Terminating employees in China is notoriously difficult. Chinese labor law strongly favors employees, and improper terminations frequently result in costly disputes. Understanding the rules before you act is essential.
Key Point: Unlike "at-will" employment in the US, you cannot simply fire an employee in China. You need valid legal grounds and must follow proper procedures.
Legal Grounds for Termination
Immediate Termination (No Severance)
You can terminate without severance only if the employee:
- Fails probation period requirements (must be documented)
- Seriously violates company rules (rules must be properly established)
- Causes major damage through serious dereliction of duty
- Has employment relationships with other employers affecting work
- Uses fraud or coercion to induce the employment contract
- Is criminally prosecuted
Termination With Notice/Severance
With 30 days' notice (or payment in lieu) plus severance, you can terminate if:
- Employee cannot perform job after medical treatment period
- Employee is incompetent and remains so after training or reassignment
- Circumstances have materially changed making the contract unperformable
Economic Layoffs
Mass layoffs (20+ employees or 10%+ of workforce) require:
- Valid business reasons (restructuring, serious difficulties, etc.)
- 30 days' advance explanation to union/employees
- Report to labor bureau
- Priority retention and rehiring rules
Protected Employees
Certain employees cannot be terminated (except for serious misconduct):
- Employees with occupational diseases or work injuries
- Employees during medical treatment period
- Female employees during pregnancy, maternity leave, or nursing period
- Employees who have worked 15+ years and are within 5 years of retirement
Severance Calculation
When severance is required:
- Formula: One month's salary × years of service
- Partial years: 6+ months = 1 year; less than 6 months = 0.5 month
- Salary cap: 3× local average salary (for high earners)
- Service cap: Maximum 12 months for high earners
Common Mistakes
1. Inadequate Documentation
"Poor performance" terminations fail because employers cannot prove:
- Clear performance standards were communicated
- Employee was given opportunity to improve
- Training or reassignment was attempted
2. Invalid Company Rules
Rules must be:
- Lawful in content
- Adopted through democratic procedures (employee input)
- Communicated to employees (with proof)
3. Procedural Failures
- Not notifying the union before termination
- Not providing written termination notice
- Not following internal procedures
The Termination Process
- Review grounds: Confirm you have valid legal basis
- Check protections: Ensure employee isn't in a protected category
- Gather documentation: Compile evidence supporting termination
- Union notification: Inform union of intended termination
- Written notice: Provide formal termination letter
- Exit procedures: Handle handover, final pay, social insurance
Negotiated Termination
Often the safest approach is mutual agreement:
- Negotiate a separation package
- Get signed release agreement
- Typically costs more than statutory severance
- But avoids litigation risk
If the Employee Disputes
Employees can file labor arbitration claims within one year. If you lose:
- Reinstatement: Employee can demand their job back
- Double severance: If reinstatement isn't practical, you pay 2× normal severance
- Back pay: Wages from termination to ruling
Need to Terminate an Employee?
I help foreign companies navigate employee terminations in China, minimizing legal risk and ensuring compliance. Get advice before you act.
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