Paid-in capital contribution refers to the paid-in part or all of the registered capital. It is the actual contribution made by each shareholder in accordance with the amount, mode and period of contribution stipulated in the Articles of Association.
Regarding the difference between subscribed capital contribution and paid-in capital contribution, there are mainly the following aspects:
1. There are different ways to pay off the registered capital:
The subscribed capital contribution need not be paid in full at one time, but the paid-in capital contribution needs to be paid in full at one time.
2. The capital verification requirements are different:
The paid-in capital contribution must be paid in place and a capital verification report must be issued when the company is established, but it is not required to subscribe for capital contribution.
3. Different investment modes:
The paid-in capital contribution and the proportion of non-monetary capital contribution are mandatory, and non-monetary capital contribution must be evaluated by an evaluation agency. The subscribed capital contribution can only be made in accordance with the Articles of Association.
4. Different legal provisions:
The law stipulates the types of paid-in companies: except that the existing laws, administrative regulations and the State Council decisions clearly stipulate that banking financial institutions, securities companies, futures companies, fund management companies, insurance companies, insurance professional agencies and insurance brokers, direct selling enterprises, foreign labor service cooperation enterprises, financing guarantee companies, publicly offered joint-stock companies, labor dispatch enterprises, pawn shops, insurance asset management companies and micro-loan companies shall implement the registered capital paid-in registration system.