Contract manufacturing in China is when a UK business outsources production to a Chinese factory that manufactures goods to the buyer's exact specifications, using the factory's own equipment, labour, and raw materials. Unlike buying ready-made products, contract manufacturing gives UK brands full control over design, components, and quality — resulting in a product that is exclusively theirs.
For UK businesses looking to build a distinctive brand, contract manufacturing in China offers a compelling route to market. Chinese factories have decades of experience producing goods for Western brands across virtually every product category — from electronics and garments to homeware and sporting equipment. The combination of skilled manufacturing capacity, competitive pricing, and broad material sourcing networks makes China the world's most established contract manufacturing destination. For UK brands, this means the ability to bring a custom product to market at a fraction of the cost of domestic production, often with faster lead times than comparable facilities in Europe.
However, contract manufacturing in China is not without complexity. UK importers must navigate supplier verification, intellectual property protection, quality control, and compliance with both Chinese export requirements and UK product safety regulations. Getting any of these wrong can result in delayed shipments, rejected stock at UK customs, or costly product recalls. Understanding the end-to-end process — from factory vetting and tooling agreements to UKCA marking and HMRC import declarations — is essential before placing your first production order.
| Option | What You Get | Customisation Level | Typical MOQ | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Contract Manufacturing | Fully custom product built to your specs | Very high — design, materials, function | 500–5,000+ units | Established brands, unique products |
| Private Label | Factory product with your branding applied | Moderate — packaging, logo, colour | 200–2,000 units | Brands wanting speed to market |
| White Label | Generic product, branded by you | Low — branding only | 100–500 units | Start-ups testing a new market |
Any product manufactured in China and imported to the UK must comply with applicable UK product safety and technical standards. The key frameworks UK importers need to understand are:
UKCA marking is a legal requirement for many product categories sold in Great Britain. Products manufactured in China must be tested against UK-recognised standards before they can bear the UKCA mark. Do not assume a CE-marked product automatically qualifies — while the standards are largely similar, testing must be carried out by a UK-recognised conformity assessment body. Failure to comply can result in goods being seized at the UK border or a Trading Standards enforcement notice.
| Factor | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ) | 500–5,000 units | Varies by product category and tooling complexity |
| Sampling Lead Time | 2–6 weeks | Initial samples often require multiple revision rounds |
| Production Lead Time | 45–90 days | After approved sample and deposit payment |
| Sea Freight to UK | 25–35 days | To Felixstowe or Southampton depending on route |
| Tooling / Mould Costs | £500–£8,000+ | One-off cost for plastic injection moulds, dies, jigs |
| Payment Terms | 30% deposit, 70% before shipment | T/T (Telegraphic Transfer) standard; Letter of Credit for larger orders |
We audit potential manufacturing partners on your behalf — verifying business licences, production capacity, quality management systems, and worker welfare standards before you commit a single pound.
Our on-the-ground team manages the sampling process, communicating your technical specifications directly to the factory in Mandarin to eliminate costly misunderstandings and reduce revision rounds.
We conduct pre-shipment inspections at the factory before your cargo is loaded, checking finished goods against your approved samples and UK compliance requirements — so you know exactly what's on the ship before it leaves China.
We guide you through the UKCA marking process, help you identify correct commodity codes for HMRC declarations, and coordinate with testing laboratories to ensure your product is market-ready upon arrival at Felixstowe or Southampton.
Contract manufacturing in China is best suited to UK businesses that have a validated product concept, a clear design specification, and sufficient volume to make custom tooling and production worthwhile. If you are ordering fewer than 200–500 units for the first time, private label or white label may offer a lower-risk entry point. However, if you have identified a specific gap in the market and want a product that is truly differentiated — with custom materials, dimensions, branding, and packaging — contract manufacturing is the most powerful route available to UK brands sourcing from China.
From initial supplier contact to delivery at a UK warehouse, the typical timeline for a new product is 4–6 months. This includes factory sourcing (2–4 weeks), sampling with revisions (3–8 weeks), production (6–10 weeks), and sea freight to Felixstowe or Southampton (4–5 weeks). Expedited air freight can cut transit time to 5–7 days but at significantly higher cost. Building in buffer time for Chinese public holidays — particularly Chinese New Year, Labour Day, and Golden Week — is essential for any order with a fixed UK launch date.
Intellectual property protection is one of the most important steps before committing to contract manufacturing in China. UK businesses should consider registering their trademark in China through the China National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA), as China operates a "first to file" system. A well-drafted Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) and manufacturing agreement — prepared in both English and Mandarin — should clearly define ownership of moulds, tooling, and product designs. Working with a reputable sourcing agent who manages supplier relationships directly provides an additional layer of protection against IP leakage.
A robust quality control process for contract manufacturing typically involves three stages: incoming material inspection (checking raw materials and components before production begins), during-production inspection (verifying workmanship and specifications at the mid-point of production), and pre-shipment inspection (checking finished goods against approved samples before the container is sealed). Third-party inspection companies including QIMA, Bureau Veritas, and SGS operate throughout China and can provide independent inspection reports. Epic Sourcing also provides on-the-ground quality control as part of our full-service sourcing packages.
Yes — and for many product categories, Vietnam offers a compelling alternative to China thanks to the UK-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (UKVFTA). Under the UKVFTA, goods originating in Vietnam qualify for reduced or zero import duty when entering the UK, compared to the standard UK Global Tariff applied to Chinese goods. For example, garments and textile products from China typically attract import duty of 12%, whereas qualifying Vietnamese-origin garments can benefit from significantly reduced rates under the UKVFTA. However, Vietnam's contract manufacturing sector is more specialised than China's — capacity is strongest in garments, footwear, electronics assembly, and furniture, rather than the full-spectrum manufacturing available across China.