How to Collect Debt from a Chinese Company

A Chinese company owes you money and won't pay. It's a frustrating situation that many foreign businesses face. Here's a practical guide to your options for recovering what you're owed.

Before You Begin: Assess Your Situation

Before spending time and money on collection efforts, honestly evaluate:

Step 1: Direct Communication

Start with direct contact. Sometimes non-payment is due to cash flow issues, disputes, or simple oversight rather than bad faith.

Step 2: Formal Demand Letter

If informal contact fails, send a formal lawyer's letter. This signals you're serious and often prompts payment or negotiation. The letter should:

Effectiveness: A well-drafted lawyer's letter resolves many cases without litigation. Companies often pay when they realize you have legal representation and are prepared to sue.

Step 3: Litigation or Arbitration

If the debtor still won't pay, you'll need to pursue legal action.

Check Your Contract

Your contract's dispute resolution clause determines your options:

Litigation Process

  1. Prepare and file complaint with supporting evidence
  2. Court accepts case and serves defendant
  3. Defendant responds
  4. Court hearing(s)
  5. Judgment

Timeline: Typically 6-12 months for straightforward cases.

Step 4: Enforcement

Winning a judgment is only half the battle. You then need to enforce it.

Enforcement Measures in China

The Blacklist Effect: China's social credit system for businesses means that being listed as a "dishonest judgment debtor" has serious consequences. This gives debtors strong incentive to pay.

Alternative: Asset Investigation First

Before investing in litigation, consider investigating the debtor's assets. There's no point winning a judgment against a company with nothing to seize. A lawyer can help conduct:

Costs and Considerations

Debt collection costs in China include:

Prevention for the Future

  1. Conduct due diligence before extending credit
  2. Use clear written contracts with dispute resolution clauses
  3. Consider requiring deposits or letters of credit for large orders
  4. Monitor payment patterns and act quickly on delays
  5. Build relationships but verify

Owed Money by a Chinese Company?

I can help you assess your options and pursue recovery. Free initial consultation.

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