Household products sourcing from China involves identifying, vetting, and procuring home goods — including kitchenware, storage solutions, cleaning products, home décor, and bathroom accessories — from Chinese manufacturers for sale or distribution in the UK. China is the dominant global supplier of household goods, producing the vast majority of the world’s plastic homewares, ceramic tableware, metal cookware, and decorative accessories.
The UK household products market is one of the most competitive and margin-sensitive retail categories, making cost-efficient sourcing a fundamental commercial necessity. Chinese manufacturers of household goods offer UK retailers and brands significant price advantages over European or domestic suppliers, particularly for plastic, ceramic, and metal products where China’s raw material access, tooling infrastructure, and labour efficiency create pricing that is difficult to match elsewhere. Whether you are sourcing for a physical retail chain, an Amazon store, an independent brand, or a supermarket own-label programme, China’s household goods factories are almost certainly already in your supply chain.
However, household products sourced from China for the UK market must meet a range of product safety and chemical compliance requirements that are not always proactively flagged by Chinese factories. UK REACH chemical restrictions, food contact material regulations for kitchenware, electrical safety standards for any powered household devices, and the General Product Safety Regulations all apply. Retailers and importers are legally responsible for ensuring compliance — not the factory — so building compliance verification into your sourcing process is essential before goods reach UK consumers.
| Category | Key Manufacturing Regions | UK Import Duty Range | Key Compliance Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plastic Homewares | Guangdong, Zhejiang | 2.7–6.5% | UK REACH, food contact rules if applicable |
| Ceramic Tableware | Jingdezhen, Chaozhou, Foshan | 0–6% | Lead and cadmium leaching limits (food contact) |
| Metal Cookware | Guangdong, Zhejiang, Jiangsu | 0–5% | Food contact, PFAS/non-stick coating restrictions |
| Home Décor & Accessories | Yiwu, Guangzhou, Foshan | 0–6.5% | General Product Safety Regulations |
| Cleaning Products | Guangdong, Jiangsu | 0–3.7% | UK REACH, biocidal product regulations, labelling |
| Storage & Organisation | Zhejiang, Guangdong | 0–6.5% | UK REACH, General Product Safety |
UK importers of household goods are legally responsible for ensuring the products they place on the UK market are safe and compliant. The key regulatory obligations are:
Non-stick coatings on cookware sourced from China may contain PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances), which are subject to increasing restriction under UK REACH. Always request written confirmation from your Chinese cookware supplier that their non-stick coatings are PFAS-free and compliant with current UK restrictions before placing a production order.
| Factor | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| MOQ | 200–1,000 units | Lower for stock designs; higher for custom tooling |
| Sampling Lead Time | 1–4 weeks | Stock products faster; custom requires tooling time |
| Production Lead Time | 30–60 days | After sample approval and deposit |
| Sea Freight to UK | 25–35 days | Felixstowe or Southampton depending on route |
We identify the right factory for your specific household product category, drawing on our network of vetted manufacturers across Guangdong, Zhejiang, and Jiangsu.
We ensure your factory provides the correct compliance documentation — test reports, MSDS, food contact certificates — before production is approved, protecting you from UK Trading Standards enforcement.
We conduct pre-shipment inspections at the factory, checking finished household goods against your specification, approved samples, and packaging requirements before they leave China.
We benchmark supplier quotes across multiple factories to ensure you are receiving a competitive market price — not an inflated quotation based on your perceived unfamiliarity with Chinese market rates.
The most commonly sourced household product categories from China for UK retail include kitchen storage and organisation, plastic homewares, ceramic and porcelain tableware, bamboo and wood kitchen accessories, bathroom accessories, home décor and ornamentals, cleaning tools and brushes, food preparation equipment, and bedroom storage. China’s dominance in these categories reflects decades of investment in production facilities, raw material access, and logistics infrastructure that gives Chinese factories an unmatched cost and capability advantage for volume household goods manufacturing.
Whether your household product requires UKCA marking depends on the product category. Electrical household goods (lamps, kitchen appliances, personal care devices) require UKCA marking under the Electrical Equipment (Safety) Regulations 2016. Certain plastic products may require testing under REACH restrictions. Toys require UKCA marking under the Toys (Safety) Regulations 2011 even if they have a household application. To check whether your specific product requires UKCA marking, consult the UK government’s UKCA guidance at gov.uk/ukca or engage a UK product compliance consultant. Epic Sourcing can advise on compliance requirements as part of our sourcing service.
On Alibaba, MOQs for household products are set by individual suppliers and can range from as low as 50 units for simple stock items to 1,000 or more units for custom products. However, Alibaba MOQs are often negotiable, and the headline figure may include hidden charges for customisation, branded packaging, or private labelling. Working with a sourcing agent like Epic Sourcing typically provides access to better factory pricing at lower volumes, because the agent’s ongoing relationship with the factory — and the promise of repeat orders from multiple clients — gives the factory a commercial incentive to accept smaller initial orders at competitive prices.
The most common quality issues with household products sourced from China include: dimensional inconsistencies (products that do not match the approved sample size or fit specifications), surface finish defects (scratches, colour inconsistencies, uneven coating), material substitution (the factory using a lower-grade material than specified to reduce costs), packaging failures (boxes that crush in transit or labels that do not adhere correctly), and assembly issues (products with multiple components that do not fit or function correctly). Pre-shipment inspection by an independent inspector or sourcing agent — conducted before the container is sealed — is the most effective tool for catching these issues before goods reach the UK.