China CBEC Product Eligibility Checker: Is Your Product on the Positive List?
Every foreign brand wanting to sell directly to Chinese consumers via cross-border e-commerce must first clear one hard gate: the CBEC Positive List (正面清单, zhèngmiàn qīngdān, Positive List) — an official catalog of exactly 1,413 product categories approved for CBEC retail import into China. If your product’s 8-digit HS code is not on this list, it simply cannot enter China through the CBEC channel. This checker tool walks you through the exact steps to determine eligibility in under 10 minutes.
What the CBEC Positive List Actually Covers
The Positive List is maintained by China’s Ministry of Commerce and updated periodically — most recently expanded in 2022 to include 29 new categories such as home aquariums and certain medical devices. It governs all retail imports under China’s cross-border e-commerce (跨境电子商务, kuàjìng diànzǐ shāngwù) model, which now accounts for over ¥1.4 trillion in annual import volume.
Products on the list enjoy a significant tax advantage: a composite tax rate of roughly 9.1% (70% of standard VAT and consumption tax) versus 20–50% under general trade. However, each Chinese consumer is limited to ¥26,000 per year in CBEC purchases. If your product is not on the list, those advantages disappear — and you must pivot to general trade (一般贸易, yībān màoyì) or other channels.
Step-by-Step: Check Your Product Against the Positive List
Use this four-step process to determine CBEC eligibility for any product you plan to sell in China.
- Identify your product’s 8-digit HS code. Every product sold in China is classified under a Harmonized System code. Use the China Customs HS code lookup tool or consult a customs broker to get your exact 8-digit code.
- Cross-check against the official Positive List. Download the latest Positive List from the Ministry of Commerce website or use a third-party CBEC eligibility database. Search your HS code at the 8-digit level — partial matches at 6 digits are not sufficient.
- Verify pre-market registration requirements. Even if your HS code is on the list, products like cosmetics, health foods, and infant formula require additional registration or filing with China’s National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) or State Administration for Market Regulation.
- Confirm you meet the “personal use” threshold. CBEC is for individual retail purchases only. Single orders must be under ¥5,000, and annual purchases per consumer cannot exceed ¥26,000. Wholesale or bulk sales require general trade.
Quick Reference: Product Categories On vs. Off the Positive List
The table below shows where common product categories stand on the Positive List as of the latest update. Use this as a starting point, but always verify your specific 8-digit HS code.
| Product Category | On Positive List? | CBEC Composite Tax | Key Restriction |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cosmetics (non-special use) | ✅ Yes | ~9.1% | NMPA filing required |
| Infant formula | ✅ Yes | ~9.1% | Formula registration mandatory |
| Vitamins, supplements | ✅ Yes | ~9.1% | Must be on health food list |
| Electronics (smartphones, laptops) | ✅ Yes | ~9.1% | CCC certification required |
| Fresh meat, dairy, eggs | ❌ No | N/A | General trade only |
| Alcoholic beverages (wine, spirits) | ✅ Yes | ~17.5% | Alcohol license required |
| Medical devices (Class I & II) | ✅ Yes (selected) | ~9.1% | NMPA registration mandatory |
| Furniture, home decor | ❌ No | N/A | General trade only |
Decision Framework: CBEC vs. General Trade
Use this decision tree to choose the right import channel for your product.
If your product’s 8-digit HS code is on the Positive List, your per-customer volume stays under ¥26,000 annually, and you can meet any registration requirements (cosmetics registration, infant formula formula registration, etc.) — choose CBEC. You get the lowest tax rate and fastest customs clearance (typically 1–3 days).
If your product is not on the Positive List, or you need to sell in bulk B2B quantities exceeding ¥26,000 per customer per year — choose General Trade (一般贸易, yībān màoyì). You will face higher tariffs (20–50%) and stricter customs documentation, but no annual per-consumer cap.
If your product is on the list but fails to meet pre-market registration requirements within 6 months — explore direct shipping alternatives (e.g., personal courier) as a temporary bridge while you complete registration.
3 Common Pitfalls When Checking Product Eligibility
Cost: Customs rejection, storage fees up to ¥5,000/day per container, and forced return-to-sender logistics from China.
Fix: Always search the official Positive List using your exact 8-digit HS code. If you are unsure, engage a China customs broker to verify classification first.
Cost: 3–6 months market entry delay and ¥50,000–200,000 in regulatory advisory and filing fees.
Fix: Before placing any orders, confirm whether your product category requires pre-market registration or filing with Chinese authorities (NMPA, SAMR, etc.).
Cost: Customs fines of 10–50% of declared product value plus potential blacklisting from CBEC pilot zones.
Fix: Use professional HS code classification services — our team recommends working with a licensed China customs broker for complex products.
Next Steps
- Use our full CBEC eligibility checker tool — input your product’s HS code and get an instant yes/no verdict plus registration requirements. Access the CBEC Positive List Checker →
- Download the step-by-step CBEC market entry guide covering registration, pilot zone setup, and logistics partner selection. Read the CBEC Guide →
- Book a 30-minute compliance consultation with a CBEC specialist who can verify your HS code, registration path, and tax strategy. Schedule a Consultation →
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