Real estate developers in China can be searched by city, project type, service area, and profile status. Review developers, brokers, builders, property managers, commercial property firms, and construction-linked providers before contact. Use REDH profiles to compare company details before company-record checks, presale review, or serious project discussions begin.

  • List Date
  • Listing Title
  • Last Update
  • Comments
  • Author
  • Rank
  • Rate
Sort By

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page
10 AM to 7 PM

華發香港展廳 (Huafa Industrial) Hong Kong is best understood as the Hong Kong-based international promotion and investment arm of Huafa, rather than a standalone Hong Kong ...

地下A及I舖, Mercantile House, 184A~188號 Nathan Rd, Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page
9:30 AM to 1 PM

Yuen Fung Real Properties Co. Ltd is a Hong Kong property developer with roots going back to 1978, when the wider business first operated in ...

2203 Yuen Long Trade Centre, 99-109 Castle Peak Rd - Yuen Long, Yuen Long, Hong Kong

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page

Swire Properties Limited is a Hong Kong-headquartered, institutionally scaled property developer, owner, and manager best known for large mixed-use districts and long-hold commercial assets rather ...

64/F, 18 Westlands Rd, Quarry Bay, Hong Kong

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page
Off

Signature Homes is best understood as the luxury residential leasing platform of Sun Hung Kai Properties, rather than a standalone housing developer focused on new ...

3/F, 30 Harbour Rd, Wan Chai, Hong Kong

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page
Off

Salboy Group is a UK-based property developer, funding, and construction business focused on delivering residential and mixed-use projects across the United Kingdom, especially in major ...

Wilson House, 8 Wyndham St, Central, Hong Kong

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page
Off

London Square Hong Kong is best understood as the Hong Kong sales and client-facing office of UK residential developer London Square, rather than a separate ...

3406, 34/F, One Exchange Square, 8 Connaught Pl, Central, Hong Kong

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page
9 AM to 1 PM

LOFTER Group is a Hong Kong-based boutique property developer founded in 2012, with a focus on urban renewal, luxury residential, Grade A commercial, retail, and ...

18樓, Pioneer Centre, 750號 Nathan Rd, Mong Kok, Hong Kong

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page

Hongkong Land is a long-established property group in Hong Kong focused on premium commercial, mixed-use, and investment-led real estate rather than smaller stand-alone developments. Founded ...

8/F, One Exchange Square, 8 Connaught Pl, Central, Hong Kong

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page

Euro Properties is a Hong Kong-based international property investment and development firm rather than a purely local Hong Kong residential developer. It describes itself as ...

20/F, Hong Kong Diamond Exchange Building, 8-10 Duddell Street, Central, Hong Kong

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page
Off

The material you pasted appears to be for District15, not Sai Kung Realty Limited. Based on Sai Kung Realty’s own site and third-party listing sources, ...

Room 903, 28 Stanley St, Central, Hong Kong

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page
Off

Berkeley Group is a major UK residential developer focused on creating new homes and large neighbourhood-style communities across London, Birmingham, and the South of England. ...

Suite 3001, 30/F, The Landmark, Edinburgh Tower, 15 Queen's Road Central, Central, Hong Kong

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page
Off

Basel Capital is better understood as a boutique real estate investment and development firm than as a traditional Hong Kong property developer. Based on its ...

Unit 701, 11 Duddell St, Central, Hong Kong

Remove from compare list Add to compare list Go to Compare Page
10 AM to 6 PM

233 Prince Edward Road West operates in Hong Kong and focuses on property development associated with a specific residential or mixed-use address. Their categories point ...

233 Prince Edward Rd W, Kadoorie Hill, Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong

How to review real estate developers in China

Real estate developers in China can differ by city, project stage, company role, and buyer eligibility. A Shanghai developer, Beijing broker, Shenzhen project company, or construction-linked provider may each require different checks.

Start with the company profile. Review its location, website, service area, project focus, public links, and profile status. Then compare key details with official sources where needed.

For presale projects, users should ask about the legal project company, presale permit, contract filing, supervised payment route, construction progress, delivery date, and handover standards.

REDH supports early research, while final decisions should depend on current documents, local rules, and qualified advice.

Explore China companies by real estate focus

Real estate developers in China can work across residential, commercial, mixed-use, construction, brokerage, management, and investment roles. Users should compare each provider by actual focus, not only by brand name or city.

Residential developers may work with apartment towers, gated communities, urban renewal projects, or large district developments. Commercial property firms may focus on offices, retail centres, logistics parks, hotels, industrial buildings, or mixed-use assets.

Some providers support real estate activity without owning projects directly. These may include brokers, construction contractors, property managers, sales agents, design firms, and project consultants.

REDH categories help users narrow the search before contact. A clearer match between company focus and user need can save time when comparing presale homes, completed apartments, land-linked projects, commercial assets, or construction-linked services before document checks begin.

Official checks for China real estate developer research

Before contacting real estate developers in China, users should compare REDH profile details with official or public sources where possible. These checks can help confirm the legal company, project company, presale status, property-registration route, and contract party.

  • Use the National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System when checking the legal company behind a provider. It can help users review basic Chinese company information, including registered status and unified social credit code. 
  • Use local housing and urban-rural development bureau sources when checking presale permits, project filings, developer qualifications, or public project notices. These checks are often city-based.
  • Use local real estate transaction centres when reviewing contract filing, transfer steps, local purchase rules, and project transaction status.
  • Use immovable property registration sources when checking ownership registration, property-right certificates, mortgage registration, or transfer records.
  • Use city-level foreign-buyer guidance when the buyer is not a Chinese citizen. Beijing’s official guidance shows how purchase eligibility can depend on local review and residence-related conditions. 

These checks support early research before reservation payments, contract signing, mortgage steps, or legal review.

China real estate due diligence graphic with legal company, presale, transaction, registration and foreign buyer checks panel

Legal company and credit-information checks

Legal company checks are important when reviewing real estate developers in China because a sales brand may not be the same as the project company signing the contract.

Users should compare the REDH profile, developer website, sales office details, contract party, invoice name, and payment recipient. Key details may include the Chinese legal company name, unified social credit code, business licence, registered address, legal representative, and company status.

This matters for presale homes, completed apartments, commercial projects, and broker-led offers. If the developer brand, project company, or payment route does not match the documents, users should pause before signing or paying.

REDH profiles help users review the provider first, while legal company records help users confirm who is actually responsible for the project or offer.

Presale permit, delivery, and project-status checks

Presale projects in China need careful review because buyers may pay before the home is completed. Users should ask whether the project has a valid presale permit, how buyer funds are supervised, and whether construction progress matches the promised delivery date.

A clear developer should explain the project company, contract filing process, delivery standard, completion acceptance, handover route, and delay terms.

REDH profiles help users review the developer first, while presale permits, local project records, and payment protections should be checked separately before signing or paying.

China presale review card showing permits, funds, handover and delay checks, with layered developer panels, white UI layout.

Property-right and immovable-registration checks

Property-right checks are important when reviewing real estate developers in China because purchase rights should match official registration steps. Users should ask how the property will be registered after purchase, which local office handles the process, and what documents confirm transfer.

Key checks may include the immovable property ownership certificate, land-use right term, mortgage registration, contract filing, and any restrictions linked to the unit or project.

REDH profiles help users review the company first, while registration records help users check whether the asset can be properly transferred and recorded.

China property registration infographic showing ownership, land term, mortgage, filing, and transfer checks before sale step

City-level purchase rules and foreign-buyer checks

Property rules in China can differ by city, buyer status, property type, and intended use. Foreign buyers should not rely only on national-level summaries because local eligibility checks may decide whether a purchase can move forward.

Check areaWhat users should askWhy it matters
Buyer eligibilityDoes the city allow this buyer to purchase?Local rules may limit who can buy
Residence or work statusAre visa, work, or residence documents required?Some cities require local proof
Property useIs the property for personal residence or investment?Rules may differ by use case
Purchase limitCan the buyer own one or more homes?Some cities restrict additional purchases
Transfer processWhich local office handles registration?Needed for legal completion
Payment routeHow will funds, mortgage, and currency steps work?Cross-border payments need review

Before paying, users should ask the developer, broker, and legal adviser to confirm local eligibility, contract filing steps, and property-registration requirements. REDH profiles support early research, while city-level rules should be checked separately before signing.

Mainland China and Hong Kong property checks

Mainland China and Hong Kong should not be reviewed as one property system. A developer may work across both markets, but users should check the legal company, property records, agent licensing, and transaction process in the correct jurisdiction.

In mainland China, users may need to check the legal company through the National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System, then review local presale permits, contract filing, supervised payment arrangements, delivery status, and immovable property registration steps. China has a unified immovable property registration system, but many project checks still depend on the city and the local housing bureau.

In Hong Kong, users should check company details through the Companies Registry, land records through the Land Registry / IRIS, and agent licensing through the Estate Agents Authority. The Land Registry allows searches of land records through IRIS, while the EAA licence search helps users confirm whether an estate agent is currently licensed.

REDH profiles help users compare the provider first, but mainland China and Hong Kong checks should stay separate before payment, contract signing, or project review.

Mainland China and Hong Kong property checks graphic with separate panels for permits, land records, agent and filing process

Price comparison checks for China and Hong Kong projects

Price checks matter when reviewing real estate developers in China because mainland cities and Hong Kong can sit in very different price bands. Users should not compare a Shanghai presale apartment, a lower-tier city project, and a Hong Kong private unit as if they follow the same market logic.

Market areaRecent price signalWhat users should compare before contact
Shanghai new housingAbout RMB 61,185 per sqm in October 2025Presale permit, project location, delivery risk, developer strength
Shenzhen new housingAbout RMB 52,250 per sqm in October 2025Policy changes, completed supply, payment supervision
Beijing new housingAbout RMB 46,583 per sqm in October 2025District, school-zone claims, purchase eligibility
Guangzhou new housingAbout RMB 25,120 per sqm in October 2025Project stage, transport access, local demand
100-city mainland averageAbout RMB 17,084 per sqm in December 2025City tier, inventory risk, construction progress
Hong Kong private housingOfficial RVD data tracks average prices by unit class up to March 2026Land tenure, building age, estate history, transaction records

Mainland China’s National Bureau of Statistics reported March 2026 sales-price indices across 70 cities, while market reporting shows first-tier cities had early stabilisation signs after a weak period. Hong Kong should be checked separately because the Rating and Valuation Department publishes its own private domestic price statistics, and its market structure is different from that of mainland China.

REDH profiles help users shortlist developers first. Price checks should still be compared with project documents, official records, delivery terms, financing conditions, and local eligibility rules before any payment.

Developer strength and delivery-risk checks

Developer strength matters when reviewing real estate developers in China, especially for presale homes and large mixed-use projects. Users should not rely only on brand recognition, launch events, or sales-office promises.

A stronger review should look at completed projects, stalled-project history, public notices, construction partners, financing signals, and whether local records show progress. Users can also ask whether the project has delivery-support measures, supervised funds, or public project updates.

This matters because a project can look active during sales while still facing funding pressure, contractor delays, or handover uncertainty. Buyers should ask how the developer handles delays, what happens if construction slows, and which documents prove current project status.

REDH profiles help users review the company first. Final decisions should still depend on local project records, contract terms, payment protections, and qualified advice before signing or paying.

Agent, contract, and payment warning signs

When reviewing real estate developers in China, users should be careful if a provider pushes for payment before official project documents are clear. Written terms should explain the project company, presale permit, contract filing, payment route, delivery date, and refund conditions.

Warning signs may include payment requests to personal accounts, unclear project company names, no visible presale permit, vague supervised-fund details, pressure to reserve quickly, or delivery promises missing from the contract.

REDH profiles help users review the company first, while payment decisions should depend on official records and legal advice.

China developer warning card saying check documents before paying, with company, permit, payment and refund checks for China

How REDH supports a clearer China shortlist

REDH helps users move from broad search results to a more useful shortlist of real estate developers in China. Instead of comparing providers only by brand name, users can review city, company role, project focus, service area, website details, public links, and profile status.

This matters because Chinese providers may have different roles. Some companies develop presale homes. Others broker completed apartments, manage buildings, support construction, advise investors, or handle commercial projects.

A practical shortlist should help users compare:

  • which city or region the company serves
  • what type of project it handles
  • whether the profile is listed or verified
  • which public links are available
  • what official records may still need checking

After building a shortlist, users can contact stronger matches and ask for legal company details, presale permits, contract filing steps, supervised payment information, delivery timeline, and registration process before making decisions.

China developer shortlist graphic with city, role, focus, links, status and website comparison cards for provider review map

Get your Chinese real estate developer profile listed

Real estate and development-related companies in China can create or claim a REDH profile to make their business easier to review.

A profile can show company name, website, city, service areas, property types, project focus, categories, public links, and contact details. This helps users understand the company before direct contact begins.

China companies can also choose a premium profile with added business information, legal details, team size, portfolio URLs, and project links. This can support buyers, investors, partners, and project teams during early research.

Companies that want stronger proof signals can apply for verified status. Verification is a separate REDH review based on submitted information, public details, company evidence, and available proof at the time of review. Approved companies may receive a verified badge and website widget.

Browse real estate developers in China

Use this page to explore real estate developers, brokers, builders, property managers, commercial property firms, and construction-linked providers across China.

Each profile can help users compare city, company role, project focus, service area, public links, and profile status. Users can open profiles that match their search, then continue with company-record checks, presale permits, project filings, supervised payment details, delivery timelines, property-registration steps, and direct company questions before making decisions.

Frequently asked questions about real estate developers in China

Real estate developers in China can be reviewed by city, project focus, profile status, official records, and company details.

What types of real estate developers in China can I find?

You can review developers, brokers, builders, property managers, commercial property firms, construction-linked providers, sales agents, project companies, and development-related businesses. Each profile may show city, service area, project focus, website details, public links, and profile status.

Listed means the company appears on REDH with basic public or submitted profile information. This may include company name, website, city, category, service area, project focus, and contact details. Listed status does not mean the company has completed REDH verification.

Verified means the company completed REDH’s added review process based on submitted details, available proof, public information, and company-related evidence reviewed at the time. Verified status can support early research, but users should still check official records, contracts, payment terms, and project documents.

Yes. For presale projects, users should check whether the project has the required presale permit, contract filing route, supervised payment information, and delivery timeline. REDH profiles support early company research, while local project records should be checked separately.

No. Mainland China and Hong Kong use different company, land-record, agent-licensing, and transaction systems. Users should check the correct local records before paying, signing, or relying on a provider’s claims.

Yes. A China real estate or development-related company can request to claim its REDH profile. REDH may ask for proof that the person is authorised to manage the company information before profile changes are approved.

Build a clearer company profile on REDH

Choose a listed profile for basic visibility, or apply for verification if your company wants stronger proof signals.