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Pull up any supplier’s quote and you’ll see trade terms. FOB. CIF. EXW. DDP. If these mean nothing to you, you’re about to make expensive mistakes.
Let me break it down simply. What each term includes, what it excludes, and when to use which.
What it includes: Just the product. That’s it.
What you pay additionally: Everything else. Picking up from their warehouse, export paperwork, freight, insurance, customs, delivery. All on you.
Best for: Experienced importers with established logistics networks. Not recommended for first-timers.
What it includes: Product plus getting it to the port plus loading onto the ship.
What you pay additionally: Sea freight, insurance, customs clearance, duties, port handling, delivery to your door.
Best for: Most importers. Gives you control over shipping without dealing with Chinese domestic logistics.
What it includes: Product cost plus sea freight plus basic insurance to YOUR destination port.
What you pay additionally: Customs clearance, duties, port handling, delivery.
Best for: When you want suppliers to handle the shipping arrangement (they often get better rates) but you still manage customs.
What it includes: Everything. Product, shipping, insurance, customs, duties, delivery to your door.
What you pay additionally: Essentially nothing (assuming quoted correctly).
Best for: First-time importers or those who want zero logistics headaches. Price is higher, but predictability is valuable.
Here’s what most suppliers won’t tell you: The quoted price difference between FOB and DDP usually isn’t as big as you’d expect.
Why? Because suppliers have established relationships with freight forwarders. They often get 15-25% better shipping rates than individual importers would.
So DDP isn’t just convenient – it can sometimes be cost-competitive with FOB after you factor in your own logistics setup costs.
Request quotes at different quantities. Watch what happens:
| Quantity | Unit Price (FOB) | Notes |
| 1-5 units | $500-$550 | Sample pricing |
| 10-20 units | $450-$480 | Small batch |
| 40+ units | $380-$420 | Full container territory |
The pattern is consistent across most suppliers: per-unit price drops significantly as quantity increases. Always get quotes for 3-4 quantity tiers before deciding.
Before accepting any quote, confirm these aren’t hiding unexpected charges:
Suppliers with ready inventory may quote lower – they’re not carrying holding costs. But verify: Is this current season product or 2-year-old stock?
Old stock might seem like a deal, but if designs have evolved or materials have changed, you could be importing outdated products.
New production ensures current specs, but takes 30-60 days. Factor lead time into your planning.
Understanding trade terms gives you negotiating power. When you know what each term includes, you can:
Suppliers respect buyers who speak the language. It signals you’re not a first-timer who can be easily overquoted.
New to importing: Start with DDP or CIF. Pay the premium for predictability while you learn the logistics.
After 2-3 orders: Transition to FOB. By then you’ll have a freight forwarder relationship and can often beat supplier shipping rates. Experienced: Mix and match based on order size and your current logistics