How to Import Carpets from China 2026: Complete Step-by-Step Guide

Published April 19, 2026 · By Wang Fangfang, Carpet Export Specialist
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Importing carpets from China can save your business 25-40% compared to buying from domestic distributors or trading companies. But the process has specific steps that, if done correctly, minimize risk and maximize quality. If done incorrectly, it leads to wasted money and quality disasters.

This guide walks you through the complete process of importing carpets from China — from finding a factory to receiving your goods at your warehouse.

Step 1: Find and Verify a Carpet Factory

What to do:

Start with factory verification before any communication about pricing or orders. The goal is to confirm you are dealing with a genuine manufacturer, not a trading company.

Verification checklist:

Red flags:

Our factory in Tianjin Wuqing welcomes all verification steps. We are a genuine manufacturer with 20+ years of export experience and OEKO-TEX certification in our own name.

Step 2: Request Samples and Approve Quality

What to do:

Never place a bulk order without approving a physical sample first. The sample is your quality benchmark — the bulk order must match it.

Sample process:

  1. Request 1-3 samples of your target product — typically costs 2-3× the unit price
  2. Inspect: pile height, pile density, color accuracy, backing quality, smell, and texture
  3. Wash test: if possible, wash the sample to check for color bleeding or shrinkage
  4. Commission a third-party material test if you need OEKO-TEX or fire retardancy documentation
  5. Confirm the sample is representative of what the bulk order will deliver — get this in writing

Sample cost examples:

Most reputable factories deduct sample costs from your bulk order deposit — confirm this before ordering.

Step 3: Negotiate Price and Place Your Order

What to do:

Get all terms in writing before paying any deposit. Verbal agreements are not enforceable.

Key terms to negotiate:

Standard purchase order terms:

TermTypical Value
Deposit30% of order value
Balance70% against copy of BL
Production time25-35 days (standard catalog)
Sea freight25-35 days to Vancouver/Toronto
Total lead time8-12 weeks from deposit

Step 4: Arrange Quality Control

What to do:

Quality control should happen before the goods leave the factory, not after they arrive at your warehouse.

Types of inspection:

Third-party inspection companies:

Inspection cost: $150-400 depending on order size and inspection type. Worth every dollar — catching quality issues after goods arrive in North America is 10× more expensive to remedy.

Step 5: Handle Shipping and Logistics

What to do:

Decide whether you want FOB (factory handles export, you hire freight forwarder) or CIF (factory arranges freight and insurance to your port).

FOB vs CIF explained:

Our factory works with established freight forwarders and can arrange CIF quotes if you prefer a single-price solution. See our FOB vs CIF guide for a full cost comparison.

Container tips:

Step 6: Navigate Customs and Import Compliance

What to do:

Work with a licensed customs broker. Do not attempt to clear customs yourself unless you have experience with textile imports.

Documents your customs broker will need:

Duty rates:

Essential certifications:

Pro tip: Work with a customs broker who specializes in textiles. The tariff classification of your specific carpet type can significantly affect the duty rate. A misclassification can cost you thousands in back duties. A good broker is worth the $200-500 fee.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I import carpets from China without visiting the factory?

Yes. Many buyers never visit in person. The key is: (1) thorough sample approval, (2) third-party inspection before shipment, and (3) working with a factory that has established export processes. Video calls and detailed photo documentation can substitute for an in-person visit for most buyers.

What happens if the quality doesn't match the sample?

Before placing your order, get the factory's quality warranty in writing. Our standard: if bulk quality does not match the approved sample, we remedy the order at our cost — either through price reduction, partial refund, or replacement production. Get this in your purchase order before paying the deposit.

How do I handle returns or quality disputes?

Prevent disputes through sample approval and pre-shipment inspection. If a dispute arises after goods arrive: document the issues with photos, communicate immediately, and reference your purchase order terms. Most established factories offer partial refunds or replacement orders for legitimate quality issues rather than risk losing a customer.

What is the total landed cost of importing carpets from China?

For a printed carpet at $3.00/sqm FOB: landed cost in Vancouver is approximately $4.25-4.70/sqm (including sea freight ~$0.50, duty 8%, GST 5%, handling ~$0.30). Compare this to domestic North American pricing of $6.00-7.50/sqm. Our printed carpet article has detailed cost breakdowns.

Is it safe to pay a deposit to a Chinese factory?

Standard practice is 30% deposit via T/T bank transfer, 70% balance against copy of bill of lading. This is the international standard for a reason — the deposit secures production, the balance ensures the factory has incentive to ship. For first orders with a new factory, some buyers request a smaller deposit (20%) with stronger quality terms. Never pay 100% upfront unless you have an established relationship.