Global Trade

Vietnam Sourcing — The Complete UK Business Guide

May 4, 2026

Let's be honest: sourcing from Vietnam used to be the backup plan. China was the default, Vietnam was for when China got too expensive. That story is well and truly over. In 2026, UK businesses sourcing from Vietnam aren't hedging — they're making a deliberate, strategic choice that's saving them real money, reducing geopolitical risk, and opening up duty advantages that China simply can't match.

This guide is for UK business owners, product entrepreneurs, and brand founders who are seriously considering Vietnam as a sourcing destination — or who've already started but aren't sure they're doing it right. Whether you're moving a category from China, building a Vietnam-first supply chain, or trying to understand the UKVFTA duty savings before your next shipment, you'll find the practical detail here.

At Epic Sourcing, we've helped hundreds of UK businesses navigate Vietnam sourcing — from that first message to a Ho Chi Minh City factory all the way to container loads arriving at Felixstowe. This guide reflects what we've actually seen work, and what's tripped people up along the way.

What is Vietnam Sourcing?

Vietnam sourcing refers to the process of manufacturing or procuring products from Vietnamese suppliers and factories for import into the UK market. It encompasses everything from finding and vetting manufacturers in industrial hubs like Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, and Binh Duong, through to managing production, quality control, and logistics — typically via sea freight through Felixstowe or Southampton.

1. Why UK Businesses Are Choosing Vietnam in 2026

The shift toward Vietnam wasn't triggered by a single event — it's been building for the better part of a decade. But for UK businesses specifically, several forces have converged to make 2025–2026 a genuine inflection point.

The Cost Gap Has Closed — but Not in the Way You Think

Vietnamese factory wages are still meaningfully lower than Chinese coastal factories — roughly 40–60% lower in equivalent manufacturing roles, depending on the province and product category. That gap used to be more dramatic, and it will narrow over time as Vietnam develops, but it remains commercially significant for labour-intensive categories: garments, footwear, furniture, electronics assembly, and soft goods of all kinds.

What's changed is that Vietnam's manufacturing quality has improved enormously. The factories operating in Vietnam's export industrial zones today are not the sweatshop operations of earlier decades. Major global brands — Nike, Samsung, Intel, H&M — run serious, audited operations in Vietnam. That infrastructure investment has lifted the baseline for everyone sourcing there.

Geopolitical Diversification Is No Longer Optional

UK businesses that were running 100% China supply chains in 2019 have spent the past five years getting a sharp education in concentration risk. The combination of COVID-19 factory closures, container shortages, and broader US-China trade tension has pushed most serious importers towards multi-country strategies. Vietnam is the most natural first diversification step for businesses already familiar with Asian manufacturing.

Crucially, many of Vietnam's factories are either Chinese-owned or have deep supply chain ties into China — so the shift isn't as radical as it sounds. You're not abandoning Asian manufacturing expertise; you're routing through a different geography that carries substantially different geopolitical and tariff risk.

The UKVFTA Is Worth Real Money

The UK-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (UKVFTA), which came into force in January 2021, is the trade argument that doesn't get nearly enough attention. For certain product categories, it eliminates import duties entirely — duties that would still apply to equivalent Chinese goods. We cover this in detail in Section 3, but the headline is that for UK importers in the right categories, UKVFTA saves enough in duty alone to be commercially decisive.

Context:

UK-Vietnam bilateral trade reached approximately £9.6 billion in 2024. That's still small compared to UK-China trade (around £87 billion), but the Vietnam figure has been growing at double-digit rates — reflecting exactly the shift described above.

Manufacturing Quality That Meets UK Standards

A concern we hear often from UK buyers considering Vietnam for the first time: "Will the quality be there?" The honest answer is: it depends enormously on the factory and the product category. Vietnam is excellent for textiles, garments, footwear, furniture, and electronics assembly — categories where it has decades of export-manufacturing history. It is less developed than China in certain precision engineering, tooling, and advanced electronics categories. Knowing which bucket your product sits in before you make the switch is half the battle.

2. Vietnam vs China: An Honest Comparison for UK Importers

The question isn't really "Vietnam or China" — it's "which categories work better where, and what are the trade-offs I'm actually accepting?" Here's an honest breakdown for UK business owners making that decision.

Factor China Vietnam
Labour cost (factory floor)£3.50–£6.00/hr (coastal)£1.50–£3.00/hr
Minimum Order QuantitiesGenerally lower — more flexibleTypically higher for first orders
Sea freight to Felixstowe~25–32 days~28–35 days
UK import duty (garments)12% (UK Global Tariff)0–9.6% (UKVFTA preferential)
UK import duty (footwear)8–17%0% (UKVFTA, phased)
Supplier base sizeEnormous — virtually all categoriesLarge in core categories; smaller elsewhere
English communicationGood in established exportersVariable — improving rapidly
IP and brand protectionImproving but still a concernImproving; lower counterfeiting exposure
Raw material availabilityExcellent — full supply chainDependent on China imports for many inputs
Geopolitical risk (UK)Moderate-to-high concentration riskLower; considered stable trade partner
Private label / custom developmentVery strong ecosystemStrong in core categories; limited elsewhere

The Raw Materials Dependency You Need to Understand

Here's a nuance that matters for UK buyers: Vietnam's factories are frequently dependent on Chinese raw materials and components. A textile manufacturer in Vietnam might source its fabric from Guangdong. A furniture maker in Binh Duong may use Chinese hardware and fittings. This means that the same supply chain disruptions affecting China can ripple through to Vietnamese factories — though typically with a lag and lower severity.

This also has compliance implications. If you're sourcing from Vietnam partly to claim UKVFTA preferential tariff rates, you need to be confident the Rules of Origin requirements are genuinely met. Don't assume that a factory in Vietnam automatically qualifies for UKVFTA — the degree of transformation required depends on the product category.

The Verdict

For most UK businesses in labour-intensive categories — garments, accessories, footwear, furniture, soft goods, electronics assembly — Vietnam is now the strongest single-country alternative to China, and in many cases a better primary source when you factor in UKVFTA savings. For high-complexity manufacturing, precision tooling, or categories requiring deep supply chain integration, China retains structural advantages that Vietnam hasn't yet closed.

3. The UKVFTA Advantage: Real Duty Savings for UK Businesses

The UK-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement came into force on 1 January 2021 — and for UK importers in the right categories, it's one of the most underutilised commercial advantages available. Let's cut through the legal language and talk about what it actually means for your landed costs.

What the UKVFTA Actually Does

At a headline level, the UKVFTA commits the UK and Vietnam to eliminating tariffs on 65% of goods traded immediately, rising to 99.2% of goods over time. For UK importers, this means that goods qualifying under the agreement can attract substantially reduced — or zero — import duty, compared with the UK Global Tariff rates that apply to equivalent Chinese goods.

This is not a marginal saving. On a £100,000 shipment of garments from China, you'd pay roughly £12,000 in import duty under UK Global Tariff. On a qualifying shipment from Vietnam under UKVFTA, that duty could be substantially reduced depending on the applicable phased rate for your commodity code — representing a meaningful saving for any business doing regular volume.

Product Category UK Global Tariff (China) UKVFTA Rate (Vietnam) Indicative saving on £100k
Garments / Clothing12%0–9.6% (phased)Up to £12,000
Footwear (leather uppers)8–17%0% (fully phased)Up to £17,000
Furniture (wooden)0–5.5%0%Up to £5,500
Handbags / Leather goods3.7%0%Up to £3,700
Electronics assembly (HS 8471)0%0%No difference (MFN 0%)
Sports equipment2.7–4.7%0%Up to £4,700

* Duty rates are indicative based on UK Global Tariff and UKVFTA schedules as of 2026. Always verify against the current UK Trade Tariff for your specific HS code. These figures exclude VAT (20%) which is payable regardless of origin.

Rules of Origin: The Critical Catch

To claim UKVFTA preferential rates, your goods must genuinely originate in Vietnam under the agreement's Rules of Origin. This isn't as simple as having a supplier in Vietnam — it requires that the goods have undergone a sufficient degree of transformation or processing in Vietnam to qualify. For textiles and apparel, UKVFTA typically requires a two-stage transformation — meaning fabric must be cut and sewn in Vietnam, not just assembled from pre-made garment parts imported from China.

⚠️ UK Compliance Watch:

Incorrectly claiming UKVFTA preferential origin can result in HMRC demanding back-payment of the full MFN duty rate, plus interest and penalties. Before claiming UKVFTA rates, obtain a valid Proof of Origin from your supplier — either a EUR.1 movement certificate or a Declaration of Origin on the commercial invoice. Your customs broker should guide you through this, but the responsibility for accuracy sits with you as the UK importer of record. Maintain records for at least four years.

How to Check Your HS Code

The UKVFTA duty rate for your goods depends on the correct Harmonised System (HS) commodity code. Use the UK Government's UK Trade Tariff tool at gov.uk/trade-tariff to look up your product. Search by description, identify the 10-digit commodity code, then filter by origin "Vietnam" to see the applicable UKVFTA rate. If you're unsure of the correct code, ask your customs broker — misclassification is one of the most common and costly import errors UK businesses make.

4. Industries Where Vietnam Excels

Not all product categories are equally well-served by Vietnamese manufacturing. Here's where Vietnam genuinely shines — and where UK businesses have seen the strongest results.

Garments, Apparel & Textiles

Vietnam is the world's third-largest garment exporter. The industry is genuinely world-class, with factories accredited to WRAP, BSCI, SA8000, and GOTS standards regularly. Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, and the surrounding industrial provinces are home to thousands of manufacturers — from small CMT operations (cut, make, trim) to vertically integrated factories with in-house fabric production. For UK fashion brands, activewear labels, and workwear businesses, Vietnam is a serious option for quality and compliance.

Footwear

Vietnam is the world's second-largest footwear exporter after China. Nike, Adidas, and most major global footwear brands manufacture here. The supply chain for materials — soles, uppers, lasts, adhesives — is well-developed. UK footwear importers can access strong manufacturing capability for leather shoes, trainers, sandals, and boots, and benefit from zero UKVFTA duty on many categories.

Furniture & Home Goods

Vietnam has one of the strongest furniture manufacturing ecosystems in Southeast Asia, particularly for rattan, bamboo, solid wood, and upholstered pieces. Binh Duong and Dong Nai provinces are major furniture export hubs. UK furniture importers and homewares brands have found genuine quality capability here, particularly for natural materials and hand-crafted items that aren't easily replicated by automated Chinese production.

Electronics Assembly

Samsung manufactures a significant share of its global smartphone output in Vietnam. Intel has a major chip-testing and packaging facility there. This level of investment has created a strong electronics assembly ecosystem, particularly around Hanoi and Bac Ninh. For UK businesses seeking electronics assembly, wiring harnesses, or simple circuit board assembly, Vietnam is a credible option — though for complex PCB design and semiconductor manufacturing, Taiwan and China retain stronger capabilities.

Bags, Accessories & Leather Goods

Handbags, wallets, travel accessories, and leather goods are a genuine strength. Vietnamese factories supply European brands at accessible price points and have strong capabilities in genuine leather, PU leather, and mixed-material constructions. For UK accessory brands, this is one of the most compelling Vietnam categories — especially given UKVFTA duty benefits on leather goods.

Where Vietnam is Less Competitive:

Vietnam is less developed than China in: precision metal parts and tooling, complex injection moulding for consumer goods, high-end electronics hardware, industrial machinery components, and anything requiring very short lead times with rapid iteration. If your product requires extensive tooling development or involves complex multi-component assembly, China's manufacturing ecosystem currently offers more depth.

5. How to Find and Vet Vietnamese Suppliers

Finding Vietnamese suppliers is harder than finding Chinese ones — that's just the reality. Alibaba's coverage of Vietnam is less comprehensive. English-language communication is more variable. And there are fewer established trading intermediaries. Here's what actually works.

Where to Search

Alibaba does list Vietnamese suppliers, but coverage is patchy — best for garments, footwear, and furniture. Global Sources has a reasonable Vietnam presence for electronics and consumer goods. TradeKey and Made-in-Vietnam are smaller directories that occasionally surface factories that don't appear on Alibaba. For trade fairs, the Vietnam Manufacturing Expo (Hanoi, annual) and Saigon International Trade Fair are the best in-country sourcing events. If you're serious about Vietnam sourcing, attending once is worth the investment.

The most reliable route — particularly for UK businesses without in-country contacts — is to work with a sourcing agent or agency that has established Vietnam factory relationships. This genuinely reduces the risk of engaging a factory that looks professional online but is a trading company with no actual manufacturing capability.

Vetting Vietnamese Factories: What to Check

  • Business registration verification — Request the factory's Enterprise Registration Certificate (ERC) from the Ministry of Planning and Investment. Verify it against Vietnam's national business registry.
  • Export experience with UK/EU buyers — Ask for specific EU or UK client references. Factories with existing relationships with European brands tend to be more aligned with quality expectations and documentation requirements.
  • Audit certificates — BSCI, WRAP, SMETA, ISO 9001. Request the actual certificate, not just a claim of compliance. Verify independently if the order value justifies it.
  • Rules of Origin capability — Specifically for UKVFTA claims, verify that the factory can genuinely support origin declarations and that its supply chain qualifies.
  • Factory visit or video audit — Before placing a first order above £10,000–£15,000, either visit the factory or commission a third-party audit.

⚠️ Watch Out: Trading Companies Posing as Factories

This is more prevalent in Vietnam than people expect. A company presents itself as a manufacturer, takes your order, and then sub-contracts to a factory you've never met or vetted. You lose control of quality, lead times, and subcontracting risk. The tell-tale signs: unusually broad product range, no evidence of actual production equipment in photos, inability to provide factory registration documents. An on-the-ground audit eliminates this risk entirely.

6. MOQs, Lead Times, and Costs: What to Realistically Expect

One of the most common frustrations UK businesses encounter when first approaching Vietnamese factories is that MOQs and lead times are less flexible than they've experienced with established Chinese suppliers. Here's what to realistically budget for.

Category Typical MOQ Sample Lead Time Production Lead Time Sea Freight to UK
Garments / Apparel300–500 pcs per style2–4 weeks60–90 days28–35 days
Footwear500–1,000 pairs per style3–5 weeks75–100 days28–35 days
Furniture (solid wood)50–200 units per SKU3–6 weeks60–90 days30–36 days
Bags / Leather Accessories200–500 pcs per style2–4 weeks45–75 days28–35 days
Electronics Assembly500–2,000 units3–6 weeks45–90 days28–35 days

Cost Structure: What Drives Your Vietnam Price

Your ex-works factory price from Vietnam is driven by the same factors as China: material cost, labour, factory overhead, and margin. Beyond the factory gate price, UK businesses need to budget for: sample and development costs (£50–£300 per garment sample; more for complex products); sea freight FCL from Ho Chi Minh City or Haiphong to Felixstowe or Southampton (typically £1,200–£2,500 per 20-foot container in normal market conditions, subject to market fluctuations); import duty at the applicable UK or UKVFTA rate; VAT at 20% on the full CIF customs value (reclaimable by VAT-registered businesses); and customs clearance fees of approximately £150–£350 per shipment.

7. UK Compliance, Customs, and Import Duties

Post-Brexit, UK businesses importing from Vietnam navigate UK-specific customs rules, not EU ones. This is an area where a lot of first-time importers make costly mistakes. Here's what you need to have in order.

EORI Number

An Economic Operator Registration and Identification (EORI) number is mandatory for any UK business importing goods. If you don't have one, apply via HMRC — it's free and typically issued within 5–7 business days. Without an EORI, your goods cannot be cleared through UK customs.

Customs Declaration Service (CDS)

The UK uses the Customs Declaration Service (CDS) for all import and export declarations. Your freight forwarder or customs broker will handle CDS submissions on your behalf, but you need to provide accurate information: commodity codes, customs value, country of origin, and any applicable preference claims (like UKVFTA). Errors on CDS submissions are a common source of delays and penalties.

UKCA Marking

Post-Brexit, many product categories that previously required CE marking now require UKCA (UK Conformity Assessed) marking for sale in Great Britain. This applies to toys, electrical products, PPE, machinery, and a range of other regulated categories. The UKCA mark requires conformity assessment against the relevant UK technical regulation. If you're importing products that previously carried CE marking, verify whether UKCA is required before you place your order — retrofitting compliance after production is expensive.

UK Product Safety Regulations

As the UK importer of record, you are legally responsible for ensuring goods placed on the UK market are safe, correctly labelled, and comply with relevant technical standards. This doesn't change based on where goods are manufactured — importing from Vietnam doesn't reduce your compliance obligations one jot.

⚠️ UK Customs Compliance Checklist for Vietnam Imports:

  • EORI number registered with HMRC
  • Correct 10-digit HS commodity code confirmed
  • Customs value (CIF basis) correctly declared
  • UKVFTA origin proof obtained (EUR.1 or supplier declaration) if claiming preference
  • UKCA marking applied where required for your product category
  • Labelling complies with UK regulations (country of origin, care labels for textiles, etc.)
  • Import VAT accounted for in your cashflow planning
  • Importer of record obligations understood and accepted

UK REACH and Chemical Compliance

UK REACH has implications for importers of finished goods containing restricted substances. For textiles, leather goods, and surface-treated products, check whether UK REACH restrictions on substances such as azo dyes, formaldehyde, or heavy metals apply to your product. Your UK importer responsibilities under UK REACH differ from those under EU REACH — take professional advice if your product category involves surface treatments or specialist dyes.

8. Logistics: Getting Goods from Vietnam to the UK

Sea freight is the primary mode for Vietnam to UK shipments — air freight is an option for small, high-value, or time-critical cargo, but it's typically 8–12x more expensive per kilogram. Here's how the sea freight journey works in practice.

Departure Ports in Vietnam

Ho Chi Minh City (Cat Lai Terminal) — the busiest container port in Vietnam, serving the south of the country including Binh Duong and Dong Nai industrial zones. Most garments, footwear, furniture, and consumer goods ship from here. Haiphong / Lach Huyen — the primary northern port, serving the Hanoi region, Bac Ninh, and Ha Nam provinces. Electronics assembly and northern manufacturers typically ship from Haiphong.

UK Arrival Ports

Felixstowe — the UK's largest container port, handling approximately 48% of the UK's container traffic. Most Vietnam shipments arrive here. Southampton — the UK's second-largest container port, often used for goods bound for the Midlands and the South West. London Gateway — DP World's modern terminal on the Thames, serving London and the South East. Transit time from Ho Chi Minh City to Felixstowe is typically 28–35 days on a direct or one-transshipment routing.

Incoterms: Who's Responsible for What

Incoterms define the point at which risk and responsibility transfer between seller and buyer. For Vietnam imports, the most common terms are: FOB (Free on Board) — factory loads goods onto the vessel in Vietnam; you're responsible for freight, insurance, and UK customs from that point. Most common for experienced importers. CIF (Cost, Insurance, Freight) — factory arranges and pays for sea freight and insurance to the UK port; you handle UK customs and onward delivery. Good for beginners. DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) — factory delivers to your UK door and handles all freight, customs, and duty. Easiest operationally, but most expensive — and you give up control of customs declaration, which has compliance implications.

Thinking About Sourcing from Vietnam?

Talk to our team about your product category, budget, and timeline. We'll tell you honestly whether Vietnam makes sense — and if it does, we'll do the heavy lifting.

Book Your Free Consultation

9. How Epic Sourcing Can Help

Epic Sourcing is a UK-based sourcing agency with an on-the-ground team in Southeast Asia. We've been helping UK businesses source from Vietnam — and we've built real factory relationships in Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, Binh Duong, and the northern industrial zones that you simply can't replicate from a laptop in London.

We offer three core service packages depending on where you are in your sourcing journey:

White Label
£699
one-time fee

Ideal for UK businesses testing Vietnam for the first time with an existing product design. We find you matched, vetted factories, provide a full supplier comparison report, and manage initial quote negotiations.

  • Factory shortlist (3–5 vetted suppliers)
  • Supplier due diligence report
  • Quote negotiation and comparison
  • UKVFTA origin assessment
  • Sample coordination support
Learn More
Most Popular
Private Label
£1,899
one-time fee

For UK brands wanting custom product development in Vietnam. We manage everything from design brief to production-ready samples — including factory selection, tech pack support, and compliance documentation.

  • Everything in White Label
  • Custom product development support
  • Tech pack and specification review
  • Factory visit / on-site audit coordination
  • Pre-shipment QC inspection
  • UKCA compliance guidance
Learn More
Secret Label
£3,299
one-time fee

Our full end-to-end managed sourcing service. We handle every element of your Vietnam supply chain — from supplier discovery through to goods arriving at your UK warehouse — under strict confidentiality.

  • Everything in Private Label
  • Full supply chain management
  • Dedicated account manager
  • Production monitoring and oversight
  • Freight and customs coordination
  • Supplier identity confidentiality
Learn More

Not sure which package is right for you? Book a free 30-minute consultation with our team and we'll walk you through the options based on your product, volume, and timeline. There's no pressure and no obligation — we'd rather give you honest advice than sell you the wrong service.

10. Frequently Asked Questions

Is Vietnam cheaper than China for UK businesses?

Labour costs in Vietnam are typically 40–60% lower than equivalent Chinese coastal factories, which can translate to meaningful unit cost savings for labour-intensive products. However, "cheaper" depends heavily on your category, order volume, and whether you factor in UKVFTA duty savings. For some UK businesses, the UKVFTA tariff reduction alone makes Vietnam the financially superior option — even if the factory gate price is comparable to China. The total landed cost calculation (factory price + freight + duty + customs + UK delivery) is what actually matters, and Vietnam frequently wins that comparison for garments, footwear, and accessories.

How do I claim UKVFTA duty preferences when importing from Vietnam?

To claim UKVFTA preferential tariff rates, you need to demonstrate that your goods originate in Vietnam under the agreement's Rules of Origin. In practice, this means obtaining a valid Proof of Origin from your Vietnamese supplier — either a EUR.1 movement certificate issued by Vietnamese customs authorities, or an Origin Declaration on the commercial invoice. Submit this proof to UK customs via your CDS declaration when the goods arrive at Felixstowe or Southampton. Your customs broker will handle the technical declaration, but you must ensure the supporting documentation is in place before the shipment departs Vietnam. HMRC can audit your preference claims, so maintain records for at least four years.

What are typical minimum order quantities when sourcing from Vietnam?

MOQs in Vietnam are generally higher than you might be used to with smaller Chinese suppliers, particularly for first orders. For garments, expect 300–500 pieces per style as a typical minimum; footwear is typically 500–1,000 pairs. Furniture and homewares can be more flexible, with 50–200 units being common for solid wood items. Electronics assembly typically starts at 500–2,000 units. These figures are for production runs — samples are available in smaller quantities at an agreed sample fee. If your volume is below these thresholds, a sourcing agent can sometimes negotiate lower MOQs by building relationships with factories or positioning you as a growth account.

How long does it take to get products from Vietnam to the UK?

Plan for a total lead time of 14–20 weeks from purchase order confirmation to goods arriving at your UK warehouse, though this varies by category and supplier. This breaks down approximately as: factory production (60–90 days for most categories), pre-shipment inspection (3–5 days), factory-to-port trucking (2–5 days), sea freight transit from Ho Chi Minh City or Haiphong to Felixstowe or Southampton (28–35 days), UK customs clearance (2–7 days), and UK inland delivery (1–3 days). For time-sensitive launches, air freight for an initial small batch is sometimes justified whilst the main sea shipment follows.

Do I need to visit Vietnam to source there successfully?

A factory visit is not strictly necessary, particularly for initial exploratory sourcing or lower-value orders — but it is strongly advisable before committing significant spend to a Vietnam supply chain. At Epic Sourcing, we've seen that the clients who get the best results from Vietnam sourcing are those who either visit factories themselves or commission a professional on-site audit. The audit confirms that the factory is real, operational, and capable — which sounds obvious, but the number of businesses that have been caught out by factories that exist only on paper is genuinely significant. If you can't travel, a third-party factory audit from a firm with Vietnam capability is a worthwhile investment for orders above £15,000. Epic Sourcing can arrange these as part of our Private Label and Secret Label service packages.

Ready to Start Sourcing from Vietnam?

Vietnam sourcing done right can save UK businesses significant sums in duty, reduce geopolitical risk, and open up high-quality manufacturing that rivals anything available in China. Done wrong, it can cost you time, money, and stock you can't sell.

At Epic Sourcing, we've done this before — properly. Let's talk about your product, your timeline, and whether Vietnam is the right move for your business.

Epic Sourcing UK · 71-75 Shelton St, London WC2H 9JQ · hello@epicsourcing.co.uk

07551 136406