Data & Privacy · China
Data & Privacy - China
China operates a comprehensive, GDPR-influenced personal-data regime anchored by the PIPL, which sets out legal bases for processing, individual rights, consent rules, and cross-border transfer mechanisms. It sits alongside two other 'pillar' laws — the Data Security Law (governing data classification and 'important data') and the Cybersecurity Law (governing network security and critical information infrastructure). The CAC is the lead regulator, with enforcement intensifying in 2025-2026 through amended CSL penalties and new cross-border certification measures.
The PIPL, effective 1 November 2021, is China's dedicated, omnibus personal-data law establishing legal bases for processing, consent (including 'separate consent' for sensitive data and transfers), and individual rights such as access, correction, deletion, and portability.
The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) leads overall planning, coordination, and enforcement of personal-information protection, issuing implementing rules, conducting investigations, levying fines, and ordering suspension of non-compliant services; relevant ministries and county-level-and-above departments share sectoral supervision.
The PIPL (personal data) operates alongside the Data Security Law (data classification and 'important data' protection) and the Cybersecurity Law (network security and critical information infrastructure operators), forming China's integrated data-governance architecture.
Transfers of personal data abroad require one of three routes — a CAC security assessment, certification by an accredited body, or CAC standard contractual clauses — plus separate notice and consent; new Measures on Certification for Cross-Border Transfer of Personal Information took effect 1 January 2026.
Handlers must adopt internal management systems and technical security measures, conduct personal-information protection impact assessments for high-risk processing, and notify the supervisory authority and affected individuals of data breaches with remedial action.
Amendments to the Cybersecurity Law, effective 1 January 2026, raise the general administrative fine cap from RMB 1 million to RMB 10 million, broaden extraterritorial reach, and remove the prior-warning requirement, allowing immediate fines; the CAC's January 2026 PIPL Q&A signals a shift toward documentation and accountability enforcement.
Machine-assisted translation · verified 5/23/2026 · orientation, not legal advice. English version →