth, you need a practical way to make your existing site visible, fast, and findable—without building and maintaining two separate systems.

Focus: visibility + performance Audience: overseas businesses Last modified: v4.1 – 17 March 2026

Why this matters

Many overseas websites fail in China due to a combination of slow international routing, blocked third‑party resources, and content that cannot be accessed from Chinese networks.

Headline risk: There is a high probability that your website may not be visible in China.

What Chinese buyers experience

Like most businesses worldwide, Chinese companies start by searching online. If your pages do not load, you effectively disappear from the buying process.

When users in China search, they may only see a fraction of overseas business websites because slow responses and blocked content cause pages to fail.

Practical takeaway: Treat China accessibility as a core requirement, not a “nice to have”.

A practical approach

Our platforms “front‑end” your existing website, removing the need to build a separate site for the Chinese market.

  • Reduce build costs (typically hundreds, not thousands).
  • Reduce implementation time (days, not weeks or months).
  • Keep your existing systems handling enquiries and orders.
  • Avoid maintaining two databases and two operational workflows.
Goal: Make your website visible and findable on the Chinese internet.

What our platform enables

  • Your business website to be seen in China
  • Replace blocked internet content
  • Speed up your website response in China
  • Locally re-host multi-media, allowing access in China
  • Allow your website to be found in China
  • Local hosting and domain name
  • Translate SEO data into Chinese
  • Chinese search engine submission
Practical takeaway: Remove China‑blocked dependencies and bring critical assets closer to users.
Your website outside China

 

Quick checklist

Use these checks to keep trust and usability high.

  • Does your full page load in China (including all third‑party resources)?
  • Are you relying on blocked CDNs, fonts, embeds, or APIs?
  • Is DNS resolution fast from China (no long overseas lookups)?
  • Are images/video hosted in a way that works from China?
  • Can Chinese buyers find you in Chinese search engines and platforms?
Note: “Looking Chinese” is not the goal. Trust comes from consistency, authenticity, and a smooth mobile experience.

Need help?

If you’d like help improving mobile usability and China accessibility while keeping an authentic overseas brand feel, contact This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Chinese internet identity

While your Chinese online identity offers no major solution on its own, its success is greatly helped by your good management.

Before trademark registration, you must decide to create an online Chinese identity.


Focus: identity + discovery Audience: overseas businesses Last modified: v4.2 – 27 January 2026

Use your existing brand (the simplest solution)

The simplest solution is to use your existing business/brand online identity.

This will work.

  • Your trademark(s), brand in this case, are available in China. i.e., A Chinese / international business has not already registered your trademark in China
  • Your trademarks, i.e. brand, product names, etc, are known in the international / Chinese market.
  • Appropriate domain, social media, etc, names are available.
  • Your brand/product name does not have an appropriate meaning/translation in spoken or written Chinese. For example, Google had this problem in China; the English pronunciation of Google in Chinese means “rice framer.”
Practical takeaway: Decide your China-facing identity before trademark registration. It affects trademarks, domains, and social account names.

If you need a new identity for the Chinese market

If you are having problems in any of these areas above, or you wish to create a new identity for the Chinese market, here are a few points for your consideration;

1) The brand is not known in China

Internet search functions in search engines, social media, and e-malls are complex, but the data they process is straightforward. A search will only compare the words you have given with the words in the search. If you are using a brand name not known in China, it will not appear in search results.

The way around this is to connect your brand name to words that are searched for, e.g.,

  • Baby food by Access to China - English only
  • 婴儿食品 Access to China - keeping your brand in English and the rest in China

Keeping the brand in your local language is recommended, provided it is not misspelt and is pronounceable in Chinese. An international company/product is expected to have an overseas name.

If you use a Chinese name, you may confuse the local Chinese market, leading local people to think you are selling “copy” products. When using a Chinese name, please reference our international credentials.

Note: Note: If you are using a brand-name translation, please ensure you register your Chinese mark as a trademark.

2) The brand is known in China

This is a great starting point if you own your brand in China.

Ensure your brand is registered as a Chinese trademark in your company name. Having your trademarks registered directly in China gives you far better protection; otherwise, you will have to rely on international copyright protection, which is very hard to enforce in China.

Once you have legal control over your trademarks in China, you can start establishing your business identity on the Internet in China.

Under Chinese law, you can stop the use of your trademarks, brand names, logos, etc.; this must be done proactively.

3) Need a new brand for the Chinese market

This is often the case if you have lost control of your brand in China.

An overseas name is always appropriate when exporting a product from an overseas brand to China.

  • If you need to use a Chinese name, two written systems are available: Madeiran and Pinyin—most significant internet brands use Pinyin, e.g., Baidu, Taobao, Shenma, Dangdang.
  • Another group of Chinese with strong internet identities uses familiar English words and sayings, such as Tmall, JD Buy, VIP, and WeChat.
  • The other important thing is that Chinese words typically end with an upward tone. All the above Chinese names have a downward followed by an upward tone. Words that follow this format are positive.

Chinese domain names

Chinese domain names

Domain names with many words become more burdensome to spell correctly—a maximum of two words is recommended.

  • Do not use hyphens and dashes. They can confuse. The Chinese language does use these characters.
  • Having a Chinese name spelt in Chinese characters is not usually used by Chinese people in browsers. However, having a secondary domain name in Chinese characters can improve SEO for search engines.
  • Chinese Social Media
  • Your company's identity on Chinese social media greatly helps me understand the meaning of the account name.

Chinese social media

Each social media search tool works differently. Please read up, take advice, and test before creating your business social media accounts. Often, it is not easy to change the name once it has been made.

More information available

Please look at the following cover in more detail, and the points raised above.

More information: Chinese intellectual property, Chinese domains, and Chinese SEO (see links below).
Chinese internet identity — branding and naming for China

 

Quick checklist

Use this as a fast scan before investing deeper.

  • Have you decided your China-facing brand name (English + optional Chinese/Pinyin)?
  • If using a Chinese name/translation, have you registered it as a Chinese trademark?
  • Are matching domain names available (short, memorable, no hyphens)?
  • Do your social account names include keywords people actually search for?
  • Will the identity be consistent across your website, e‑commerce platforms, and social channels?
  • Have native speakers checked meaning, tone, and unintended wordplay?
Common pitfall: A name that “sounds right” in English can have an unintended meaning in Chinese. Validate meaning + tone with native speakers before committing.

Need help?

If you would like support reviewing your naming, trademarks, domains, or Chinese social identities, please get in contact. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent (BAT)

The BAT is the Chinese acronym for the following internet and software companies in China.


Baidu
Alibaba
Tencent

Focus: digital habits + practical use Audience: overseas businesses Last modified: v4.0 – 29 January 2026

Generally, the internet business profiles of giant BAT companies operate similarly to those of Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and others.

The BAT companies are estimated to directly or indirectly control over 70% of the internet business and transactions in China.

There is a significant difference between how businesses approach the Chinese Internet and the rest of the world. Most Chinese companies are part of an existing B2B or social media platform and do not have a business website.

The BAT company's domination of the internet in China is in part due to the following:

  • the histrionic concerns in publishing internet content in China. Using Chinese platforms does not require ICP certification,
  • speed of implementation,
  • the cost of developing a website in China is 100% to 200% higher than in the USA or Europe,
  • the lack of experience in IT skills in Chinese businesses,
  • BAT's overall control of the markets,
  • The integration of the services, such as website, messaging, social media, and payment processing, within each BAT platform,
  • The e-Mall and e-commerce platforms have been highly successful, as they seamlessly integrate online store processes with traditional business operations, including storage, shipping, and returns. This is very similar to the services supplied by Amazon outside China.

In the 2000's, each BAT company achieved significant success on a single Chinese platform;

  • Baidu search engine
  • Alibaba B2B services
  • Tencent Messaging

Each of these businesses has a substantial user base to support the development of new services.

  • Baidu - search engine and marketing and IT services,
  • Alibaba – B2C services and e-commerce (Taobao, TMall, etc.),
  • Tencent – Social media, APPs, e-commerce (WeChat, JD Buy).

Each BAT business operates in a different market, and their market share and success fluctuate on a monthly basis.

The next page summarises the BAT companies' services, but does not have a complete list.

When you examine this list, you may conclude that Tencent is the more substantial business or the one with the highest potential, given its hugely successful WeChat platform.

Alibaba's strength lies in its e-commerce platforms, such as Tmall and Taobao. Its expansion into email markets outside China has also been very successful.

Not all the businesses in this list are owned by BAT companies; some are JVs, partners, etc. The BAT companies have been innovative by creating groups of services that best use their extensive user base.

 

Services
Baidu
Alibaba
Tencent
Search Engines
Baidu
Shenma
Sogou
AI
Biadu Ernie AI
Tongyi Qianwen AI
Tencent Hunyuan AI
WeChat Turbo AI
Social Media

None

Chinese Social Medium Webio

Chinese Social Medium WeChat logo

Payment systems

Chinese payment system - AliPay

Chinese payment system - WePay

Chinese payment system - QQ Wallet

e-Commerce

None

Tmall Global

Tmalllogo

Taobao

Juhuasuan

Lazada Logo

jdworldwide

JD logo

joybuy

WeChat Min Program

B2B Trading

None

Trading B2B Alibaba

WeChat Min Program

EMail Services

Baidu Cloud

alibaba cloud

QQ Mail

Maps

QQmap

Cloud Services

Baidu cloud services

alibaba cloud services

icon cloud

Food Delivery

None

ele.me logo

WeChat Min Program

APPs

None

None

WeChat Min Program

Text message

None

None

Chinese payment system - QQQQ

In some cases, the BAT companies have created new services that take control of existing distribution channels, often changing commercial and retail practices throughout China within months. An example of this was taxi booking services like Uber, which were created many years before Uber's popularity grew.

The first significant implementation of the taxi app was in Shanghai. Both the customer and the taxi driver received a payment for each booking. The app was losing money for many months. The BAT companies purchased a market share. Within six months, they controlled the taxi business in Shanghai.

Following this, many startup venture capital companies were established over the next five years, utilising funds raised in the Chinese investment markets. Today, China boasts numerous excellent taxi services. Most Chinese taxis today are booked online. If there is an issue, the taxi market has become overcrowded with an excessive number of taxis.

From this example, there are a few points of interest;

  • The BAT companies' resources give them durable purchasing power. If they move into a market, change will quickly follow.
  • If taking an IT service to China, do not enter into a market area in China where the BAT companies already have control of the market.
  • The BAT companies have financial resources like Google or Microsoft. These resources are used to purchase businesses when a company establishes or expands its online market share.

In the rest of the world, about 75% of online purchases are performed directly on supplier websites. Supplier websites are being replaced/complemented with e-Malls, such as Amazon, which provides end-to-end purchasing, payment, and shipping services.

In China, BAT companies control e-commerce platforms, allowing Chinese businesses to sell directly to end consumers and international companies to sell to the Chinese market. Between 60% and 70% of online store trading is through the BAT companies' platforms.

Often, people see European products being sold online in China at prices 100% or higher. While this may look like an excellent opportunity for overseas suppliers, the net prices include all supply costs, i.e.,

  • all local and international shipping,
  • import duties,
  • Chinese sales tax,
  • bonded warehousing storage,
  • e-Mall transaction fees,
  • e-Mall listing fees.

Additionally, the BAT company's store costs are high, which in turn pushes the price higher.

E-commerce, which sells a limited number of products in China, typically has a narrow margin. However, based on the volume of sales, there is a significant market return.

The exception applies to large wholesalers or foreign product manufacturers. Additional margin is available as many products in the Chinese e-Malls are sourced from international retail shops.

Looking ahead

Alibaba will continue its growth outside China with its Lazada e-mail platform. It operates in South Asia: Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam, Thailand, and the Philippines. We anticipate that Africa will be the next area of expansion.

In China, more consumer businesses operate outside e-malls through the Weixin Mini Apps (Tencent-owned) platform. The Weixin Mini Apps platform enables companies to create online stores or apps. Many independent online stores are now fully integrated into WeChat's social media platform, utilising the WeChat platform as their primary online presence.

The impact of COVID-19 has dramatically changed the markets in China, as it has in the rest of the world. During January, February, and March 2020, 95% of all retail transactions were completed online. While this will partially reduce the “lockdown” at the end of April 2020, we believe the retail market will remain above 80% in the foreseeable future.

Like most people, Chinese people will not be travelling internationally on holidays. However, the demand for global retail products will remain high; therefore, there will continue to be a high demand for international products online in China.

The impact of COVID-19 has created a need for contact-tracking APPs. Currently, each city/region has its own dependent systems. BAT companies will need to accelerate their development of big data and artificial intelligence (AI) systems if COVID-19 is to be contained in China.

Note: Not all services shown are owned outright by BAT companies; some are joint ventures, partners, or closely integrated ecosystems.
BAT - Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent

 

Quick checklist

  • Which BAT ecosystems are your customers already using (search, social, e‑commerce)?
  • Do you need a China “platform-first” strategy before investing in a China-hosted website?
  • Are any critical assets blocked or slow from China (Google, YouTube, trackers, CDN files)?
  • Do you have a plan for payments and order flow (Alipay/WeChat Pay, e‑mall, mini programs)?
  • Have you registered brand/trademarks in China?
Tip: Start by testing what can be accessed from China, then choose the lowest‑risk route (platform, proxy, or China hosting) based on your goals.

Useful links

Chinese intellectual property rights

Politicians, the press, and businesses worldwide have spoken and written extensively about the problems with intellectual property rights in China.

China faces numerous challenges related to international intellectual property rights and their enforcement.


Focus: IP protection + enforcement Audience: overseas businesses Last modified: Version V4.0 – 27 January 2026

Management summary

It is estimated that there are between 100,000 and 150,000 outstanding international copyright/trademark cases with Chinese businesses. Given the costs and time involved in raising a case, we expect this number to be much higher, as many companies lack the resources to navigate the complexities of Chinese legal processes.

If your trademark or copyright is registered in China, a dispute over it can often be resolved with a letter from a local Chinese solicitor. No business or Chinese person wishes to be seen breaking Chinese rules and regulations.

If you do not register your trademark in China, you could spend years in the Chinese legal system trying to block the use of your trademark. If you have registered your trademark and there is an infringement, it is usually resolved after a letter from a Chinese-based solicitor.

We strongly recommend that you protect your trademark in China in accordance with local Chinese laws and regulations.

Practical takeaway: Protect trademarks/copyright in China under local Chinese law. When registered, many disputes can be resolved quickly with local legal letters instead of long international disputes.

Background

In reviewing intellectual property law with our Chinese legal firm, they point out that China only started developing Commercial and Civil law in the last 40 years. This marks the first time China has had Commercial and Civil law in 4,000 years, whereas England, for instance, began developing these laws over 900 years ago.

Given China's historical lack of Commercial and Civil law, local businesses have exploited this saturation, creating copies of Chinese and international products and brands.

Although China has been a member of international trade agreements that protect IP rights since 1979, the scale of IP rights infringements means that Chinese authorities lack the resources to enforce them effectively.

IP rights enforcement becomes local, not international, by registering the IP in China. This allows enforcement between Chinese companies and Chinese legal firms without often involving Chinese authorities. Chinese people and businesses recognise that having the correct paperwork enables IP enforcement, which in turn ensures that rules and regulations are followed. No company or person in China (or worldwide) wants to involve local authorities in legal conflicts.

Chinese IP laws are split into three areas

  • Trademark
  • Copyright
  • Patent
Important: A trademark registered in the EU, USA, etc., is not generally protected in mainland China — register in China if you want enforceable protection there.

Chinese IP laws are split into three areas

Trademark

Copyright

Patent

Note: Trademark law in China is often referred to as brand registration, which involves registering your Trademark.

The Chinese are developing Commercial law, which includes intellectual property rights. The laws being developed are independent of international law,

For example, a Trademark registered in the EU, USA, etc., is not generally protected in China and therefore must be registered there.

If you manufacture in China, you will train and set up a production line for your products and brands. If you fail to protect your trademarks, patents, and other intellectual property, the factory can legally sell your products and use your brand name throughout China.

Please be aware that factories in China often manufacture products for other overseas businesses. You could try to enforce your Chinese trademark protection with the factory. Firstly, you need to be aware that they are doing this. Your products are often sent to a factory in another area. Secondly, you may not be able to enforce the trademark as the goods are not to be sold in China.

Once your IP rights have been correctly registered in China, they can be successfully enforced.

All IP registrations need to be renewed every 10 to 15 years, depending on the type of registration (e.g., trademarks vs. patents).

Please seek advice in your local country. We recommend starting with trade organisations. In the UK, these would be the Chinese British Business Council (CBBC) and the British Chamber of Commerce. They should have a list of local businesses that specialise in Chinese IP.

If your business has products/services that would interest the Chinese or international market, protecting your IP, specifically trademarks, in China is strongly recommended.


Chinese trademark registration

Chinese trademark registration, also known as brand registration, covers logos, company names, brand names, product names, and more.

Protecting your interests outside China, including Hong Kong, will not protect your interests in China.

Note: Please check

if your IP is registered in mainland China. Does this cover Hong Kong?

If your IP is registered in Hong Kong, does this cover mainland China?

This was the case when writing this paper.

Any business or person/person inside or outside China can register a trademark in China. There is some protection for significant international trademarks. When reviewing a trademark application, we understand that the Chinese authorities will check their international trademark registration database. This database is limited to substantial trademarks and offers minimal protection for SMEs.

Recently, the Chinese authorities have encouraged Chinese companies to register their trademarks. This has led to many trademarks being registered in China by Chinese companies seeking to protect their existing overseas brand names. This has been causing problems for overseas businesses that have registered trademarks in China.

Once you have registered a trademark in China, it is illegal to copy and trade using the trademark in China, regardless of any registration outside China.

Make sure your trademarks are in your company name, regardless of whether you own a Chinese company. Do not allow a third party to own your trademark, irrespective of the agreement. The best solution is to register your brand names, logos, product names, etc., at the outset before you involve any parties inside/outside China.

Suppose you wish to allow an organisation in China to use your trademark. In that case, you can give written permission but include detailed terms and conditions in an MOU (Memorandum of Understanding). Followed by a written agreement.

Key point: Make sure your trademarks are registered in your company name. Do not allow a third party to own your trademark, regardless of any agreement.

Trademark registration process

  • Appoint a local agent in your country to handle your trademark registration
  • Appoint an agent from your country with a successful track record in Chinese trademark registration. They will, in turn, appoint a Chinese agent; only a Chinese licensed agent can apply to the Chinese authorities.
  • Using a local agent from your country means you will work in your local language and under your country's trading terms.
  • Your local agent should also have access to the trademark registration database in China and, therefore, be able to check what is already registered. This will save time and money when submitting trademarks already registered in China.
  • You can appoint a local Chinese agent directly. This is only recommended if you know the Chinese agent and have a successful trading relationship.
  • The government must certify all local Chinese agents. Please ensure that you see a copy of their certification that matches the Chinese company name.
  • Trademark registration is straightforward in China. However, incorrect trademark ownership can prevent you from trading in China and result in the loss of any investments you have made there.
  • Submit the papers to the Chinese authorities
  • Your local agent will handle this matter. Please make sure all the information is correct, including the spelling, fonts, etc.
  • Before submitting, ensure you are not using words in the trademark name that are not allowed or will need further supporting documentation, such as country names or “British.”
  • You must select an international trademark class(es) for your submission. There is a cost per code. Your registration will be protected within this class(es). Another company can use the same registration but with different trademark classes.
  • For example, one organisation could Access China class 38 (Telecoms) and 42 (IT Services), while another could Access China class 43 (hotels). Both organisations can use the trade to gain Access to China only in the classes stated in the registration.
  • This submission must be accurate. Being 99% right is not enforceable in Chinese trademark law. Get the papers checked thoroughly before submission.
  • The Chinese authorities review the paper
  • The Chinese authorities will review the information submitted. This comprehensive process can take up to three months to complete.

Rejected and accepted applications

Chinese trademark registration rejected

The Chinese authorities can reject the registration request. They will give their reasoning.

  • If it is for missing information, this can often be corrected.
  • If a change to the brand name spelling, etc., is required, a new submission/money is often needed.

Chinese trademark registration acceptance

Once you have an agreement and the paperwork from the Chinese authorities, you can start using the trademark in China, knowing it is protected.

Once a trademark registration is accepted, a two-year " cooling-off period.” During this period, any party can challenge your registration. Although the challenge is unlikely to succeed, there is no guarantee, and it could result in significant time and financial commitments to resolve.

Once the two years have passed, the trademark can no longer be challenged unless you have not used it in China for over three years.

Cooling-off period: Once accepted, there is a two-year cooling-off period where any party can challenge your registration.

Renewal processes

Depending on the registration type, you may be required to renew every 10 to 15 years.

The Chinese registration authorities can accept an application by another business or person (Chinese or international) to take over your trademark if you have not used/traded it in China for three years.

Please understand the renewal process, rules and regulations, etc., before completing your trademark registration with your local agent.

Practical takeaway: Renewals are typically required every 10–15 years, and non-use for 3 years can allow takeover applications.

Trademark registration enables

  • Stop Chinese and international companies and people from using the registered trademark in China.
  • Use your trademark on the internet, e.g., e-Malls, social media, etc. On request, the Chinese platform must take down any use of your trademark without your written consent. You may have researched the use of your trademark as part of your submission to the Chinese platforms.
  • Request that the domains registered under your trademark be closed.
  • Stop factories from reproducing your trademark.

Please note that this must be performed proactively. This will not happen by default.

At this stage of the process, we recommend that if enforcement is needed, a local Chinese legal firm be used. A local legal contact is far more successful than an international firm in most countries. Chinese vs. Chinese works faster. Usually, a simple letter to the Chinese legal firm will force the issues.


Your trademark is already registered in China

If your trademark is already registered in China, you can take little action. This is why starting your trademark registration as soon as possible is so important.

Options available

  • If the trademark is registered within the first 2 years, you can appeal to the Chinese registration authorities. This is not usually successful.
  • If you prove that the Trademark has not been used in China for the last three years, you can apply to take over the trademark.
  • Purchase the trademark registration. This is often expensive.
  • Ensure your trademark is registered outside China to prevent copies of your brand, products, etc., from being exported into your existing market.
  • Create a different trademark name for the Chinese market. This can create an opportunity for a meaningful trade name for the Chinese market.

Chinese patent registration

Firstly, this process is the same as the one for trademark registration.

Like with trademark registration, we recommend starting with the trade organisation in your local country.

Chinese software registration

You can register software in China to protect it from cloning. To do so, give the registration authority your first and last 10 to 30 pages of program coding. You do not provide a full copy of your system coding.

This generally does not protect your software from reverse engineering. This is the case with most software worldwide.

Chinese copyright

Copyright is one of the hardest to enforce in China. The growing use of AI databases to store media, papers, and other digital content is becoming a global problem. We need to wait to see how the issue of copyright protection worldwide is resolved.

We recommend registering a Chinese trademark for all your copyrighted material. It should create clear ownership.

Do not do this if you have no registered trademark in China. You will make it easier to copy material. A local or international company or person can register your trademark in China, which could help protect it with copyright enforcement.

i.e., you could be publishing your copyright material in China with their trademark

We recommend seeking advice or joining professional trading organisations in an appropriate industry, such as music, books, film, etc.

Chinese intellectual property rights

 

Quick checklist

Use this as a fast scan before investing deeper.

  • Have you registered key trademarks in mainland China (in your company name)?
  • Have you checked conflicts in the China trademark database before submission?
  • Have you selected the correct trademark classes (class-specific protection)?
  • Do you have a renewal calendar (10–15 years depending on type)?
  • Can you evidence “use” in China (reduce 3-year non-use takeover risk)?
  • If manufacturing in China, is IP registered before production starts?
Common pitfall: Relying on overseas registrations only. Enforcement in China is strongest when the registration is local.

Need help?

If you would like support reviewing IP protection for China (trademarks, domains, and takedown workflows), please get in contact. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.