Let's be frank: most UK businesses that get burnt sourcing from China were not let down by China itself — they were let down by a supplier they never properly vetted.
Whether it was a trading company pretending to be a factory, a business licence expired two years ago, a "manufacturer" that turned out to be a teenager reselling via Alibaba, or a supplier that handed your product design straight to a competitor — the stories are real, and they are all preventable. We hear them from UK importers every week at Epic Sourcing.
This guide is for UK business owners, brand builders, and buyers who are about to place a significant order with a Chinese supplier, or who want to tighten up their existing supply chain. It covers every practical step of the supplier verification process — from checking company registration records in China to running factory audits, using third-party services, and understanding how unverified suppliers create HMRC and UKCA compliance problems you might not even know about until Customs flags your shipment at Felixstowe.
At Epic Sourcing, we've verified hundreds of Chinese manufacturers on behalf of UK clients. What follows is the same framework we use internally — with the nuance that only comes from actually being on the ground.
Chinese supplier verification is the process of independently confirming that a manufacturer or trading company in China is legally registered, financially stable, physically operational, and genuinely capable of producing what they claim to produce. It goes far beyond checking an Alibaba Gold Supplier badge — it involves official business licence checks, factory audits, capability assessments, and cross-referencing public and private data sources.
With UK-China imports running at approximately £71 billion annually (April 2024–March 2025), British businesses are clearly comfortable sourcing from China. And rightly so — the manufacturing capability, price points, and product range available are simply unmatched anywhere in the world at scale. But the sheer volume of suppliers on platforms like Alibaba, Made-in-China, and Global Sources — many millions of listings — means quality and legitimacy vary enormously. For every outstanding, honest factory you could build a decade-long relationship with, there are also operations that are none of these things.
The consequences of working with an unverified supplier are not just financial. From a UK regulatory standpoint, if your products arrive at Southampton or Felixstowe and the declared manufacturer turns out not to exist, or the goods don't match what was declared to HMRC's Customs Declaration Service (CDS), you're looking at potential misdeclaration penalties, seized goods, delayed clearance, and — in the worst cases — personal liability. If you're importing products that require UKCA marking and the supplier cannot produce legitimate test reports from accredited labs, you're placing non-compliant goods on the UK market. None of this is theoretical: HMRC and Trading Standards investigations into exactly these situations are on the rise as UK imports from Asia have grown post-Brexit.
In China specifically, the challenge is compounded by the fact that business registration is handled at provincial level through the State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) — and most UK buyers have no idea how to access those records, let alone interpret them. This is not an indictment of China as a sourcing destination; it's simply the reality of operating at scale in a market with different transparency norms than the UK's Companies House.
At Epic Sourcing, we break supplier verification into seven distinct checks. Not all of them are necessary for every order — a small initial trial order might only need steps 1–3, whilst a £50,000+ production commitment warrants all seven.
| Check | What It Covers | Trial (<£5k) | Mid (£5k–£30k) | Large (>£30k) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Business Licence Check | Legal registration, scope, expiry | |||
| 2. Factory vs Trading Co. | Who actually makes the product | |||
| 3. Platform Badge Review | Trade Assurance, Gold Supplier | |||
| 4. Reference & Export History | UK/EU export history, references | — | ||
| 5. Financial Health Check | Registered capital, court orders | — | ||
| 6. Factory Audit | On-site capacity, equipment, workers | — | Recommended | |
| 7. Capability Sample Test | Pre-production sample + UK lab test | — |
Every legitimate Chinese business has a Unified Social Credit Code (统一社会信用代码) — a unique 18-character identifier that works like a combination of the UK's Companies House number and VAT registration. This code should appear on all official documents: business licences, invoices, contracts, and customs export declarations. If a supplier cannot provide this, or the code doesn't check out, stop there.
Ask your supplier to send you their business licence (营业执照). Check the company name, Unified Social Credit Code, registered address, business scope, registration date and validity, and registered capital. The primary official verification source is the National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System at gsxt.gov.cn — searchable by company name or social credit code. For court judgements and enforcement actions, China Judgment Online (wenshu.court.gov.cn) is the authoritative source.
When you receive payment details from a supplier, the beneficiary name on the bank account should exactly match the registered company name on their business licence. If you're asked to pay to a personal account, a different company name, or a Hong Kong entity you haven't verified, pause and ask for an explanation before sending any money. This is the single most common vector for payment fraud in cross-border sourcing.
A factory (工厂) manufactures products directly. A trading company (贸易公司) buys from factories and resells to overseas buyers. Confusing one for the other has significant implications for price, quality control, lead times, and product compliance.
| Factor | Direct Factory | Trading Company |
|---|---|---|
| Unit price | Lower — no middleman margin | Higher — 10–30% markup typical |
| Customisation | Full control over spec changes | Limited — relies on factory to agree |
| Quality control | Direct access to production line | Indirect — you may never see the factory |
| UKCA test reports | Can produce original test reports | May only have reports from another buyer's spec |
| IP protection | Better — direct NDA with manufacturer | Weaker — your design goes to an unknown factory |
| Lead time | Typically faster | Can be slower due to additional layer |
Look at the business scope on the business licence. A factory's scope includes terms like "制造" (manufacture) or "加工" (processing). A trading company's scope centres on "进出口贸易" (import/export trade). Factories are almost always in industrial zones. If a supplier's registered address is a city-centre office block, they're almost certainly a trading company.
There are situations where a trading company is the right choice — particularly for small UK businesses with lower MOQ requirements, or when sourcing multiple product categories from a single contact. The issue isn't that they're trading companies; it's that they sometimes claim to be factories. Know what you're working with, and price and structure your relationship accordingly.
A factory audit is the gold standard of supplier verification. For any order above £15,000–£20,000, or for products that have UK safety compliance requirements (toys, electronics, PPE), a factory audit is not optional — it's basic due diligence.
A thorough audit covers: business licence and export licence verification (originals, on-site), factory layout and production capacity, equipment age and condition, raw material storage and incoming inspection, quality control processes, workforce composition, existing certifications (ISO 9001, BSCI, SMETA), health and safety, and working conditions.
Professional third-party audit firms such as QIMA, Bureau Veritas, Intertek, and SGS offer factory audit services starting from around £400–£600 per audit, producing standardised reports you can share with your compliance team or retail buyers. If you're not in China, an unannounced third-party audit is more reliable than a supplier-arranged visit — cross-reference the factory address visited against the registered address on the business licence.
Before committing to a full paid audit, ask the supplier to do a live video walk-through via WhatsApp or WeChat: the entrance sign, the main production floor, the QC area, and the warehouse. A legitimate factory will be comfortable with this. It quickly filters out outright misrepresentation — and it costs nothing.
Qichacha (企查查) and Tianyancha (天眼查) are Chinese commercial databases similar to Creditsafe in the UK. They aggregate SAMR, court, and tax data, providing registered capital, shareholder structure, court judgements, administrative penalties, and blacklist status. Epic Sourcing can run these checks on your behalf as part of our Supplier Verification service.
Alibaba's Verified Supplier and Trade Assurance programmes offer baseline vetting. Global Sources' Verified Manufacturer badge involves on-site audits and is generally the most rigorous of the major platforms. Independent inspection companies (QIMA, Bureau Veritas, Intertek, SGS) offer Company Profile Reports (£150–£300), Factory Audits (£400–£700), Social Compliance Audits (SMETA/BSCI, £600–£1,200), and Product Testing against UK standards.
One of the most common supplier scams involves a supplier quoting a competitive price, then requesting an additional "quality deposit", "customs guarantee", or "materials advance" on top of the agreed deposit — often after you're already committed. These requests are almost always fraudulent. Legitimate suppliers agree payment terms upfront and don't add surprise charges once you're financially invested.
As the UK importer of record, you are legally responsible for the compliance of goods you bring into the country — regardless of what your supplier told you, what was on the invoice, or what certifications they claimed to have.
When your goods arrive at Felixstowe or Southampton, your freight forwarder lodges a customs entry via HMRC's Customs Declaration Service. If your supplier has misrepresented themselves and the declared country of origin or manufacturer details are inaccurate, you're looking at potential misdeclaration penalties even if you didn't intend it. HMRC has been increasingly active in post-clearance audits (C18 demands) and can raise duty demands going back years. Your EORI number is attached to every import — keeping your supply chain verified protects your record.
The UK Conformity Assessed (UKCA) mark replaced CE marking for Great Britain after Brexit. For covered product categories — electronics, toys, electrical equipment, PPE, medical devices, machinery — the importer must demonstrate compliance via a valid Declaration of Conformity and, in most cases, test reports from an accredited laboratory. Unverified suppliers are far more likely to provide falsified or borrowed test reports. For children's toys, electrical goods, or PPE, this can carry personal criminal liability.
UK REACH (administered by the HSE) controls hazardous chemicals in manufactured goods. Unverified suppliers with limited export experience often have no idea UK REACH exists. UK businesses with turnover above £36 million must publish an annual Modern Slavery Act statement. Even below this threshold, major UK retailers increasingly require ethical sourcing evidence — a verified factory with a current SMETA audit provides this; an unverified supplier provides nothing.
As the UK importer of record, you cannot outsource your compliance obligations to your Chinese supplier. UKCA compliance, HMRC declarations, UK REACH — all of these sit with the UK-registered importer. Supplier verification is your first line of defence.
| Verification Method | Typical Cost | Turnaround | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Business licence check (DIY) | Free | 1–2 days | All orders |
| Qichacha / Tianyancha report | £50–£150 | 1–3 days | Orders >£5,000 |
| QIMA / Bureau Veritas company report | £150–£300 | 3–5 days | First-time suppliers |
| Third-party factory audit | £400–£700 | 1–2 weeks | Orders >£15,000 |
| Social compliance audit (SMETA) | £600–£1,200 | 2–4 weeks | Retail-bound goods |
| Epic Sourcing verification service | From £399 | 5–10 days | All scenarios |
A £500 factory audit on a £30,000 order is 1.7% of order value. No sensible UK business owner would skip a solicitor reviewing a domestic contract. The same logic applies here.
Our team has verified hundreds of Chinese suppliers for UK importers. We can run the checks, produce a professional report, and give you our honest assessment — including whether we'd work with them ourselves.
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At Epic Sourcing, supplier verification is baked into everything we do. Whether you're asking us to find a new supplier from scratch or you've identified a factory on Alibaba and want us to vet them before you commit, we bring the same rigorous approach: business licence check against SAMR records, export licence verification, factory vs trading company determination, financial health screen, physical address verification, video walk-through assessment, and UK export history review.
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Source an existing product type branded with your label. We identify, vet, and connect you with a verified manufacturer.
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Custom product development with your own design and specifications. Full verification, NDA management, sample coordination, compliance documentation support.
One-time project fee
Deep product development, full factory audit coordination, and ongoing supply chain management for significant sourcing programmes.
We also offer a standalone Supplier Verification Report from £399 for businesses that have already identified a supplier and want an independent check before committing. Delivered in 5–10 business days. Learn more about our verification service.
The basic checks — business licence, USCC verification, factory-vs-trading-company determination — take 2–3 business days if you know where to look. A thorough verification including a financial health screen and video walk-through takes 5–7 business days. A physical factory audit via QIMA or Bureau Veritas takes 10–14 business days. Epic Sourcing's standalone verification service typically delivers within 5–10 business days. The 10 days spent verifying is trivially short compared to the months you'll spend working with the supplier.
No — not as a standalone check. The Gold Supplier badge confirms membership and documentation assessed at the time of issuance. It does not confirm current licence status, factory vs trading company, financial health, or legal disputes. It's a useful baseline signal but should be one data point among many. Alibaba's Verified Supplier badge involves more rigorous third-party assessment and is more reassuring, though still not a substitute for independent due diligence.
You can do the basics — gsxt.gov.cn can be navigated with Chrome's auto-translation, and a business licence can be partially interpreted without Chinese. However, legal dispute records are in complex legal Chinese, financial health platforms are primarily in Chinese, and interpreting business scope requires familiarity with Chinese registration categories. The practical solution for most UK importers is a sourcing agent or service like Epic Sourcing. The cost is usually modest relative to order value.
Don't panic — this is extremely common. Run the basic checks now before placing the main order. If something looks wrong, address it before production begins. If you paid via Alibaba Trade Assurance, understand the dispute resolution mechanism. If you paid by bank transfer to a verified company account, your main protection is your signed purchase order with specifications and quality standards. If the supplier is fraudulent, contact your bank immediately and report to Action Fraud (actionfraud.police.uk).
Yes — Vietnamese businesses register with the National Business Registration Portal and similar checks apply. Vietnam sourcing has grown significantly for UK importers thanks to the UKVFTA, which delivered 65% immediate tariff elimination, rising towards 99.2% over time, with UK-Vietnam trade at approximately £9.6 billion (2024). Epic Sourcing's verification and sourcing services cover both China and Vietnam. If you're considering supply chain diversification across both markets, our team can advise on the right approach for your product.
Whether you need a standalone supplier verification report or want Epic Sourcing to handle the entire sourcing process end-to-end — we're here. Our UK-based team ensures you only ever work with suppliers who are exactly who they say they are.
Epic Sourcing UK — 71-75 Shelton St, London WC2H 9JQ | hello@epicsourcing.co.uk