UK businesses paying Chinese suppliers typically use one of four main payment methods: Telegraphic Transfer (T/T bank transfer), Letter of Credit (L/C), Alibaba Trade Assurance, or PayPal. Each method carries different risk levels, cost implications, and suitability depending on the order size, supplier relationship, and the level of buyer protection required.
Payment to Chinese suppliers is one of the highest-risk moments in any import transaction. Once money leaves a UK bank account and arrives in China, recovering it in the event of a problem — non-delivery, quality failure, or outright fraud — is extremely difficult. Unlike purchasing from a UK supplier where consumer and commercial contract law provides strong legal recourse, cross-border commercial disputes with Chinese factories are expensive, slow, and uncertain to resolve. Choosing the right payment method, structuring payment terms correctly, and building in financial protections before transferring funds are therefore fundamental risk management steps for any UK business importing from China.
The good news is that the vast majority of Chinese suppliers are legitimate businesses that fulfil their orders to a reasonable standard. Payment risk is not about distrusting Chinese factories wholesale — it is about structuring transactions sensibly so that your financial exposure is limited and your leverage is maintained until goods are received and verified. The payment methods and structures used by experienced UK importers are designed to achieve exactly this.
| Method | Buyer Protection | Cost to Buyer | Best For | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T/T Bank Transfer | Low — no recourse once sent | Low (£15–£40 per transfer) | Established supplier relationships | Medium–High (new suppliers) |
| Letter of Credit (L/C) | High — bank-backed conditional payment | Higher (£200–£600 in bank fees) | Large orders with new suppliers | Low |
| Trade Assurance (Alibaba) | Medium — Alibaba-mediated dispute process | Low–Medium (card/bank fees apply) | Alibaba orders, first-time suppliers | Low–Medium |
| PayPal | Medium — PayPal dispute process | Higher (3.4%+ transaction fee) | Small sample payments | Low–Medium (small amounts only) |
| Western Union / MoneyGram | None | Medium | Avoid for all commercial payments | Very High |
Telegraphic Transfer — also known as T/T, SWIFT transfer, or wire transfer — is the most widely used payment method for paying Chinese suppliers. It involves transferring funds directly from your UK bank account to the supplier’s Chinese bank account via the international SWIFT banking network. T/T is straightforward, relatively low cost, and accepted by virtually all Chinese factories. The standard payment structure in China-UK trade is 30% deposit paid before production, and 70% balance paid before shipment (against a copy of the bill of lading). This structure limits your upfront exposure to 30% of the order value while maintaining leverage over the remaining 70% until you have seen proof that goods have been loaded and are on their way to the UK.
Never pay 100% of an order value upfront to a new Chinese supplier by T/T. If the supplier does not deliver, you have no financial leverage and no practical recourse. Always insist on a 30/70 payment structure (30% deposit, 70% against bill of lading) or use Trade Assurance on your first order. Separately, always verify the bank account details you are paying to directly with your supplier contact before transferring funds — invoice fraud (where criminals intercept emails and substitute their own bank details) is a real risk in cross-border trade.
A Letter of Credit is a bank-issued conditional payment guarantee: your UK bank agrees to pay the Chinese supplier a specified amount, but only once the supplier presents a set of specified shipping documents (commercial invoice, bill of lading, packing list, certificate of origin, and any other documents specified in the L/C). If the documents are not presented, or are incorrect, the bank does not pay. For the buyer, an L/C provides a high level of assurance that payment is tied to the supplier shipping the goods and providing accurate documentation. For large orders (typically above £50,000–£100,000) with a new supplier, a Letter of Credit offers the strongest financial protection available.
We advise on the right payment structure for your specific order value, supplier relationship, and risk profile — helping you balance supplier expectations with your need for financial protection.
Before you transfer funds, we help verify your supplier’s bank account details and business registration — reducing the risk of invoice fraud or payment misdirection.
For new supplier relationships or complex orders, we can structure payments into production milestones — tying disbursements to verified production progress rather than calendar dates.
We conduct pre-shipment inspections to verify quality and quantity before your 70% balance payment is due — so you only complete payment when you are confident the goods meet your specification.
The most common payment terms for ordering from Chinese factories are 30% deposit payable when the order is placed, with the remaining 70% balance due before shipment (i.e. before the goods are loaded onto the vessel). The 70% is typically paid against a copy of the draft bill of lading, packing list, and commercial invoice — giving you confirmation that goods are ready for shipment before you release the final payment. Some larger buyers with established supplier relationships negotiate better terms (such as 20/80 or 30% deposit with balance payable on arrival of goods), while first-time buyers may be asked for 50% or even 100% upfront by cautious suppliers who do not yet trust the relationship.
T/T (Telegraphic Transfer) is safe when used correctly with an established supplier and a structured payment split. The risk is highest when paying 100% upfront to a new supplier with no track record. To minimise risk: always pay in the 30/70 structure (deposit before production, balance before shipment); conduct a pre-shipment inspection before releasing the balance; verify your supplier’s bank details through a direct phone call rather than relying solely on emailed banking instructions; and consider using Alibaba Trade Assurance for your first order if the supplier is on the platform.
Alibaba Trade Assurance is a payment protection programme available for orders placed through Alibaba.com with participating suppliers. When you use Trade Assurance, Alibaba holds your payment and releases it to the supplier only after you confirm receipt of goods or after a specified number of days have elapsed without a dispute. If the goods do not match the Trade Assurance order specification, you can file a dispute, and Alibaba will mediate — potentially issuing a full or partial refund. Trade Assurance is particularly useful for first-time orders with new suppliers, and for orders where the buyer does not yet have the leverage to insist on their preferred payment structure. It is not infallible — Alibaba’s dispute resolution is not always favourable to buyers — but it provides meaningfully more protection than an unprotected T/T transfer.
PayPal is accepted by some Chinese suppliers and can be a reasonable option for small payments such as sample fees (typically under £500). PayPal’s buyer protection mechanism offers some recourse if goods are not received or are significantly not as described. However, PayPal charges suppliers a transaction fee of 3.4%–4.4% plus a fixed fee — which many Chinese factories pass on to buyers, making it an expensive option for large commercial orders. For production orders, T/T or Trade Assurance is almost always more appropriate than PayPal. Avoid using PayPal for large transactions, as PayPal’s buyer protection for business-to-business payments in international trade is more limited than its consumer protection.
Invoice fraud — where criminals intercept email communications and substitute fraudulent bank account details for your supplier’s genuine account — is a real and growing risk in international trade. To protect yourself: always call your supplier on a known telephone number to verbally confirm bank details before making any transfer; treat any email that asks you to use new or changed bank details with extreme caution; keep your email account secure with two-factor authentication; and consider using a dedicated secure communication channel for sharing payment information with your supplier. Once funds have been transferred to a fraudulent account, recovery is extremely difficult even with bank cooperation and police involvement.