Buy from China to Australia | Direct Purchase & Shipping | Tralio Transit

To buy from China to Australia, the buyer should choose the product, check Australian import rules, confirm the supplier, agree payment terms, arrange inspection if needed and calculate shipping, GST, duty and delivery before paying in full. Small online orders can be bought through platforms, while furniture, electronics, private-label goods or factory-direct orders usually need supplier communication, payment checks, freight planning and import review. Tralio Transit helps Australian buyers purchase from China, check order terms, arrange China-side inspection, calculate delivery cost and plan shipment to Australia.

Buying from China is possible, but the process depends on the order type

Buying from China can mean different things.

A private buyer may want one sofa, dining table, light fitting, machine, bicycle or homeware item for personal use. A business may want stock for resale, a sample order, wholesale goods, factory-direct purchase or regular procurement.

The purchase route changes by order type:

Purchase type Typical route Main risk
Small online order AliExpress, marketplace, online store Product quality, warranty, GST, unsafe goods
One large personal item Supplier, factory, Taobao/1688, agent, freight forwarder Shipping cost, biosecurity, customs value, delivery damage
Business sample order Alibaba, 1688, factory, sourcing support Wrong specification, weak documents, high unit freight
Wholesale order Alibaba, factory, trading company, sourcing agent Supplier risk, MOQ, payment, inspection
Factory-direct order Direct manufacturer or industrial cluster MOQ, language, payment, export documents
1688 purchase Domestic China platform with agent support Local payment, no export documents, domestic packaging

The key question is not only “where can I buy products from China?” The real question is whether the product can be paid for, checked, shipped and imported into Australia without the final cost becoming higher than expected.

Start with Australian import rules before paying a Chinese supplier

Before buying from China, check whether the product can be imported into Australia and whether it needs specific documents, labels, safety checks or biosecurity treatment.

For Australia, this can include:

  • customs value;
  • GST;
  • import duty;
  • import declaration;
  • product safety rules;
  • electrical safety;
  • biosecurity;
  • timber or bamboo conditions;
  • country-of-origin documents;
  • packing declaration;
  • anti-dumping exposure for some goods;
  • delivery and local handling costs.

For goods over AUD 1,000, Australian Border Force says an Import Declaration is required, and duty, taxes and other charges may apply. For lower-value online purchases, GST is usually handled differently: ABF says GST for online goods may be charged at the point of sale rather than collected at the border, and ATO explains that GST applies to many low-value imported goods with a customs value of A$1,000 or less.

This means a cheap Chinese product price is not enough. The buyer should estimate the landed cost before paying: product price, local delivery in China, export handling, freight, insurance, duty, GST, customs clearance, biosecurity costs and final delivery in Australia.

Buying from China for personal use

A private buyer in Australia can buy products from China for personal use, but large items need more planning than small parcels.

Small items bought online may arrive by post or courier. ABF says goods arriving by mail with a declared or assessed value of AUD 1,000 or less generally do not have duties, taxes or charges collected at the border, except for specific goods such as alcohol or tobacco.

Large personal purchases are different. A sofa, bed, dining table, large mirror, tiles, machine, lighting set or bulky homeware item may need sea freight, export packing, import declaration, customs clearance and delivery from port or warehouse to the buyer’s address.

For personal furniture from China, the buyer should check:

  • product dimensions and weight;
  • carton size;
  • whether the item contains solid timber, bamboo or untreated wood;
  • whether the packaging uses wooden pallets or crates;
  • whether the product needs assembly;
  • whether the supplier can pack for sea freight;
  • whether the supplier can provide invoice and packing list;
  • whether final delivery in Australia is included.

Timber, bamboo and related articles imported for personal use are still subject to Australian biosecurity import conditions, including when they arrive by mail, courier or freight. DAFF says import conditions should be checked in BICON, and timber/bamboo products must meet relevant conditions.

Buying from China for business

For a business, buying from China usually means more than ordering one item online. The buyer may need stock for resale, samples, wholesale products, factory-direct supply or private label goods.

A business buyer should prepare:

Point What to confirm
Product Exact model, size, material, colour and specification
Quantity Sample order, trial order or regular order
Supplier type Factory, trading company, reseller or marketplace seller
Terms EXW, FOB, CIF, DAP or another Incoterm
Documents Commercial Invoice, Packing List, Certificate of Origin, test reports if needed
Payment Deposit, balance, payment account, currency and beneficiary company
Quality control Sample check, warehouse check, product inspection or pre-shipment inspection
Import HS code, duty, GST, biosecurity, product safety and customs clearance
Logistics Courier, air freight, LCL, FCL or consolidated sea freight

For regular B2B buying, the buyer should not rely only on a product link. Tralio Transit can connect the purchase with China sourcing services, supplier checks, inspection and freight planning if the buyer wants to buy repeatedly or resell the product in Australia.

Where to buy products from China

Australian buyers can buy products from China through several channels.

Channel Best for Main limitation
Alibaba Export-ready suppliers, samples, wholesale, business orders Prices may change after exact requirements are confirmed
1688 Domestic China prices, local suppliers, factory-direct comparison Usually needs Chinese payment, local support and export handling
Taobao / Tmall Retail goods, personal purchases, small products Not built for international freight or business importing
AliExpress Small online orders and simple consumer goods Limited control over documents and supplier
Direct factory Larger orders, custom products, buy direct from China manufacturer Higher MOQ and harder communication
Wholesale markets Ready goods, small mixed orders, product research Weak documents and quality consistency risk
Trade shows Product comparison and supplier contacts Booth does not prove factory ownership

If the buyer wants to buy direct from China factory, the most important point is supplier control. A factory-direct price is useful only if the buyer knows who manufactures the goods, who issues the invoice, who receives payment and who is responsible for quality.

Buying direct from China factory is not always cheaper

Many buyers search for buy direct from China manufacturer because they expect the lowest price. Sometimes this is true. But not always.

A direct factory may require:

  • higher MOQ;
  • longer lead time;
  • deposit before production;
  • technical specification;
  • packaging details;
  • sample approval;
  • inspection before shipment;
  • export documentation;
  • clear payment terms.

A trading company can be more expensive per unit but easier for small orders, mixed products or consolidation. For one sofa, one pallet of homeware or a small trial order, a trading company or buying agent can sometimes be more practical than a factory.

The buyer should compare the full result: price, MOQ, packaging, documents, quality risk, freight and delivery to Australia — not only the unit price.

Buying from 1688 usually needs a China buying agent

1688 is often useful when the buyer wants lower China domestic prices. But it is not designed for overseas buyers.

Common problems with 1688:

  • sellers may not speak English;
  • payment is often local RMB payment;
  • many sellers do not export directly;
  • products may be packed for domestic China delivery;
  • invoices and export documents may not be suitable for Australia;
  • several suppliers may need consolidation;
  • product quality may need warehouse checking before export.

For 1688 purchases, Tralio Transit can support as a China buying agent: contact the seller, confirm product details, arrange payment route, receive goods in China, check cartons, consolidate orders and prepare shipment handover.

This is different from sourcing. Sourcing is used when the buyer still needs to find and compare suppliers. A buying agent is useful when the product or supplier is already known and the buyer needs help completing the purchase.

Payment should be checked before money is sent

Payment risk is one of the main risks when buying from China.

Before paying, the buyer should check:

  • Proforma Invoice;
  • supplier company name;
  • bank account name;
  • product description;
  • quantity;
  • unit price;
  • total amount;
  • currency;
  • Incoterm;
  • payment schedule;
  • production lead time;
  • packaging;
  • required documents;
  • whether inspection happens before final balance.

For factory or wholesale orders, a common structure is deposit before production and final balance before shipment. The safer approach is to arrange a product check or pre-shipment inspection before paying the final balance.

For 1688, Taobao, wholesale markets or non-export sellers, payment through an agent may be required. In that model, the buyer usually pays the product cost and service fee before the agent buys the goods locally.

Shipping method depends on size, value and urgency

The right shipping method depends on product size, weight, value and urgency.

Shipping method Best for Main issue
Postal / courier parcel Small personal orders Limited control, damage risk, product restrictions
Express courier Samples, urgent small goods Expensive for bulky items
Air freight Higher-value or time-sensitive goods Higher cost than sea freight
LCL sea freight Bulky goods below full container volume Port, warehouse and handling charges
FCL sea freight Larger orders or full-container cargo Requires enough volume and better planning
Consolidation Multiple suppliers or mixed orders Needs warehouse and order control in China

For one large personal item, such as furniture, sea freight may be cheaper than air freight, but the buyer must include China pickup, export packing, destination charges, customs clearance, delivery in Australia and possible storage.

Tralio Transit can calculate freight and landed cost before the buyer pays the supplier, so the buyer can decide whether the purchase is still commercially sensible.

Product category matters: furniture, electronics, clothing and tiles are not the same

Different products create different risks when buying from China.

Product Main buying risk for Australia
Furniture Timber, moisture, weak packaging, anti-toppling warnings, bulky delivery cost
Electronics Electrical safety, plug, voltage, RCM/EESS route if sold in Australia
Clothing Fibre composition, care labels, country-of-origin label, children’s nightwear or hi-vis requirements
Ceramic tiles Slip-resistance, water absorption, country-of-origin marking, anti-dumping exposure, heavy freight
Toys and children’s goods Product safety, small parts, warning labels, test evidence
Food-contact goods Materials, safety evidence, labelling and product-specific import rules

Product Safety Australia states that mandatory standards make specific safety or information features compulsory for legal supply of certain products in Australia. For example, the toppling furniture mandatory information standard came into effect on 4 May 2025 for covered furniture products.

For electrical goods, EESS says a Responsible Supplier for in-scope electrical equipment must be a legally identifiable Australian or New Zealand entity, and in-scope equipment sold in participating jurisdictions must meet RCM/EESS requirements.

This is why a product that is safe to buy for personal use may still be unsuitable for resale in Australia without compliance checks.

Should you buy cheap or premium products from China?

China is not only a cheap-goods market. It can supply low-cost, mid-range and premium products. The right choice depends on the category and the buyer’s goal.

For personal use, premium China purchases can make sense when the product is bulky, customised, design-specific or much more expensive in Australia. Furniture, stone, tiles, lighting, bathroom products and home renovation materials are common examples.

But premium purchases need better control:

  • detailed specification;
  • sample or showroom confirmation;
  • material confirmation;
  • export packaging;
  • damage protection;
  • inspection before shipment;
  • insurance;
  • realistic freight quote;
  • clear after-sales expectations.

Cheap products can work for small online orders, but they are risky for bulky goods or products with Australian safety requirements. A cheap sofa, cabinet or electrical product can become expensive if it arrives damaged, unsafe, non-compliant or impossible to return.

The practical buying process from China to Australia

A practical process looks like this:

  1. Choose the product and define the specification.
  2. Check whether the product can be imported into Australia.
  3. Decide whether the purchase is personal or business.
  4. Choose a channel: Alibaba, 1688, retail platform, factory, market or supplier contact.
  5. Confirm product price, quantity, packaging and delivery terms.
  6. Check supplier details and payment route.
  7. Arrange sample, photos, warehouse check or inspection if needed.
  8. Calculate freight, duty, GST, customs clearance and delivery in Australia.
  9. Pay deposit or product cost based on the agreed structure.
  10. Follow production or order preparation.
  11. Check goods before final payment or shipment where possible.
  12. Ship to Australia and complete import clearance.

This process is simple for a small parcel. It becomes more important for furniture, machinery, electronics, wholesale orders and any product intended for resale.

Submit a China purchase request through Tralio Transit

An Australian buyer can start by sending a China purchase request through Tralio Transit.

The request should include:

  • product link, supplier contact or product photo;
  • quantity;
  • quoted price if available;
  • destination in Australia;
  • whether the purchase is personal or business;
  • packaging requirements;
  • whether the product contains timber, bamboo, electrical parts or regulated materials;
  • whether inspection, consolidation or buying-agent support is needed.

Inside the Tralio Transit importer account, the buyer can review purchase information, import requirement notes, supplier or order details, freight options and estimated landed cost.

This is the practical next step when the buyer wants to move from “I found this product in China” to a real purchase, checked order and shipment plan to Australia.