Minimum Wages in China: A Complete Guide (2024)

Posted by China Briefing Written by Qian Zhou Reading Time: 9 minutes

Minimum wages in China continue to rise in 2024. We offer a guide to minimum wages in the Chinese Mainland and discuss how labor costs are affected by changes to the minimum wage levels.

Minimum wages in China continue to rise.

As of February 19, 2024, Shanghai has the highest monthly minimum wage among 31 provinces (RMB 2,690/US$370 per month), and Beijing has the highest hourly minimum wage (RMB 26.4/US$3.7 per hour). 21 regions – Anhui, Beijing, Chongqing, Fujian, Gansu, Guangdong (including Shenzhen), Hainan, Hebei, Henan, Hubei, Jiangsu, Jiangxi, Liaoning, Ningxia, Shaanxi, Shandong, Shanghai, Sichuan, Tianjin, and Zhejiang – have surpassed the RMB 2,000 (US$275) mark in their monthly minimum wage standards.

At the lower end of the wage spectrum, Jilin and Xinjiang’s minimum wage level (RMB 1,540 per month) is slightly higher than that in Heilongjiang (RMB 1,450 per month).

In 2023, 14 provinces including Anhui, Beijing, Guangxi, Guizhou, Gansu, Hainan, Hebei, Qinghai, Shaanxi, Shandong, Shanghai, Shanxi, Tianjin, and Yunnan have raised their minimum wage standards.

Coming into 2024, the new minimum wage standards of Hennan, Jiangsu, and Zhejiang took effect from January 1. Hubei’s new minimum wage standards will be effective from February 1. Ningxia’s new minimum wage standard will take effect from March 1, 2024. Jiangxi’s new minimum wage standard will take effect from April 1, 2024. Liaoning’s new minimum wage standards will come into effect on May 1.

What is the minimum wage in China?

According to China’s Provisions on Minimum Wage, the legal minimum wage refers to the minimum labor remunerations that shall be paid by the employers to the employees under the precondition that the employee has provided normal labor within the promissory working hours or within the working hours that is prescribed in the labor contracts.

The minimum wage standards are determined by provincial governments by taking into consideration factors, such as the minimum living costs of local employees and their dependents, the urban residents’ consumption price index, the social insurance premiums, and the housing funds paid by the employees themselves, the average salary of the employees, the level of local economic development, the local employment status, etc.

In general, the minimum wage standards appear in two forms, namely the monthly minimum wage standard and the hourly minimum wage standard. The monthly minimum wage standard applies to full-time employees while the hourly minimum wage standard applies to non-fulltime employees, such as part-time and temporary employees.

To be noted, the minimum wage is just the basic wage that employers must pay their employees, which excludes overtime pay, night shift allowance, summer high-temperature allowance, the special working environment allowance, and subsidies for meals, transportation, and housing.

Nevertheless, China’s minimum wage standards do include the social insurance premiums and housing fund contributions paid by employees in most regions. In fact, it is possible that the employee’s take-home pay is lower than the corresponding minimum wage standard in these regions. Only a few regions, such as Shanghai, clearly stipulate in their local rules that their local minimum wage standards exclude social insurance premiums and housing fund contributions.

Local governments in China are generally required to update their minimum wages every few years but have the flexibility to adjust wages according to local conditions.

Most provinces set different classes of minimum wage levels for different areas depending on the given region’s level of development and cost of living. For example, a higher minimum wage class is established for the provincial capital and the most developed cities in the province, whereas smaller cities and rural areas fall under a lower wage class.

The minimum wage in China guide

A complete guide to China’s minimum wages can be found below.

Minimum Wages in China 2023

Province/regionClassCity/urban area*Monthly minimum wage (RMB)Hourly minimum wage (RMB)Effective date
AnhuiAHefei2,060212023.3.1
BBengbu

Huaibei

Huainan

Xuancheng

1,93020
CAnqing

Fuyang

Huangshan

1,87019
DCertain county-level cities1,78018
Beijing2,42026.42023.09.01
ChongqingACertain suburban districts and counties2,100212022.04.01
BCertain suburban districts and counties2,00020
FujianAXiamen2,030212022.04.01
BFuzhou

Quanzhou

Pingtan FTZ

1,96020.5
CZhangzhou

Ningde

1,81019
DSanming

Nanping

1,66017.5
GansuALanzhou

Jiayuguan

Yumen

Dunhuang

2,020212023.11.01
BHezuo1,96020.5
CLinxia1,91020
DCertain county-level cities1,85019.5
GuangdongAGuangzhou2,30022.22021.12.01 (Shenzhen’s minimum wage standards were effective since January 1, 2022)
Shenzhen2,360
BZhuhai

Foshan

Dongguan

Zhongshan

1,90018.1
CShantou

Huizhou

Jiangmen

Zhanjiang

Zhaoqing

1,72017
DOther cities1,62016.1
GuangxiANanning

Liuzhou

Guilin

Wuzhou

Beihai

Fangchenggang

Qinzhou

1,99020.12023.11.01
BYulin

Baise

Guigang

1,84018.6
CCertain county-level cities1,69017
GuizhouAGuiyang

Qingzhen

Chishui

1,89019.62023.02.01
BKaiyang1,76018.3
CXifeng

Xiuwen

1,66017.2
HainanAHaikou

Sanya

Yangpu Economic Development Zone

2,01017.92023.12.01
BQionghai

Danzhou

Sansha

1,85016.3
HebeiAShijiazhuang

Baoding

Langfang

Tangshan

Qinghuangdao

Cangzhou

Handan

2,200222023.01.01
BXintai

Hengshui

Zhangjiakou

Chengde

2,00020
CCertain country-level cities1,80018
HeilongjiangAHarbin (except certain districts)

Daqin

1,860182021.04.01
BQiqihar

Mudanjiang

Jiamusi

Suihua

1,61014
CHeihe

Yinchun

Daxinganling

1,45013
HenanAZhengzhou

Luoyang

Anyang

2,10020.62024.01.01
BKaifeng

Puyang

Nanyang

2,00019.6
CWeihui1,80017.6
HubeiAWuhan2,210222024.02.01
BHuangshi

Yichang

Huanggang

Tianmen

1,95019.5
CCertain county-level cities1,80018
Hunan***AChangsha

Zhuzhou

1,930192022.04.01
BXiangtan

Yueyang

Changde

1,74017
CZhangjiajie

Yongzhou

Yiyang

1,55015
Inner MongoliaAHohhot

Erenhot

1,98020.82021.12.01
BHulunbuir

Xilinhot

1,91020.1
CBayanur

Ulanhot

1,85019.5
JiangsuANanjing

Suzhou

Zhenjiang

Changzhou

Wuxi

2,490242024.01.01
BYangzhou

Nantong

Lianyungang

2,26022
CSuqian2,01020
JiangxiANanchang2,000202024.04.01
BJiujiang

Shangrao

Pingxiang

Ji’an

1,87018.7
CYichun

Fuzhou

1,74017.4
JilinAChangchun1,880192021.12.01
BJilin

Songyuan

Yanji

Huichun

1,76018
CSiping

Liaoyuan

Tonghua

Baishan

Qianguo county

Fusong county

1,64017
DBaicheng and the rest counties (cities)1,54016
LiaoningADalian

Shenyang

2,100212024.05.01
BAnshan

Dandong

Fushun

Yingkou

1,90019
CChaoyang

f*ckin

1,70017
NingxiaAYinchuan

Shizuishan

2,050202024.03.01
BLingwu

Wuzhong

Zhongwei

1,90018
Qinghai1,880182023.02.01
ShaanxiAXi’an2,160212023.05.01
BBaoji

Hancheng

Hanzhong

Tongchuan

Weinan

Xianyang

Yan’an

Yulin

2,05020
CAnkang

Shangluo

1,95019
ShandongADongying

Jinan

Qingdao

Weifang

Weihai

Yantai

Zibo

2,200222023.10.01
BBinzhou

Jinning

Linyi

Rizhao

Tai’an

Zaozhuang

1,90019
CDezhou

Heze

Liaocheng

1,82018
Shanghai2,690242023.07.01
ShanxiAMost districts under Taiyuan; some districts and county-level cities under Datong, Changzhi, Jincheng, Shuozhou, Yizhou, Jinzhong, Linfen, Lvliang, and Yuncheng1,98021.32023.01.01
BMost county-level cities under Datong, Changzhi, Shuozhou, Yizhou, Jinzhong, Linfen, and Yuncheng1,88020.2
COther county-level cities1,78019.1
Sichuan***AChengdu2,100222022.04.01
BCertain districts under the jurisdiction of Chengdu1,97021
COther districts and county-level cities1,87020
Tianjin2,32024.42023.11.01
Tibet1,850182021.05.25
XinjiangAKaramay

Taxkorgan Tajik Autonomous Region

1,900192021.04.01
BChangji

Shixenze

Urumqi

Wujyachu

1,70017
CAksu

Arai

Kashgar

Korla

Kumul

Tumxuk

Turpan

Wusu

1,62016.2
DAtlay

Atush

Bortala

Dacheng

Gulja

Kuytun

1,54015.4
YunnanAKunming1,990192023.10.01
BCertain counties under the jurisdiction of Kunming1,84018
COther county-level cities1,69017
Zhejiang***AHangzhou

Ningbo

Wenzhou

2,490242024.01.01
BHuzhou

Jinhua

Shaoxing

Taizhou

2,26022
CLishui

Zhoushan

2,01020

Notes:

*Certain provinces setminimumwagestandards at the county or district level. The cities listed in the table are examples and are not exhaustive.

**Highlighted areas denote jurisdictions that updated theirminimumwage in 2023. The monthly minimumwageis for full-time employment while the hourlyminimumwageis for part-time employment.

*** Hunan, Zhejiang, and Sichuan provinces allow each city to decide whichminimumwagelevel to apply. The cities given as examples are therefore subject to change.

What is affected by theminimumwage increase?

As the minimum wage rises, minimum standards for other employee benefits, such as overtime pay, other allowances, and subsidies, increase in kind.

Housing fund

The minimum contribution base of the housing fund in many cities is the same as the local minimum wage standards. The change of the minimum wage means the adjustment of the housing fund contribution base in the following months. The ceiling of the housing fund contribution base is usually three times the local average monthly salary of employees in the previous year and the floor of the housing fund contribution base is usually the same as the local minimum wage standard.

To be noted, however, the adjustment of the housing fund contribution base is not always in sync with the change in the minimum wage standard. For example, to reduce labor costs and help struggling businesses survive in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Shanghai government decided that its minimum contribution base of the housing fund in 2021 will follow the 2020 minimum wage standard, rather than the 2021 one.

Companies are suggested to pay attention to announcements from the local government.

Wages during the probation period

Article 20 of the Labor Contract Law stipulates that the wage amount of a worker during their probation period shall not be less than the lowest wage amount for the same job position in the employer’s organization or 80 percent of the wage amount agreed in the labor contract and shall not be less than the minimum wage standard of the locality of the employer.

Therefore, the wages paid by the enterprise to the probationary employees who are on regular attendance should not be lower than the corresponding standard amount.

Wages during sick leave

Different cities have different standards regarding sick leave payments. But one universal rule is that the sick leave wage shall not be lower than 80 percent of the local minimum wage, according to the Opinions on Several Issues concerning the Implementation of the Labor Law of the People’s Republic of China (Lao Bu Fa [1995] No. 309).

Correspondingly, the minimum sick leave wage standard shall be adjusted with the increase of the local minimum wage standard.

Severance payment

Article 27 of the Implementation Regulations for the Labor Contract Law of the People’s Republic of China stipulates that the monthly salary used for calculating the severance payment to an employee shall be no less than the local minimum wage standard. If the average pay of the employee in the 12 months before the termination of the labor contract is less than the local minimum wage standard, the local minimum wage standard shall be used to calculate the severance payment.

Wages during the suspension of work or production

Companies may decide to suspend their businesses or production in the wake of internal or external difficulties, such as during lockdowns caused by the pandemic. According to relevant provisions on wage payment during the period of suspension of production:

  • If the suspension period is within one wage payment cycle, salaries shall be paid according to the standards stipulated in the labor contract; and
  • If the suspension period goes beyond one wage payment cycle, the living allowance shall be paid by the enterprise, and the living allowance shall be implemented in accordance with the relevant local regulations.

Referring to the regulations of Zhejiang Province, Hubei Province, and Shaanxi Province, the employer is required to pay a living allowance of 70~80 percent of the local minimum wage.

Wages of dispatched employees

According to Article 58 of the Labor Contract Law, during the period in which a dispatched worker is not assigned any work duties, the labor dispatch agency shall pay the worker remuneration on a monthly basis pursuant to the local minimum wage standard.

Wages of injured workers

Article 35 and Article 36 of the Regulations on Work-Related Injury Insurance stipulates that where a worker who sustained a work injury is certified grade 1 to grade 6 disability, he/she shall enjoy corresponding benefits, such as a one-off disability subsidy and monthly disability allowance covered by the work-related injury insurance fund in accordance with the disability grading, among other factors.

Regarding the monthly disability allowance, the injured workers shall be paid at 60-90 percent of their average monthly wage in the 12 months before the injury. Where the amount of disability allowance calculated is less than the local minimum wage standard, the shortfall shall be covered by the work-related injury insurance fund.

Unemployment insurance benefits

The Guiding Opinions of the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security and the Ministry of Finance on Adjusting the Criteria for Unemployment Insurance Benefits (Ren She Bu Fa [2017] No.71) stipulates that:

With the development of the society and economy, all provinces shall, on the premise of ensuring a sustainable fund, appropriately improve the level of unemployment security step by step, to improve the unemployment insurance benefit criteria to 90 percent of the local minimum wage standard.

In practice, unemployment insurance benefits are usually paid at 70-80 percent of the local minimum wage standard.

Impact on China’s labor costs

Minimum wages only tell part of the story of labor costs in China.

As China’s economy moves up the value chain and makes the transition to innovation and services, most workers employed by foreign-invested enterprises earn above the minimum wage.

For example, workers in Shanghai made an average of RMB 10,338 (US$1,632) per month through 2020 – nearly four times the local minimum wage.

Moreover, employer social insurance and housing fund obligations add around an additional 37 percent to employers’ labor costs on top of the employee’s gross salary.

For foreign investors, rising wages are an unavoidable feature of doing business in China. Yet, when other factors like productivity, infrastructure, transportation costs, and access to a massive domestic market are considered – China may still emerge as themore cost-efficient optioncompared to countries with lower statutory labor costs.

When comparing locations for foreign investment in China, minimum wages are a helpful barometer to gauge labor costs across different regions.

From there, identifying industry-specific wage levels, availability of talent, and access to regional incentives offers a more nuanced view of ultimate labor costs within a given region.

(The article was first published on January 2, 2020, and was last updated on January 17, 2024.)

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China Briefing is written and produced by Dezan Shira & Associates. The practice assists foreign investors into China and has done so since 1992 through offices in Beijing, Tianjin, Dalian, Qingdao, Shanghai, Hangzhou, Ningbo, Suzhou, Guangzhou, Dongguan, Zhongshan, Shenzhen, and Hong Kong. Please contact the firm for assistance in China at china@dezshira.com.

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