
LegislationCN
Decree No. 835
Chinese State Council executive decree of 13 April 2026 creating a Malicious Entity List as a reserve counter-sanctions instrument against the US.
Last refreshed: 28 April 2026
Key Question
Will China activate Decree No. 835 against US firms before the 24 May OFAC deadline expires?
Timeline for Decree No. 835
#8429 Apr
Mentioned in: Hengli cuts Singapore arm to 5%
Iran Conflict 2026#8428 Apr
Mentioned in: OFAC sb0477 hits Iran shadow banking
Iran Conflict 2026#8226 Apr
Mentioned in: GL-V opens a 24 May Iran deadline
Iran Conflict 2026#8213 Apr
Mentioned in: China's Decree 835 sits in reserve
Iran Conflict 2026Common Questions
- What is China's Decree No. 835 and what does it do?
- Decree No. 835 is a Chinese State Council executive order issued on 13 April 2026 that creates a Malicious Entity List. It gives the government power to freeze assets, ban entry and restrict investment for designated foreign entities. It was issued 11 days before the US sanctioned Hengli Petrochemical.Source: Lowdown
- Has China used Decree 835 against any US companies?
- No. As of 28 April 2026 the decree remained unactivated. Beijing held its response to the Hengli designation at embassy-level protest without listing any US entities under the new instrument.Source: Lowdown
- Why did China issue Decree 835 before the US sanctioned Hengli?
- The 11-day gap between the decree's issue date (13 April) and the OFAC Hengli designation (24 April) suggests Beijing had advance intelligence of the US action and prepared its counter-sanctions framework before the designation was announced.Source: Lowdown
Background
State Council Decree No. 835 was issued on 13 April 2026 — eleven days before OFAC's Hengli designation — creating a Malicious Entity List with asset-freeze, entry-ban and investment-restriction powers, assigned to the Ministry of Justice . As of 28 April it remained unactivated; law firm Morrison Foerster published early compliance analysis .
How the World Sees Them
China
The State Council frames the decree as a sovereign legal instrument protecting Chinese companies from extraterritorial US jurisdiction, consistent with China's longstanding opposition to unilateral sanctions.
United States
US sanctions lawyers and OFAC analysts view Decree No. 835 as China's most structurally significant counter-sanctions instrument to date; its non-activation is seen as a signal of Beijing's reluctance to escalate before the 24 May wind-down expires.
Multinational corporations
Law firms including Morrison Foerster advise clients that Decree No. 835 creates a potential compliance conflict for multinationals operating in both the US and China — they could face conflicting legal obligations if the decree is activated.