Right, let's be honest about the Canton Fair: it's overwhelming. More than 200,000 exhibitors across 1.2 million square metres of exhibition space, with tens of thousands of buyers from every corner of the world descending on Guangzhou simultaneously. For first-time UK buyers, it can feel more like being dropped into a foreign city with no map than a structured sourcing event.
But here's the reality: for UK businesses serious about sourcing from China, the Canton Fair remains the most valuable sourcing trip you can take. Done right, a single well-planned visit can unlock genuine manufacturer relationships, competitive pricing, and product ranges you simply cannot find through Alibaba or online directories alone. At Epic Sourcing, we've guided UK buyers through the Fair for years — and this guide covers everything you need to know before, during, and after your visit.
Who This Guide Is For
UK brand owners, Amazon sellers, retail buyers, and importers who are considering attending the Canton Fair — whether for the first time or to improve on previous visits. If you want to understand how to register, which phase to attend, how to stay legally protected, and how to convert show meetings into real supplier relationships, this is the guide for you.
The Canton Fair (officially the China Import and Export Fair) is the world's largest and oldest trade fair, held twice annually in Guangzhou, China. The Spring session typically runs from mid-April to early May, and the Autumn session from mid-October to early November. The Fair is split into three phases, each running for five days and covering different product categories — meaning the full event spans approximately three weeks in total.
In terms of scale, nothing else comes close. The Fair hosts exhibitors from across China at the Pazhou Complex in Guangzhou, one of the largest purpose-built exhibition facilities in the world. For UK buyers specifically, this matters because China remains the UK's single largest source of manufactured goods. UK-China goods imports were valued at approximately £71 billion in the year to March 2025 — and a significant proportion of that flows through supplier relationships that began or were strengthened at the Canton Fair.
The Fair is not a shopping trip. It's a relationship-building and supplier-qualification event. You won't be placing orders on the show floor (and you shouldn't). Instead, you'll be meeting manufacturers, assessing product quality in person, comparing pricing, and shortlisting the suppliers you want to develop relationships with afterwards. The real work — due diligence, sampling, negotiation, and contracting — happens after you return to the UK.
The Canton Fair is not just for large importers. UK businesses placing orders of as little as £5,000–£10,000 per shipment can benefit enormously from attending — particularly for building direct manufacturer relationships that let you move beyond middlemen and trading companies.
Understanding the three-phase structure is the single most important piece of pre-trip planning you can do. Each phase covers distinct product categories, and attending the wrong phase means you'll spend your time walking past exhibitors with nothing relevant to your product range.
| Phase | Dates (Spring, approx.) | Key Product Categories | Best For UK Buyers Sourcing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phase 1 | 15–19 April | Electronics, electrical appliances, lighting, vehicles & parts, machinery, industrial equipment | Tech products, EV accessories, consumer electronics, industrial supplies |
| Phase 2 | 23–27 April | Consumer goods, gifts & premiums, home décor, building materials, hardware, personal care | Homeware, seasonal gifts, health & beauty, construction supplies |
| Phase 3 | 1–5 May | Textiles, garments, footwear, bags, accessories, furniture, food & beverages | Fashion & apparel, soft furnishings, food retail, accessories brands |
If your product range spans multiple phases — say you're sourcing both packaging materials (Phase 2) and garments (Phase 3) — you may need to budget for attending two phases, which means extending your trip by a week. Most first-time attendees are advised to focus on a single phase and do it thoroughly rather than attempting to cover multiple phases on a compressed schedule.
There's typically a gap of two to three days between phases, which experienced UK buyers often use strategically — either to visit supplier factories in the Pearl River Delta region (within day-trip distance of Guangzhou), explore the nearby Shunde furniture market, or simply catch up on follow-ups from the previous phase. Don't underestimate how exhausted you'll be after five days on the Fair floor. Rest days are not wasted days — your follow-up emails matter as much as your booth conversations.
Overseas buyers register online at cantonfair.org.cn. The process requires a valid passport and basic business information. Registration is free for overseas buyers and grants a buyer badge valid for all three phases of the Fair. You should aim to register at least six to eight weeks before the event to avoid delays.
Note that some exhibition zones — particularly those dedicated to major branded manufacturers or premium product sections — may operate invitation-only access. Your standard buyer badge will get you into the vast majority of the show floor, but if you've identified a specific exhibitor in a restricted zone, contact them in advance to arrange entry.
China introduced a 15-day mutual visa exemption for UK citizens in 2024, and UK buyers attending the Canton Fair have generally been entering under this policy. However, we recommend verifying the current exemption terms with the Chinese Embassy in London before booking, as the rules around what constitutes business activity under the exemption can evolve. If you prefer certainty, apply for an M (trade/business) visa through the Chinese Visa Application Service Centre. Allow at least two to three weeks for processing, and never leave visa arrangements to the last minute — the Canton Fair organisers cannot assist with this.
This is what first-time Canton Fair attendees consistently underestimate. The Fair draws hundreds of thousands of visitors to Guangzhou simultaneously, and hotel prices surge dramatically — rooms that ordinarily cost £60–£100 per night can reach £300–£600 during Fair periods. Rooms near the Pazhou Complex sell out months in advance.
Secure accommodation three to four months before the Spring session. Your options are:
The Guangzhou Metro is excellent and is the most reliable way to travel to and from the venue during the Fair. Avoid taxis during peak arrival and departure times — queues can be brutal.
Here's where most UK buyers leave enormous value on the table: they arrive at the Fair with no supplier shortlist and spend half their time wandering the halls. The Canton Fair publishes its full exhibitor list online before the event opens. Cross-reference exhibitors with your target product categories, identify manufacturers (not just trading companies), and build a prioritised list of stands to visit each day.
For each target supplier, prepare a list of questions in advance: minimum order quantities, sample availability, certifications held (UKCA, CE, ISO, BSCI), export experience with UK buyers, and whether they work with similar brands. Having this ready means your booth conversations are targeted and efficient — which matters enormously when you're trying to cover hundreds of exhibitors in five days.
The Canton Fair exhibitor list includes a mix of genuine manufacturers and trading companies (middlemen). Many trading companies present themselves as factories. Always ask directly: "Is this your factory?" and "Can I visit your factory?" Genuine manufacturers welcome the question. Trading companies often deflect. The answer tells you a great deal about who you're actually dealing with.
Each phase runs for five days. The first two days are typically the busiest — exhibitors are fresh, stock is complete, and energy on the floor is high. By days four and five, crowds thin and exhibitors are often more willing to negotiate and engage in longer conversations. Use days one and two to work through your priority list at pace, and days three to five for deeper conversations with your top picks.
At each booth of interest, collect the following:
Most exhibitors now operate on WeChat rather than email. Installing WeChat before you travel and having a QR code for your own profile ready to share will make communication significantly smoother. English-speaking staff are common at the Canton Fair, but interpretation quality varies — patience and simplicity in your language will pay dividends.
The Fair is an appropriate place to discuss indicative pricing, but it's not the place to finalise deals. Quoted prices at the Fair are often higher than what you'll achieve through follow-up negotiation after the event — exhibitors know buyers are comparison-shopping across dozens of booths and quote accordingly. Your leverage improves significantly once you're back in the UK engaging two or three shortlisted suppliers who are competing for your business.
Do not pay deposits or sign contracts at the Fair. Reputable manufacturers will not expect you to, and any supplier that pressures you to commit on the spot is a red flag.
Meeting a supplier at the Canton Fair and being impressed by their booth display does not mean their products are compliant for sale in the UK. This is where many UK buyers — particularly those new to importing — make costly mistakes. As the UK importer of record, you are responsible for ensuring all products comply with British regulations and standards before they arrive at Felixstowe or Southampton.
A supplier claiming their products are "UK compliant" or "UKCA ready" at their booth does not constitute compliance. Always request full technical documentation — test reports from UKAS-accredited laboratories, a completed Declaration of Conformity, and the product's technical file — before placing your deposit. Customs authorities at Felixstowe and Southampton increasingly check compliance documentation, and non-compliant products face seizure and destruction at your cost.
The Canton Fair increasingly includes Vietnamese exhibitors, and several Chinese manufacturers now operate dual production facilities in both China and Vietnam. This matters for UK buyers because the UK-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (UKVFTA) eliminated tariffs on 65% of eligible goods immediately upon coming into force, rising to 99.2% over the agreement's life. For product categories where China-origin goods carry 12–20% UK import duty, Vietnam-origin equivalents under UKVFTA may attract 0–5% — a meaningful cost saving at scale.
If you meet a supplier with Vietnam production capacity at the Fair, ask specifically: can goods be shipped under UKVFTA rules of origin? Rules of origin thresholds under UKVFTA typically require 40–50% of the product's value to originate in Vietnam — a claim that needs substantiation, not assumption.
One of the most useful things the Canton Fair does is give you a real-world sense of market pricing and MOQs across product categories. The ranges below are typical starting points you'll encounter — treat them as the beginning of negotiation, not fixed rules.
| Category | Typical MOQ | Sample Lead Time | Production Lead Time | Phase |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Consumer Electronics | 500–2,000 units | 2–4 weeks | 45–75 days | 1 |
| Lighting & LED | 200–1,000 units | 1–3 weeks | 30–50 days | 1 |
| Homeware & Gifts | 200–1,000 units | 1–2 weeks | 30–50 days | 2 |
| Health & Personal Care | 500–3,000 units | 2–4 weeks | 30–60 days | 2 |
| Clothing & Apparel | 100–500 pcs per style | 2–3 weeks | 30–60 days | 3 |
| Bags & Accessories | 100–300 pcs | 2–3 weeks | 30–45 days | 3 |
| Furniture | 20–100 sets | 3–5 weeks | 45–90 days | 3 |
Sea freight from Guangzhou (or nearby Shenzhen/Yantian ports) to Felixstowe or Southampton typically takes 25–35 days, depending on the service and routing. Always factor this into your stock planning — a 45-day production lead time plus 30 days' transit means your goods won't arrive for approximately 75 days after you confirm the order.
The Canton Fair rewards preparation and follow-through in equal measure. That's where Epic Sourcing adds significant value — we've built our operations specifically around helping UK brands and importers get more from China and Vietnam sourcing, and the Canton Fair is a core part of that.
Before you board the plane, we identify and vet the most relevant exhibitors for your product category from the published Canton Fair exhibitor database. You arrive with a prioritised list of target stands — manufacturers confirmed (not trading companies), categorised by relevance, and mapped by hall and stand number. No more wandering.
Our China-based team can accompany you to meetings, providing Mandarin interpretation and real-time guidance on what a supplier is actually saying versus what they're telling you. We know the tells that distinguish genuine manufacturers from trading companies — and can read a booth in seconds in a way that takes first-time buyers years to develop.
After the Fair, we run factory verification visits and audits on your shortlisted manufacturers. A supplier who presents beautifully at a trade show booth needs to be validated at their actual production facility before you commit money. Our audit reports give you the full picture: real production capacity, quality systems, and whether the factory you met at the Fair matches reality on the ground.
From placing your order and managing production timelines to arranging sea freight from Guangzhou to Felixstowe or Southampton, handling HMRC customs clearance, and coordinating UKCA compliance checks — Epic Sourcing manages the complete import journey. Our Guided Sourcing Tour service also lets you visit factories in the Pearl River Delta before or after the Fair as part of a structured trip itinerary.
Book a free consultation with the Epic Sourcing UK team. We'll help you prepare, shortlist suppliers, and make the most of your time on the show floor.
Book Your Free ConsultationChina introduced a 15-day mutual visa exemption for UK citizens in 2024, and UK buyers attending the Canton Fair have generally been entering under this policy. However, we recommend verifying the current exemption terms with the Chinese Embassy in London before booking, as the rules around what constitutes business activity under the exemption can change. If you prefer certainty, apply for an M (trade/business) visa through the Chinese Visa Application Service Centre — allow at least two to three weeks for processing and never leave this until the last minute, as the Canton Fair organisers cannot assist with visa applications.
No — and reputable manufacturers won't expect you to. The Canton Fair is a supplier identification and relationship-building event, not a purchasing event. Use the Fair to shortlist suppliers, collect samples, and agree on indicative pricing. Conduct your due diligence — factory audits, reference checks, legal verification — before committing funds. Any supplier who pressures you to pay a deposit at the show booth should be treated as a significant red flag. The factories genuinely worth working with understand that serious UK buyers need to verify before they invest.
Ask directly: "Is this your factory?" and "Can I arrange a factory visit?" A genuine manufacturer will typically know their production capacity, factory address, key production managers, and lead times precisely — because they own the process. A trading company will often give vague or deflecting answers, claim their factory is "nearby" without being specific, and struggle with detailed production questions. You can also check the exhibitor's business registration type on Chinese government databases — this is something Epic Sourcing does as part of every supplier verification exercise.
UK buyers should typically budget £2,500–£4,500 for a five-day single-phase visit, covering return flights from London (typically £500–£900), accommodation in Guangzhou (£150–£350 per night during Fair periods, so £750–£1,750 for five nights), daily subsistence, and local transport. Buyer registration is free. For two-phase visits, budget proportionally more and add accommodation costs during the inter-phase gap. Think of the trip as a research and supplier qualification investment — the returns compound across subsequent import orders with the suppliers you identify.
Yes — the Canton Fair operates an online platform (online.cantonfair.org.cn) that allows buyers to browse exhibitors, view catalogues, and connect with suppliers remotely. The virtual experience is useful for initial research and shortlisting, but it cannot replicate in-person attendance: you cannot assess product quality physically, relationships form more slowly, and negotiation dynamics differ significantly. An effective alternative is to engage a sourcing agent like Epic Sourcing who attends on your behalf — we can video-call you from the show floor, walk through supplier booths with you, and report back on in-person meetings in detail.
Whether you're attending for the first time or looking to sharpen a previous visit, Epic Sourcing's UK team can help you prepare, support you on the ground in Guangzhou, and manage the full import journey back to the UK.
Book Your Free ConsultationEpic Sourcing UK — 71-75 Shelton St, London WC2H 9JQ | hello@epicsourcing.co.uk