We offer a new customer discount for first-time buyers.
We offer not only the current bestsellers on the market, but can also customize a tent just for you.

Let me guess. You’ve been scrolling through Alibaba, and every other supplier claims to be a factory. Half of them are lying.
After working with dozens of Chinese rooftop tent suppliers, I’ve developed a pretty good radar for who’s actually making tents – and who’s just dropshipping from someone else’s facility.
Let me share how I separate the real manufacturers from the middlemen.
Alibaba is great. But here’s the thing – it’s not just factories. You’ve got three types of suppliers on there:
I’m not saying traders are useless. Sometimes they offer better service, faster responses, or access to multiple factories. But they cost more, and you lose some control.
Don’t just type rooftop tent supplier. Be specific:
The more specific, the fewer results – but the better quality leads.
See a tent you like on Instagram or a camping forum? Screenshot it. Then upload that image directly to Alibaba’s search. Works surprisingly well.
Why this matters: Suppliers who appear in image search results are usually actively promoting that specific model. Means they either made it or have good access to it.
Post a detailed Request for Quotation. Specify: tent type, quantity, target price, delivery timeline. Suppliers who respond with thoughtful, complete quotes? Worth evaluating. The ones who just send generic responses? Move on.
Once you’ve got potential suppliers, run them through this:
A real factory usually focuses on 1-3 related product lines. If a supplier sells rooftop tents AND power tools AND kitchenware? 90% chance they’re a trader.
Look for established dates. Alibaba shows Gold Supplier years. I generally prefer suppliers with 3+ years of verified export history.
Suppliers already selling to the US, EU, or Australia? They’ve dealt with stricter quality expectations. Good sign.
For rooftop tents, relevant certs depend on your market. EU buyers: check REACH, RoHS. US: various. If a supplier can’t provide basic documentation, that’s a red flag.
First order? Here’s what I recommend:
More factories are building their own websites now. Google becomes another sourcing channel.
My approach: Find factories on Google, then check if they have Alibaba stores. Best of both worlds – direct pricing with some platform protection.
I’ve connected with a few suppliers through LinkedIn. Not my primary channel, but some factories are actively building their international presence there.
Limitations: Harder to verify company size, fewer suppliers, no easy comparison shopping. Use it as a supplement, not a primary source.
Finding real manufacturers takes time. There’s no shortcut that works every time. But if you follow this playbook, you’ll avoid most of the common traps – and build relationships with suppliers who actually deliver what they promise.
Been through this myself. Happy to answer specific questions if you’re stuck.