Practical Answer — China Manufacturing Payment Terms
China Manufacturing Payment Terms: What Should I Check Before Paying?
By Peter Lin, Founder, China IP Gateway · July 2026
This page is informational guidance, not formal legal advice.
In short
Before sending any payment to a Chinese manufacturer, the priority is confirming: who receives the payment (and whether that entity is the correct contract party), what the payment covers, what triggers the balance payment, and whether the invoice name, bank account holder name, and contract party are aligned. These checks apply to deposits, tooling fees, sample fees, and production payments.
Who receives the payment — and who should
The payment recipient is not always the same as the contract party. Before sending funds:
| Check | What to confirm | Risk if skipped |
|---|---|---|
| Bank account holder name | Must match the Chinese legal entity in the contract | Payment to wrong entity; fragmented legal position |
| Invoice issuer | Invoice name must match contract entity | Tax issues; unclear supplier of record |
| Contract party | Entity receiving payment must be the one bound by agreement | Payment without enforceable obligation |
| Wire instructions confirmed in writing | Confirmed from official company email or WeChat — not verbally | Fraud risk: account substitution scams |
Deposit amount, milestones, and what they should cover
A deposit structure should be specific about what each payment covers and what triggers the next payment:
Tooling / mold fee
Separate from production deposit; tied to mold delivery and sample acceptance
Sample fee
If charged, specify what samples are covered and what happens if samples are rejected
Production deposit
Typically 30–50%; tied to production start confirmation
Balance payment
Triggered by inspection acceptance, before shipment release — not before inspection
Payment milestones in writing
All payment triggers should be in the manufacturing agreement, not just in email
Inspection timing and payment release
The relationship between payment and inspection affects your practical leverage. Consider:
Pre-payment checklist
What not to do
How China IP Gateway can help
China IP Gateway can help overseas product companies review whether the payment path, entity, and milestones are correctly structured before funds are committed — including whether the contract party, payment recipient, and invoice issuer are aligned, and whether the manufacturing agreement clearly addresses deposit, balance, tooling, and inspection terms.
Outcomes depend on the facts and supplier situation. No result is guaranteed.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much deposit is normal for China manufacturing?
Common deposit structures range from 30% to 50% of the order value, but the exact amount depends on the product, order size, factory relationship, and tooling requirements. More important than the percentage is what the deposit covers (tooling, production start, samples), what triggers the balance payment, and whether these milestones are clearly written into the agreement.
Should tooling fees and production deposits be separate payments?
In most cases, yes. Keeping tooling fees and production deposits separate and clearly documented means each payment has an identified purpose, a defined deliverable, and a clear recipient. Combining them into a single unitemised payment creates ambiguity about what was paid for — especially if the relationship ends before production is complete.
How do I confirm the bank account belongs to the correct supplier entity?
Ask for the bank account details in writing and verify that the account holder name matches the Chinese legal entity named in your agreement and invoices. A payment to a different entity name — such as an agent, a trading company, or an individual — creates a gap between your contract party and your payment record. This gap can complicate dispute resolution or recovery.
What if the supplier asks for 100% payment before production starts?
This is a higher-risk payment structure for most overseas buyers. A 100% upfront payment before production provides limited leverage if quality, delivery, or manufacturing issues arise. If a supplier requires 100% upfront, the agreement should have clear, enforceable quality, delivery, and dispute terms — and the supplier's legal entity and payment path should be thoroughly verified first.
Should payment be made after inspection or before shipment?
For many overseas buyers, tying the balance payment to inspection acceptance and before shipment release provides practical leverage. If the balance is paid before inspection and defects are found, the factory has less incentive to address them. The payment milestone and inspection rights should be clearly written in the manufacturing agreement.
Written by
Peter Lin
Founder & China Supplier Control Lead, China IP Gateway
Peter Lin works with overseas product companies on China manufacturing agreement structure, payment path verification, supplier entity review, and supplier-control assessment before production commitment.
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