Clothing and apparel sourcing from China involves finding, vetting, and ordering garments from Chinese manufacturers or trading companies, either as white label, private label, or fully custom contract-manufactured products. China is the world’s largest exporter of clothing and textiles, offering UK fashion brands an unmatched range of fabric options, production techniques, and price points across categories from fast fashion to premium sportswear.
China has dominated global garment manufacturing for decades, and despite the rise of alternative sourcing destinations such as Vietnam, Bangladesh, and Turkey, it remains the single largest supplier of clothing to the UK. Chinese garment factories — concentrated in textile hubs such as Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Keqiao, and Dongguan — offer UK brands a combination of capabilities that is difficult to replicate elsewhere: rapid sampling, vast fabric libraries, sophisticated finishing techniques, and the capacity to handle both small private label runs and large contract manufacturing programmes. For a UK fashion brand at any stage of growth, understanding how to source clothing from China effectively is a fundamental commercial skill.
However, clothing sourcing from China also carries specific risks that UK brands must manage carefully. Quality consistency across production runs, compliance with UK product safety and labelling regulations, intellectual property protection for original designs, and the 12% import duty on Chinese-origin garments are all factors that affect the true cost and risk profile of a China clothing sourcing programme. Many UK brands are now also evaluating Vietnam as an alternative or complementary sourcing destination, particularly where the UKVFTA duty saving on qualifying Vietnamese-origin garments is significant enough to offset the slightly higher factory prices.
| Factor | China | Vietnam |
|---|---|---|
| UK Import Duty | 12% | Reduced / 0% (UKVFTA staging) |
| Factory Price (relative) | Lower — higher competition between factories | 5–15% higher than comparable Chinese factories |
| MOQ (Typical) | 100–1,000 pieces per style | 300–2,000 pieces per style |
| Fabric Options | Vast — full textile supply chain in-country | Good but narrower; some fabrics imported from China |
| Sampling Speed | 7–21 days for initial samples | 14–30 days (fabric sourcing may add time) |
| Sea Freight to UK | 25–35 days | 28–38 days |
| Best For | Volume, variety, fast turnaround | Duty savings, sustainability positioning, knitwear & activewear |
Clothing imported from China and sold in the UK must comply with a range of UK product safety, labelling, and chemical compliance regulations. Key requirements include:
Children’s clothing is subject to significantly stricter safety and chemical compliance requirements than adults’ clothing. In addition to the standard UK REACH restrictions, children’s garments must comply with tighter limits on chemical substances, drawstring safety regulations (EN 14682 is the reference standard), and flammability rules for nightwear. Always request compliance documentation from your Chinese factory, and consider independent laboratory testing before releasing any children’s clothing to market in the UK.
| Factor | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| MOQ (White Label) | 50–300 pieces per style | Lower MOQs for simpler styles using stock fabrics |
| MOQ (Private Label / Custom) | 300–1,000 pieces per style | Higher MOQs for custom fabrics or complex construction |
| Sampling Lead Time | 1–3 weeks | Proto and fit samples; may require multiple rounds |
| Production Lead Time | 30–60 days | After approved fit sample and deposit; varies by complexity |
| Sea Freight to UK | 25–35 days | To Felixstowe or Southampton |
| UK Import Duty | 12% on CIF value | Applies to all Chinese-origin garments under UK Global Tariff |
We match your brand with the right Chinese garment factory based on your product category, target quality level, and order volume — then verify the factory’s business licence, production capacity, and compliance certifications before you engage.
We help you prepare technical packs and communicate your specifications in Mandarin to the factory, managing the sample approval process to reduce costly revision rounds and get you to a market-ready sample faster.
We conduct pre-shipment quality inspections at the factory, checking garments against your approved samples, UK labelling requirements, and UK REACH compliance — before your cargo leaves China.
For brands sourcing significant volumes of clothing, we model the potential duty savings of switching to a UKVFTA-qualifying Vietnamese factory — helping you decide whether the landed cost benefit justifies the transition.
MOQs for clothing sourced from China vary widely depending on the garment type, factory tier, and level of customisation required. For simple styles using a factory’s stock fabrics (known as white label or ODM sourcing), MOQs can be as low as 50–100 pieces per style. For private label orders requiring custom fabric, custom printing, or branded labels and packaging, MOQs typically start at 300–500 pieces per style. Fully custom contract manufacturing — where you design the garment from scratch with bespoke materials — generally requires 500–1,000 pieces per style as a minimum. UK brands placing their first order should aim to negotiate a lower initial MOQ in exchange for a commitment to scale volume on repeat orders.
Protecting your clothing designs when sourcing from China requires a multi-layered approach. First, register any distinctive design features, patterns, or brand elements as UK Registered Designs and as trademarks through the China National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA) — China operates a “first to file” trademark system, so early registration is essential. Second, ensure your manufacturing agreement (prepared in both English and Mandarin) includes explicit ownership provisions for your designs, patterns, and tech packs, and prohibits the factory from producing your designs for other customers. Third, avoid sharing your complete design documentation until you have a signed NDA and manufacturing agreement in place. Working through a reputable UK sourcing agent who maintains ongoing factory relationships provides an additional layer of protection.
The right answer depends on your product category, order volumes, quality requirements, and duty sensitivity. China offers unmatched manufacturing breadth, the lowest MOQs, the fastest sampling, and the widest fabric selection — making it the default choice for most UK fashion brands starting out. Vietnam is increasingly compelling for brands sourcing significant volumes of knitwear, activewear, or denim, where UKVFTA duty savings of 12% on qualifying garments can materially improve landed cost and margins. Vietnam’s garment factories also tend to score better on labour welfare audits, which is a consideration for brands with sustainability commitments. Many established UK fashion brands now dual-source from both countries, placing volume orders in Vietnam for duty savings and using China for smaller, faster, or more complex pieces.
A robust quality control process for clothing sourced from China should include at least three checkpoints: a pre-production check (confirming approved fabrics, trims, and labels are in stock at the factory before cutting begins), an inline or mid-production inspection (checking cut-and-sew quality, measurements, and workmanship at approximately 30–50% production completion), and a pre-shipment inspection (checking finished garments against your approved samples for measurements, stitching, finishing, labels, and packaging). Each garment style should be measured against a detailed spec sheet, and random samples should be checked for fabric composition compliance. Epic Sourcing conducts on-the-ground quality inspections at Chinese garment factories as part of our sourcing service.
Clothing imported from China and sold in the UK must carry permanent, legible labels in English showing the fibre composition of the garment (e.g. “100% Cotton” or “52% Polyester, 48% Cotton”). This is a legal requirement under the UK Textile Products Regulations 2012, enforced by Trading Standards. Labels must be durable, permanently attached, and clearly readable. In addition to fibre content, most brands include care instruction symbols (using ISO standards for washing, drying, ironing, and bleaching), size labelling, and country of origin (“Made in China”). For garments sold to retailers, you should check the retailer’s own labelling requirements, as many UK retailers impose additional label specifications beyond the legal minimum.