China Flag

China

Country Rating  » Star Rating Icon

Capital Gains Taxes (%) - China Compared to Continent

Footnote

Sort: Alphabetically  |  Ascending Rank  |  Descending Rank

Cambodia 15.00%
China 4.66%
Hong Kong 0.00%
India 16.95%
Indonesia 0.00%
Japan 3.98%
Malaysia 5.18%
Pakistan 25.08%
Philippines 0.00%
Singapore 0.00%
South Korea 9.12%
Sri Lanka 0.00%
Taiwan 21.11%
Thailand 30.00%
Vietnam 23.49%

 

 

China: Capital gains taxes (%).

In arriving at effective capital gains tax rates, the Global Property Guide makes the following assumptions:

  • The property is directly and jointly owned by husband and wife;
  • They have owned it for 10 years;
  • It is their only source of capital gains in the country
  • It has appreciated in value by 100% over the 10 years to sale
  • The property was worth US$250,000 or €250,000 at purchase.
  • It is not their sole or principal residence.


These assumptions are critical. In many countries a holding period of less than 5 years results in capital gains being taxable. But a longer holding period often results in no capital gains tax being payable. For more details see the Data FAQ


Source: Global Property Guide Research, Contributing Accounting Firms

 

China has poor house price statistics. The National Bureau of Statistics of China (NBSC) has quarterly house price time-series but these are not publicly available. Another source of house price indices is eHomeday, Shanghai's largest property market web site, which has time-series for Shanghai, Nanjing, Hangzhou, Beijing, Yangzhou and Suzhou (but the site is only in Chinese, and no time-series are available). Colliers International publishes useful housing data in their quarterly property market reviews. General economics statistics are available from the NBSC and the People’s Bank of China.




Subscribe to our Newsletter!

Enter your email address to sign up.