E-Malt. E-Malt.com News article: China: China’s tax authority closes consumption tax loophole for brewers

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E-Malt.com News article: China: China’s tax authority closes consumption tax loophole for brewers
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From 1 April 2026 Chinese brewers are no longer be able reduce their consumption tax liabilities by lowering declared product pricing using affiliated distributors, Asia Brewers Network reported.

China’s State Administration of Taxation (SAT) has tightened its consumption tax regime for brewers by closing a long-standing loophole that allowed them to reduce their tax liabilities, according to report by Yicai Global, the English-language digital news service of Shanghai-based Yicai Media Group, one of China’s leading financial media groups.

Under the revised rules, formally announced on 2 April 2026 by SAT in an official announcement that took effect from 1 April 2026, beer producers must now calculate consumption tax based on the higher of their ex-factory selling price or the market price realised by affiliated distributors. Previously, some brewers had established related sales companies and distributors and transferred products to them at artificially low prices, thereby lowering the taxable base.

The new framework effectively eliminates this practice by aligning tax calculations with the ultimate market pricing. Consumption tax represents a substantial fiscal burden for brewers in China. Industry data cited shows that for some listed producers the levy can account for between 70% and 75% of their total tax bill.

The reform comes amid a wider restructuring of China’s fiscal system, with policymakers seeking to enhance revenue stability and reduce aggressive tax planning. Recent policy signals from Beijing have stressed the need to align tax collection more closely with actual consumption and market activity, particularly in sectors such as alcohol where pricing opacity has historically been an issue.

For the beer industry, the immediate impact is likely to be an increase in effective tax burdens for companies that previously relied on such affiliated distribution channels. Major domestic brewers such as China Resources Beer and Tsingtao Brewery, alongside multinational operators including Anheuser-Busch InBev, are expected to be impacted and will need to review pricing structures, distribution models and compliance systems in response.

The measure will also likely reinforce the ongoing drive into premiumisation in China’s beer sector which typically focuses on higher-margin products that can better absorb the additional tax impact than mass-market brews.



17 April, 2026

   
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