this post was submitted on 06 May 2026
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Can PhD Holders Still Apply Directly in Shanghai for Chinese Permanent Residence? The New Policy Has Already Given the Answer

f you have lived in Shanghai, or have talked about this with friends, you have probably heard one common line:

👉“A PhD holder who works in Shanghai can directly apply for permanent residence.”

I. Many People Are Still Operating Under an Outdated Understanding

In the past, this statement was indeed true.

And in actual practice at that time, the process was also relatively lenient:

● Salary was not heavily emphasized● Work experience requirements were not strictly enforced● Whether the job was perfectly aligned with the applicant’s academic background was not examined so strictly

👉 So many people came to assume:

A PhD = a relatively direct pathway to Shanghai Permanent Residence

But now, that logic has changed.

And the change is not minor. The underlying rules themselves have been replaced.

I. The New Policy Has Two Clear Paths and You Must Qualify Under One of Them

Under the current policy, the PhD route to Shanghai Permanent Residence has effectively been divided into two clearly defined paths, and an applicant must satisfy at least one of them: Path 1: Income-Based Eligibility

● Continuous employment for at least 3 years● Annual income ≥ 3 times the Shanghai average salary● Normal tax payment record

👉 This path is closer to the traditional logic for “high-income talent.”

Path 2: Degree + Field Alignment Eligibility (This Is the Route Most PhD Holders Will Rely On)

● Continuous employment for at least 3 years● The applicant’s graduating institution must be:○ a Double First-Class university○ or a Global Top 100 university● The applicant’s current job responsibilities must be closely aligned with the PhD field of study

👉 This path appears to be “designed for PhD holders,”but in reality, the review is more detailed and more stringent.

III. The Core Change Can Actually Be Summed Up in One Sentence

If we had to summarize the key policy shift in one sentence, we would put it this way:

👉Before: having a PhD meant you could apply.👉Now: having a PhD only means you may enter the screening process. V. Two Typical Cases Show How the New Policy Works in Practice

✅ Case 1: The Applicant Meets the Criteria and the Case Moves Forward Smoothly

Case 1:  We submitted a PhD application just last week:

● PhD in Computer Science● University qualified within the Global Top 100● Worked in two companies in Shanghai, with a cumulative employment history of more than 3 years● Has consistently worked in technical positions that are highly aligned with the academic field 👉 This is a highly standard case:

It follows the Degree + Field Alignment Path.

So:

● There is no need to meet the 3-times-average-salary threshold● The core issue is whether the applicant’s work is

professionally aligned with the PhD field

👉 Under the new policy, this is a typical and workable route.

❌ Case 2: The Applicant’s Background Is Not Weak, Yet the Case Is Blocked Immediately

 Case 2: 

Another client who came to us for consultation had the following profile:

● PhD degree (but not from a Global Top 100 university)● Nearly 4 years of work experience in Shanghai● Income is good, but still below 3 times the Shanghai average salary● The position is management-oriented and only weakly related to the

PhD field

The problem is very clear:

👉 Neither of the two paths works:

● Income is insufficient → Path 1 does not apply● School background + field alignment do not satisfy the requirements →

Path 2 does not apply

👉 The result is:

In the past, this person could still try. Now, there is not even a qualifying path available.

V. Under the New Policy, PhD Holders Most Commonly Fall Into Three Traps

❌ 1. Assuming They “Must Be Eligible”

Many PhD holders instinctively think:👉 “I have the degree, so I should be fine.” But the real question now is:👉 It is no longer about whether you can file an application, but whether you actually qualify under a valid path.

❌ 2. Underestimating the Importance of Field Alignment

👉 Many people assume that working in a related industry is enough.

But what the review focuses on more closely is:

👉 Whether the work you are actually doing is directly related to your PhD research direction.

❌ 3. Failing to Plan the 3-Year Period in Advance

👉 The 3-year requirement is now rigid.

But even more importantly:

● Whether the employment is continuous● Whether the company is suitable● Whether the role is properly aligned

👉 In many cases, the outcome has effectively already been determined by the applicant’s first job.

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[–] xijinpingist@hexbear.net 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Their country, their rules. China has a very dark history with open borders policies. Western countries seized parts of the country and set up their own laws and courts.Foreigners were exempt from Chinese law. Now China's law applies to everyone. China is already wildly overcrowded, immigration of randos is the last thing they need. They're coming out of a 20 year period of loose visa policies. They used to hand them out like candy. I know a bunch of people who abused the crap out of that system. One man overstayed his visa for seven years before finally being caught. Turned out he had an interpol warrant out for him from Belgium for molesting kids. A lot of foreigners taught English in kindergartens.

[–] MayoPete@hexbear.net 3 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

With all due respect comrade some of these talking points are the same ones right wingers in the US use against immigrants here.

Overcrowding is a non-issue IMO. People will naturally migrate to more rural and suburban areas if an area is too crowded to afford.

Shitty people come from everywhere and I am certain there are some child molesters born and raised in China too. Immigrants are not more or less likely to commit crimes than anyone else. We know that criminality scales with poverty, not whether someone moves between countries!

I hear you on the history and agree that sucks, but that's not the fault of anyone trying to migrate today and it's not fair to use a few bad cases to deny everyone entry. IDK the circumstances that led to a parallel rule of law but again right wingers say the same things about "no-go zones" and "sharia law" with Muslim immigrants here.

I don't get this point? Like if I drive across a state border I am technically in another area with different laws and a different government. I just don't have to go through a checkpoint or need a expensive passport or have to jump through years of hoops to move there if I wish. I believe all borders should be treated th3 same way. Humans should be able to move between countries easily. Otherwise we are all just stuck in very large cages imposed by birth.

[–] CrawlMarks@hexbear.net 2 points 5 days ago

"With all due respect comrade some of these talking points are the same ones right wingers in the US use against immigrants here."

In the way of right wing hypocrisy immigration in america was notably bad for the native peoples

[–] xijinpingist@hexbear.net 5 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

In the old days there were a lot of bad foreigners who came to China to escape child support or outstanding warrants. The one with the interpol warrant was an extreme example but back then they didn't do criminal background checks. On the plus side, we all have to do annual health checks. As a result, there are zero sexually transmitted diseases among the foreign population. Anyone who fails the health check cannot get a residence permit renewed. China famously eliminated these diseases after liberation. There was a case of a US Marine embassy guard in Beijing who caught one of these diseases while on leave in Tokyo and doctors came from all around to observe the case: none of them had ever seen an STD before in their careers. China does have homegrown child sex offenders and deals with them according to their own laws.