Free Tool
Supplier Vetting Checklist
27 questions to ask before placing your first order with a Chinese supplier. Bad suppliers are the single biggest reason solo importers lose money — this checklist filters out 80–90% of the risk in about 30 minutes.
How to use this
- Run a candidate supplier through every question. Note the answers in writing — paste them into a doc, do not just remember.
- If you get an evasive or “we will tell you later” answer to a Category 1 or 2 question, walk away. There are 10,000 other suppliers.
- Anything in Category 4 (Terms) needs to end up in the proforma invoice (PI), not just in chat. Verbal promises do not survive disputes.
- Re-run the full checklist for every new supplier, even if a previous one passed. Past success does not transfer.
01
Verify the entity is real
- What is their registered company name and business license number? Cross-check on gsxt.gov.cn (China’s official business registry).
- Does the registered legal entity name match the name on the Alibaba/1688 store and the bank account they want you to wire?
- How many years has the company been registered? (Be cautious of companies under 2 years old, especially for high-value orders.)
- Is the registered address industrial or residential? A residential address often signals a trading desk, not a factory.
- What is their official email domain? Free Gmail/QQ accounts are common but a red flag for $5,000+ orders.
02
Confirm they actually manufacture (not resell)
- Will they share a live video walkthrough of the production line during a video call? (Pre-recorded photos are easy to fake. Live video is the gold standard.)
- What is the factory address, and how many workers do they employ?
- Do they own the machinery for this product category, or is it outsourced to a partner factory?
- Do they have brand registrations or design patents on similar products, or only OEM/white-label work?
- Will they accept an in-person visit (yours or a third-party inspector’s)? If yes, that is a strong positive signal.
03
Check product capability
- Can they ship three real samples from past production runs (not staged showroom pieces) within 7–10 days?
- What certifications does this product have? (FDA, CE, RoHS, FCC, CPSIA — depends on category and destination.)
- What is their typical defect rate, and which AQL standard do they inspect against (e.g., AQL 2.5)? Why AQL matters →
- What is the MOQ for sample order, first production order, and reorder?
- What is the production lead time for 100 / 500 / 1000 units?
- Can they handle small custom branding (logo print, custom tags), or is everything generic?
04
Lock in communication and commercial terms
- Who is your assigned account contact, and what is their direct WeChat ID and email?
- Do they reply within 12 hours during their working day (China time)? Slow response now means very slow response when there is a problem.
- What payment terms do they offer? (30% deposit + 70% before shipment is the standard. 100% upfront is a red flag.)
- Do they accept Alibaba Trade Assurance, escrow, or PayPal for samples? (Big positive — adds dispute leverage.)
- What is their cancellation and refund policy if samples are unacceptable?
- Will they put quality specifications, tolerance, and inspection terms into the PI (proforma invoice), not just chat? If they refuse, walk away.
05
Logistics readiness
- Do they handle export documentation (Commercial Invoice, Packing List, Bill of Lading), or do you need a freight forwarder?
- What is their nearest port of export (typically Yantian, Ningbo, Shanghai, Qingdao)?
- What Incoterms are they comfortable with — FOB, EXW, DDP? Incoterms primer →
- Have they shipped to your country before? Any past customs issues or rejected shipments? (This matters more in 2026 with stricter CBP enforcement.)
- Will they provide HS codes for customs declaration, or do they expect you to classify? (They should at least suggest one — but verify it yourself against the HTS database.)
