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Practical Answer — China NNN & Manufacturing Agreements

China NNN vs Manufacturing Agreement: Which One Do I Need?

By Peter Lin, Founder, China IP Gateway · July 2026

This page is informational guidance, not formal legal advice. It is intended to help you understand your options and identify practical next steps.

In short

A China NNN agreement is usually a pre-disclosure document. It helps control non-disclosure, non-use, and non-circumvention before you share sensitive information. A manufacturing agreement or OEM agreement is broader — it should control production, quality, tooling, payment, subcontracting, IP ownership, supplier display, and delivery. Many China manufacturing projects need both, but at different stages.

Use a China NNN when you are before disclosure

An NNN agreement (non-disclosure, non-use, non-circumvention) is most useful before you share anything meaningful with a Chinese factory or supplier. The goal is to create written obligations before sensitive information leaves your hands.

Typical information you should protect before sharing:

Product idea, concept, or technical approach
CAD / STP / STEP files and product drawings
Samples or prototype files
Supplier list or preferred factory list
Pricing model or margin structure
Product launch plan or market strategy
Factory capability discussions with product-specific context
Packaging artwork and brand materials

The NNN is not a production document. It controls what the factory can do with your information before you are in a production relationship.

Use a Manufacturing Agreement when production terms matter

A manufacturing agreement or OEM agreement becomes necessary once the discussion moves from information-sharing to production. It should cover the full production relationship, not just confidentiality.

Who manufactures

The correct Chinese legal entity — factory, not trading company

Quality and inspection

Standards, tolerances, defect rates, and inspection rights

Payment path and milestones

Who receives payment, in what amounts, and when

Tooling and mold ownership

Who owns the mold, who holds it, who can use it

Packaging and branding control

Factory display restrictions and unauthorized use

Delivery and lead time

Confirmed specifications, quantity, delivery terms

Subcontracting restrictions

Whether and how the factory may involve other parties

Production change approval

Material substitutions, design changes, BOM changes

IP ownership of improvements

Who owns modifications made during production

Use both when the project moves from discussion to production

Many China manufacturing projects need both documents — just at different stages. The relationship between them is sequential, not competing:

Stage Situation Document
Early Before sharing files, drawings, or product details China NNN agreement
Mid Samples, tooling, production terms becoming concrete Manufacturing / OEM Agreement
Both Full production relationship with prior disclosure history NNN + Manufacturing Agreement

Core principle: NNN controls early disclosure. Manufacturing agreement controls actual production.

Common mistakes when structuring supplier agreements

Signing only an NNN and starting production — with no manufacturing agreement in place for quality, tooling, payment, or delivery
Using an English-only NDA or NNN instead of a China-side bilingual or Chinese-language document
Using a standard template manufacturing contract without verifying the correct Chinese legal entity
Signing a contract with a trading company while another company is actually manufacturing your product
Contract party, invoice party, payment recipient, and file recipient not matching
Leaving tooling and mold ownership unaddressed in any agreement
Not including subcontracting restrictions — allowing the factory to send your files to affiliated workshops

How China IP Gateway can help

China IP Gateway can help overseas product companies decide whether the immediate next step should be a China NNN agreement, manufacturing agreement, OEM agreement, contract review, or supplier-control review. The right starting point depends on your current stage, what has already been disclosed, what documents are in place, and what risks matter most to your project.

Outcomes depend on the facts, documents, supplier relationship, and China-side execution structure. No result is guaranteed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a China NNN agreement the same as a manufacturing agreement?

No. A China NNN agreement is usually used before meaningful disclosure to control non-disclosure, non-use, and non-circumvention. A manufacturing agreement is broader and should cover production, quality, tooling, payment, delivery, subcontracting, and ownership issues.

Do I need both an NNN and a manufacturing agreement?

Often yes. A China NNN agreement may be suitable before disclosing technical or commercial information, while a manufacturing agreement is usually needed once samples, tooling, purchase orders, production, or payment terms become concrete.

Can I use a normal NDA instead of a China NNN?

A normal NDA may not address non-use, non-circumvention, Chinese legal entity issues, official seal execution, or China-side enforcement realities. For China supplier discussions, the document should be drafted around the actual disclosure and supplier relationship.

When should I switch from NNN to manufacturing agreement?

When the discussion moves from early disclosure to actual production terms — such as samples, tooling, pricing, purchase orders, quality standards, payment, packaging, or delivery — a manufacturing or OEM agreement should usually be considered.

What if my supplier already sent me a manufacturing contract?

You should review whether the contract correctly identifies the Chinese legal entity, protects your IP and tooling, controls subcontracting, sets quality and inspection rules, and matches the payment and production path.

Should a China NNN agreement include liquidated damages?

Liquidated damages may be useful in China supplier agreements, but the amount, drafting, governing structure, Chinese legal entity, and factual context matter. A liquidated damages clause should be proportionate and realistic — not so high that a Chinese court would find it unenforceable, and not so low that it fails to deter the actual risk. It should not be treated as a guarantee of recovery or enforcement. The clause works best as part of a well-structured agreement with the correct legal entity and a clear governing law and dispute resolution path.

Written by

Peter Lin

Founder & China Supplier Control Lead, China IP Gateway

Peter Lin works with overseas product companies on China NNN agreements, manufacturing contract structure, supplier-control review, and China-side IP protection before and during factory engagement.

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