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With the acceleration of the global economic digitalization process, cross-border e-commerce tax supervision is ushering in significant changes.

Starting from this October, the "Regulations on the Submission of Tax-Related Information by Internet Platform Enterprises" promoted by the State Taxation Administration has been officially implemented, requiring all cross-border platforms to submit Chinese sellers' identity and income data to the tax authorities.

This new regulation not only reshapes the tax collection and management model, but also has a profound impact on seller operations, platform strategies, and the industry ecosystem.

 

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Core Content of the New Regulation and Differentiated Platform Responses

The new regulation clearly stipulates that both domestic and overseas cross-border e-commerce platforms must regularly provide tax authorities with sellers' identity information, sales income, and transaction details. The first submission must cover data from July to September, and subsequent submissions will be carried out quarterly.

Among them, sellers with annual sales exceeding 5 million yuan must register as general taxpayers, and it is strictly forbidden to evade tax responsibilities by splitting income or changing entities. If the platform fails to fulfill its obligations, it will bear corresponding legal responsibilities.  

At present, AliExpress and Shein have proactively issued notices to sellers, requiring them to summarize all-channel income and declare on time. However, international platforms such as Amazon have not yet made public statements, possibly due to the complexity of their global business systems and the need for time to adjust compliance processes.

However, the universality of the regulation means that all platforms will eventually need to adapt to the new rules, otherwise they will face market access risks.

 

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Seller Survival Rules: Compliance Challenges and Strategic Transformation  

For sellers, the implementation of the new regulation is both a pressure and an opportunity.

On the one hand, tax transparency directly increases operating costs and compliance burdens. Sellers with annual sales exceeding 5 million yuan need to switch to general taxpayers, which means stricter accounting management and higher tax declaration complexity. Some small and medium-sized sellers who rely on tax incentives may face shrinking profit margins or even be forced to optimize their business structure.  

On the other hand, the new regulation forces sellers to move towards refined operations. Enterprises need to reorganize financial processes, integrate multi-platform income data, and use professional tax tools to improve efficiency.

In the long run, compliance will eliminate speculative sellers and create a fairer competitive environment for companies that focus on brand building and long-term development.

Sellers can adopt three strategies to respond: First, proactively learn tax policies and make use of local government support measures for Tuke; second, optimize supply chains and pricing models to offset the impact of rising tax costs; third, turn compliance capabilities into competitiveness and win consumer trust through transparent operations.

 

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Platform Response: Compliance Operations Become an Inevitable Trend

For Tuke platforms, the new regulation not only affects sellers but also puts higher requirements on the platform's own compliance capabilities.

1. Increased Pressure on Data Submission

Platforms need to establish more comprehensive tax data management systems to ensure that they can accurately and promptly provide sellers' transaction information to tax authorities. Platforms with weaker technical capabilities may need to invest more resources in system upgrades.

2. Platform Policy Adjustments

Some platforms may adjust seller entry rules, such as raising entry thresholds or strengthening reviews, to reduce potential tax risks. In addition, platforms may launch more tax assistance tools to help sellers simplify the declaration process.

3. Industry Concentration May Increase

Due to rising compliance costs, some small sellers may exit the market, while sellers with stronger financial strength and better compliance capabilities will have more competitive advantages. In the long run, the industry may become more concentrated at the top, and the competitive landscape among platforms may also change accordingly.

 

Image source:Google

Conclusion

The implementation of the new cross-border e-commerce tax regulations marks the end of the era of rough industry growth and the beginning of compliant development.

From sellers' operational upgrades to platforms' strategic adjustments, from short-term pain to long-term healthy competition, this transformation will profoundly reshape the industry landscape.

In the future, only enterprises and platforms that proactively embrace compliance and focus on core competitiveness will be able to ride the wave of globalization and usher in a more transparent and sustainable new trade ecosystem.