Type something to search...

Practical Answer — Mold / Tooling / Supplier Control

Who Owns the Mold or Tooling If I Paid a Chinese Factory?

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

Paying for a mold or tooling does not automatically solve every control issue. You need to distinguish ownership, possession, exclusive use, storage, return, transfer, and whether the factory can use or display the mold for other buyers. These issues should be written clearly before or when the mold is made.

The key questions are separate — and each one matters

Mold and tooling ownership involves several distinct issues. Payment alone does not resolve them.

Question Why it matters
Who legally owns the mold? Legal ownership determines who can control or transfer it
Who physically holds the mold? Practical control — factory may hold even if you own
Who can use the mold? Exclusive use rights vs. open use for other buyers
Can the factory display or list it? Alibaba or showroom listings may expose your product
Can you transfer the mold to another supplier? Critical for switching factories or restructuring supply chain
What happens after production ends? Exit rights, storage, destruction, and final disposition

When mold and tooling problems usually appear

These problems often surface after production has begun — not before. By then, leverage has already shifted.

Factory uses the mold to make a similar product

No exclusive-use restriction was written into the contract

Factory lists similar product on Alibaba using your mold

No display restriction or listing prohibition was agreed

Factory refuses to return the mold when you want to switch

No return or transfer terms were written at payment stage

Sourcing agent controls the mold shop, not the buyer

Mold is with an intermediary with no direct buyer-to-factory agreement

Mold fee paid but contract is silent on ownership

Factory may argue the mold is their asset or part of their equipment

Factory modifies the mold without approval

No approval process or notification requirement was agreed

Factory claims mold is their technology or IP

No written ownership statement before or at payment

Factory changes payment terms after tooling is made

No milestones, deposit limits, or completion triggers were set

What should be written before paying mold fees

Before or at the time of the mold payment, the following should be addressed in writing:

Ownership

Clear statement that the buyer owns the mold

Exclusive use

Factory may only use the mold for buyer's production

No sale or transfer

Factory may not sell or transfer the mold to any third party

No display or listing

Factory may not display, photograph, or list products made from the mold

No subcontracting without approval

Mold cannot be sent to affiliated shops without written consent

Storage and maintenance

Factory responsible for safe storage and maintenance at no additional charge

Return rights

Buyer may request return of the mold on notice

Transfer rights

Buyer may move production and mold to another factory

Destruction clause

What happens if mold is no longer needed

Payment milestones

Deposit and balance tied to delivery and quality acceptance

Correct Chinese legal entity

Verified registered name, not just a sales contact

Official seal on agreement

Factory's company seal on any mold ownership document

What evidence to save

From the start of the mold or tooling engagement, preserve the following:

Mold invoice and payment record
Tooling quote and specification
Mold drawings or design files (CAD / STP)
Sample photos and approval communications
WeChat / WhatsApp / Alibaba chats about the mold
Any supplier promise or confirmation about ownership
Mold serial numbers or physical markings
Production records linking mold to your product
Shipping or delivery records for samples using the mold
Any Alibaba or marketplace listing screenshots showing the mold or product

What not to do

Do not rely only on 'I paid, so it is mine' — payment is evidence, but not a written ownership agreement
Do not ignore the Chinese legal entity — confirm who is actually the party to the mold agreement
Do not let a sourcing agent hold all files, molds, and tooling without any direct buyer-to-factory documentation
Do not leave transfer rights unwritten — you may need to move production later
Do not omit no-display language — unauthorized Alibaba listings can happen without it
Do not fail to save Alibaba listing screenshots or marketplace evidence if unauthorized listing appears
Do not use a simple purchase order as the only mold-control terms

How China IP Gateway can help

China IP Gateway can help overseas product companies review mold and tooling control issues, identify whether the current contract or supplier documents address ownership, exclusive use, storage, return, and transfer, and decide whether a supplier-control review or manufacturing agreement update is needed. If a problem has already arisen — such as refusal to return tooling or unauthorized listing — a review can help identify the next realistic step.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

If I paid for the mold, do I automatically own it?

Not always in a practical sense. Payment is important evidence, but the agreement should clearly state ownership, exclusive use, storage, return, transfer, and whether the factory may use or display the mold for other buyers.

Can a Chinese factory use my mold to make products for other customers?

That depends on the contract, the mold terms, the actual Chinese legal entity, and the evidence. The agreement should expressly prohibit unauthorized use, sale, display, subcontracting, or production for others.

What if the factory refuses to return my mold?

First preserve evidence, identify the correct Chinese legal entity, review the contract and payment records, and check whether return or transfer terms were clearly agreed. The next step may involve negotiation, supplier-control review, or legal action depending on the facts.

Should mold ownership be in the NNN agreement or manufacturing agreement?

It can be referenced in an NNN, but detailed mold and tooling control is usually better handled in a manufacturing, tooling, or supplier-control agreement that covers ownership, possession, use, storage, return, and transfer.

What should I do before paying mold fees to a Chinese supplier?

Confirm the Chinese legal entity, payment path, invoice name, mold ownership, exclusive-use rights, return and transfer terms, no-display restrictions, and what happens if you move production to another supplier.

Written by

Peter Lin

Founder & China Supplier Control Lead, China IP Gateway

Peter Lin works with overseas product companies on mold and tooling control review, China supplier-control restructuring, manufacturing agreement structure, and China-side IP protection before and during factory engagement.

Verify Us →

Review Mold and Tooling Control

We can review whether your current documents and supplier relationship adequately address mold and tooling ownership, exclusive use, return, and transfer — and identify what should be in place before the next stage.

LinkedIn Newsletter

Read More on the China IP Gateway Newsletter

For weekly, practitioner-level commentary on China IP, NNN agreements, supplier control, trademark and patent strategy, follow the China IP Gateway newsletter on LinkedIn.

Follow the China IP Gateway Newsletter on LinkedIn