Let's have a frank chat about electronics sourcing from China — because this is one of those categories where getting it wrong is expensive, and getting it right is genuinely transformative for a UK business.
Electronics is the UK's single largest import category from China. Every year, tens of thousands of UK businesses import circuit boards, consumer gadgets, LED lighting, power tools, audio equipment, smart home devices, and industrial electronics from factories across Guangdong, Zhejiang, and Fujian provinces. The opportunity is enormous. So is the complexity — particularly post-Brexit, where UK compliance requirements (UKCA, RoHS, WEEE, Radio Equipment Regulations) now sit separately from EU frameworks.
This guide is for UK business owners, buyers, and brand operators who are:
At Epic Sourcing, we've helped UK businesses navigate electronics sourcing across consumer goods, industrial equipment, and branded electronics lines. This guide pulls together everything we've learned — the compliance traps, the supplier vetting process, the cost realities, and the strategic questions you need to answer before placing a purchase order.
Electronics sourcing from China refers to the process of procuring electronic goods — whether finished products, sub-assemblies, or components — directly from Chinese manufacturers or through sourcing agents, for import and sale in the UK market. It encompasses everything from factory identification and product compliance to logistics, customs clearance, and HMRC import duty payment.
China manufactures more than 70% of the world's consumer electronics. That's not marketing copy — it's the operational reality of the global supply chain. From the microchips in smartphones to the LED drivers in commercial lighting, the ecosystems surrounding electronics manufacturing in Shenzhen, Dongguan, and Ningbo are decades ahead of anywhere else on the planet. For UK businesses, that means one thing: if you're sourcing electronics anywhere other than China (or, increasingly, Vietnam), you're almost certainly paying more than you need to.
UK-China trade was approximately £87 billion in 2024, and electronics represent the largest single slice of that figure. Consumer electronics, industrial electronics, and electronic components account for a significant portion of the roughly £71 billion worth of goods the UK imports from China annually (April 2024–March 2025). UK businesses range from global brands using Chinese electronics factories for their supply chains, to small Shopify brands sourcing white-label gadgets for resale, to engineering companies procuring bespoke industrial components.
Post-Brexit product compliance is the biggest change for UK electronics importers. The UK's exit from the EU created a separate regulatory landscape that trips up even experienced importers:
Many UK importers assume that because a product has CE marking from a Chinese factory, it automatically meets UK requirements. This is incorrect post-Brexit. UKCA and CE are separate conformity routes with overlapping (but not identical) technical standards. Always verify with a UK-qualified test lab.
The good news is that direct manufacturing access in China has never been easier for UK SMEs. Platforms like Alibaba, Global Sources, and Made-in-China have lowered the barrier to entry significantly. More importantly, the rise of professional sourcing agents (like Epic Sourcing) means UK businesses can now access factory-direct pricing and quality assurance without needing a team on the ground in China. The combination of competitive pricing, increasingly sophisticated manufacturing capability, and accessible logistics makes China the default starting point for any UK business evaluating electronics sourcing.
The breadth of electronics available from Chinese manufacturers is genuinely extraordinary. Here's a practical breakdown of the major categories UK businesses successfully source, along with the key considerations for each:
This is the highest-volume category: wireless earbuds, portable speakers, phone accessories, power banks, smartwatches, action cameras, drones, and home automation devices. Shenzhen is the global hub for consumer electronics manufacturing, with thousands of factories at varying quality tiers. This category has the most robust compliance requirements — UKCA, Radio Equipment Regulations (for wireless devices), battery regulations, and UK PSTI for connected devices.
LED drivers, bulbs, commercial fixtures, strip lighting, and smart lighting systems. China dominates global LED manufacturing, particularly in the Pearl River Delta. Key compliance: UK Electrical Equipment (Safety) Regulations 2016, EMC Regulations 2016, ErP (Energy-related Products) Regulations. Watch for photometric data accuracy — Chinese factory test reports don't always match real-world performance.
Angle grinders, drills, circular saws, and industrial control systems. Heavily regulated category — UKCA is mandatory, and you'll need third-party conformity assessment for most power tools. Lead times and MOQs tend to be higher than consumer electronics. Zhejiang province (Jinhua, Yiwu) is the manufacturing hub.
Resistors, capacitors, PCBs (printed circuit boards), connectors, displays, and semiconductors. UK manufacturers and electronics assemblers regularly source components directly from Chinese distributors and manufacturers. Lower compliance burden at component level (components don't need UKCA as finished products), but end-product responsibility still falls on the UK-based producer.
Amplifiers, mixers, microphones, PA systems, projectors, and display screens. China produces the vast majority of the world's pro-audio and AV equipment — both under established global brands (OEM agreements) and as generic/white-label products. Radio Equipment Regulations apply to wireless audio products.
A rapidly growing category: EV chargers, solar inverters, MPPT controllers, battery management systems, and energy storage units. Heavy regulatory scrutiny — OZEV approval for EV chargers installed in UK homes, UK Grid Code compliance for grid-connected inverters. Getting compliance right in this category is critical and often requires UK-specific certification beyond what Chinese factories typically provide.
The shift of electronics manufacturing from China to Vietnam has been one of the most discussed topics in global supply chain over the last five years. Samsung, Intel, LG, and Foxconn have all built significant manufacturing capacity in Vietnam. For UK businesses, the question isn't whether Vietnam has electronics manufacturing capability — it clearly does — but whether it's the right choice for your specific product and scale.
| Factor | China (Shenzhen / Guangdong) | Vietnam (Hanoi / Ho Chi Minh City) |
|---|---|---|
| Manufacturing range | Comprehensive — virtually everything | Concentrated in high-volume assembly (smartphones, TVs, components) |
| Component ecosystem | Deepest in the world — parts available same day in Shenzhen | Still immature — most components imported from China |
| UKVFTA duty benefit | No FTA with UK — standard UK Global Tariff applies | UKVFTA: 65%+ of electronics lines at 0% duty immediately |
| Sample / prototype speed | 7–21 days; PCB/tooling fast | Typically 3–6 weeks; slower iteration cycles |
| Minimum order quantities | Flexible; 50–500 units common for consumer electronics | Higher minimums more typical; 500–5,000+ common |
| Sea freight to UK | ~25–30 days to Felixstowe or Southampton | ~28–35 days to Felixstowe or Southampton |
| Geopolitical risk | Higher — ongoing US-China tech tensions | Lower — strong diplomatic relationships with UK |
The UK-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (UKVFTA) came into force in January 2021 and provides significant duty relief for electronics originating in Vietnam. Under the agreement, 65% of tariff lines were immediately reduced to 0%, with the figure rising to 99.2% over time. For electronics specifically, many HS Chapter 85 product lines (electrical machinery, apparatus, and parts) qualify for reduced or zero duty under UKVFTA — compared with the UK Global Tariff rates of 0–14% applied to Chinese-origin goods.
To claim UKVFTA preference, goods must genuinely originate in Vietnam. Since most Vietnamese electronics factories import components from China and assemble locally, you need to check whether your specific product meets the "sufficient transformation" rules of origin criteria. Always get a valid Proof of Origin (EUR.1 certificate or origin declaration) from your Vietnamese supplier.
Our practical recommendation: for custom-designed or bespoke electronics, China remains the first-choice sourcing destination for most UK SMEs due to its unmatched ecosystem, speed, and flexibility. Vietnam is increasingly worth evaluating for high-volume, assembly-intensive products where the duty saving is material and the product doesn't require heavy customisation.
This is where most UK importers get into trouble. Electronics imported from China must meet UK-specific regulatory requirements before they can be placed on the GB market.
The UK Conformity Assessed (UKCA) marking is the UK equivalent of the EU's CE marking, applicable in Great Britain since January 2021. From 1 January 2025, CE marking alone is no longer accepted for most regulated electronic products on the GB market — you need UKCA. UKCA applies to electrical equipment under the Electrical Equipment (Safety) Regulations 2016, radio equipment under the Radio Equipment Regulations 2017, and equipment under the EMC Regulations 2016.
Any electronic product that uses radio frequencies — Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, Zigbee, cellular, RF remote controls, wireless chargers — is subject to the UK Radio Equipment Regulations 2017. This includes the overwhelming majority of modern consumer electronics. Compliance requires testing to UK-recognised radio and EMC standards and registration with Ofcom where applicable.
UK RoHS 2012 (as amended) restricts the use of hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment. It applies to most consumer and industrial electronics and limits the concentration of lead, mercury, cadmium, hexavalent chromium, PBB, PBDE, DEHP, DBP, BBP, and DIBP. Your supplier should provide RoHS test reports from accredited labs.
As a UK business placing electronic equipment on the GB market, you're a UK producer under UK WEEE Regulations 2013 and must register with an approved Producer Compliance Scheme (PCS). Annual reporting of WEEE arising from your products is required. Non-compliance carries significant penalties.
Effective from April 2024, the PSTI Act requires consumer connectable products (IoT devices) to meet minimum security requirements: no universal default passwords, a published vulnerability disclosure policy, and a minimum defined period for security updates. If you're importing smart home devices, connected speakers, networked cameras, or any IoT product, PSTI compliance is non-negotiable.
Chinese electronics factories routinely provide compliance documents — CE test reports, RoHS declarations, UKCA declarations — with quotation packs. Many of these documents are for similar (not identical) products, are from unaccredited labs, or are simply fabricated. Trading Standards enforcement in the UK has increased significantly for electronics.
Before placing any order for a regulated electronic product, commission your own independent compliance assessment with a UK-accredited test laboratory. The liability for non-compliant products sits with you as the importer.
| Product Category | HS Chapter | Typical MFN Duty Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Computers, laptops, tablets | 8471 | 0% |
| Smartphones & mobile handsets | 8517 | 0% |
| LED lighting products | 9405 | 2.7–4.9% |
| Wireless audio (speakers, headphones) | 8518 | 2.2–4.9% |
| Power tools | 8467 | 1.7–3.7% |
| Electronic components | 8532/8533 | 0% |
VAT at 20% applies to all imports, calculated on the customs value (CIF) plus any import duty. You'll need an EORI number to import into the UK and submit customs declarations via HMRC's Customs Declaration Service (CDS).
One of the most common conversations we have with new UK clients is around budgeting. The factory price is just the starting point — landed cost is what matters for your margins.
| Electronics Category | Typical MOQ | Sample Cost (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| Consumer gadgets (white label) | 50–200 units | £20–£150 |
| Custom-branded electronics (private label) | 200–1,000 units | £50–£300 |
| LED lighting (standard spec) | 100–500 units | £10–£80 |
| Power tools | 200–500 units | £30–£200 |
| Custom PCB / ODM electronics | 500–5,000 units | £500–£5,000+ (tooling) |
Standard production lead times: off-the-shelf/white label 2–4 weeks; private label 3–6 weeks; OEM/ODM with modifications 6–10 weeks; fully custom electronics 12–24 weeks+. Add 25–30 days sea freight to Felixstowe or Southampton.
UK compliance testing for a single electronics product typically costs between £500 and £5,000 depending on complexity and the number of standards involved. On a 500-unit order, a £2,000 compliance cost adds £4.00 per unit — material impact on margin that many new importers fail to budget for.
This is where the real work happens — and where the most common mistakes are made. Electronics is a category saturated with trading companies presenting themselves as factories, and sub-standard manufacturers producing goods that look fine in photos but fail quality or compliance checks.
Electronics have specific logistics considerations. Products containing lithium batteries — which includes most modern consumer electronics — are subject to strict transport regulations (IATA DGR for air freight, IMDG Code for sea freight). Your freight forwarder must have experience with lithium battery-containing electronics. Regulatory non-compliance creates serious delays and potential shipment seizure.
Required customs documents: commercial invoice, packing list, Bill of Lading or Air Waybill, Certificate of Origin (if claiming preferential duty), and your EORI number. Electronics are a category that Border Force targets for compliance sampling — having your compliance documentation organised significantly reduces the risk of examination delays at Felixstowe or Southampton.
At Epic Sourcing, we've worked with UK businesses importing consumer electronics, LED lighting, industrial equipment, and branded electronics lines from China. Here's how our services apply:
Source an existing electronics product — Bluetooth speaker, LED light, power bank — under your own brand. We identify and vet qualified factories, arrange samples, negotiate pricing, and manage logistics. Factory-direct pricing with your branding, without the complexity of managing a China supply chain.
Learn about White Label →Customise an existing electronics design — modified casing, added features, bespoke colour options, or custom firmware — and launch it as your own branded product. We manage the design brief, oversee sample development iterations, coordinate compliance testing, and manage production.
Learn about Private Label →Developing a genuinely new electronics product — from concept brief to manufactured product. Our team works with Chinese ODM/OEM factories to develop your product, including PCB design, firmware, casing tooling, packaging, and full UK compliance testing coordination.
Learn about Secret Label →Already found your electronics supplier but want independent verification before committing? We arrange third-party factory audits, verify supplier business licences, review compliance documentation, and provide a report on factory capability and risk level.
Learn about Supplier Verification →Book a free 30-minute consultation with our UK team. We'll tell you honestly whether your product is viable to source from China, what compliance requirements apply, and what it will cost.
Book Your Free ConsultationWhether UKCA marking is required depends on the product category. Most consumer electronics, electrical equipment, radio devices, and electronic machinery that previously required CE marking in the EU now require UKCA marking for the Great Britain market (England, Scotland, Wales). The key legislation includes the Electrical Equipment (Safety) Regulations 2016, Radio Equipment Regulations 2017, and EMC Regulations 2016. Some product categories are exempt — for example, simple electronic components not placed on the market as finished products. If you're unsure whether your product requires UKCA, consult a UK product compliance specialist or approved body before importing.
The most reliable approach for a small UK business is to start with established B2B platforms (Alibaba, Global Sources), shortlist five to ten suppliers who respond professionally and can provide existing export references, then request samples from your top two or three. Before placing a production order, commission a third-party factory audit. This process typically takes six to twelve weeks from initial contact to placing a purchase order. Working with a professional sourcing agent like Epic Sourcing significantly compresses this timeline — we have established relationships with vetted electronics factories across Guangdong and can identify the right factory without the trial-and-error of direct platform searching.
The three highest-risk areas in 2026 are: first, UKCA marking compliance — many importers are still operating on the assumption that CE-marked products from Chinese factories are acceptable in the UK, when in practice UKCA is now required for most regulated product categories; second, the PSTI Act for connected IoT devices, which is actively enforced from 2024 and catches many small importers; and third, fraudulent or inadequate compliance documentation from Chinese suppliers — the only protection is commissioning your own independent testing from a UK-accredited laboratory. Trading Standards has increased its sampling activity for electronics at UK ports, and the consequences of non-compliance include product withdrawal, fines, and potential criminal liability for directors.
For some product categories and order volumes, yes — the UKVFTA tariff saving can be material. For example, a Bluetooth speaker at HS 8518 attracting 4.9% UK import duty on £100,000 of goods represents a £4,900 annual saving if genuinely originating in Vietnam. However, this needs to be weighed against additional supply chain complexity, Vietnam's less developed electronics component ecosystem, typically higher MOQs, and strict rules of origin requirements. Our recommendation: run the numbers properly for your specific product and order volume before making sourcing location decisions based primarily on duty savings. For most UK SMEs under £500,000 annual electronics spend, the supply chain advantages of China outweigh the UKVFTA duty saving.
Standard payment terms for electronics orders from China: for a first order, expect 30% deposit by T/T (bank wire transfer) on order confirmation, with 70% balance due before shipment (paid against copy of Bill of Lading). As you build a relationship and order history, you may negotiate payment against original Bill of Lading, or 30-day terms with established factories. For smaller orders on Alibaba, Trade Assurance orders provide additional payment protection. Never pay 100% upfront on a first order — this is a significant red flag regardless of what reason the supplier gives. For high-value orders (over £50,000), consider a Letter of Credit through your bank.
Electronics sourcing from China is one of the most rewarding — and most technically demanding — import categories for UK businesses. Get the compliance right, vet your supplier properly, and you're looking at 40–70% cost savings versus UK or EU procurement.
At Epic Sourcing, we help UK businesses get it right the first time. Book a free consultation — tell us your product, your budget, and your timeline.
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