How to Get Product Liability Insurance for Foreign Brands Selling in China

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How to Get Product Liability Insurance for Foreign Brands Selling in China

Product liability insurance (产品责任险, chǎnpǐn zérèn xiǎn) is a mandatory operational safeguard for any foreign brand distributing physical goods in China. Without a valid policy that meets local regulatory standards, foreign companies face personal injury claims that regularly exceed RMB 2 million per incident in Chinese courts. This guide walks you through the process of securing compliant coverage, from minimum premium thresholds to policy wording traps.

Why Foreign Brands Need Product Liability Insurance in China

China’s Product Quality Law (产品质量法, chǎnpǐn zhìliàng fǎ) places strict liability on manufacturers, importers, and sellers — including foreign brands with no local legal entity. Since 2021, Chinese courts have accepted jurisdiction over foreign defendants in product injury cases under the Interpretation of the Supreme People’s Court on Several Issues Concerning the Application of Law in Trials of Product Liability Disputes. The average awarded compensation for bodily injury in product liability claims has risen 34% year-over-year since 2020, reaching approximately RMB 1.7 million per claim in 2024. For defective products causing death or permanent disability, awards can exceed RMB 5 million. Over 78% of Chinese e-commerce platforms now require sellers to submit a valid product liability insurance certificate during onboarding, making it a prerequisite for listing on JD.com, Tmall Global, and Pinduoduo cross-border channels.

Minimum Coverage Requirements and Premium Tiers

Chinese insurers typically offer three standard coverage tiers for foreign brands. The table below summarizes the most common options as of mid-2025, based on filings with the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission (中国银行保险监督管理委员会, Zhōngguó Yínháng Bǎoxiǎn Jiāndū Guǎnlǐ Wěiyuánhuì).

Coverage Tier Annual Limit (RMB) Per Occurrence Limit (RMB) Annual Premium (RMB) Typical Deductible (RMB) Recommended For
Basic (Cross-border e-commerce) 5,000,000 1,000,000 12,000 – 25,000 2,000 – 5,000 Low-risk consumer goods (electronics, apparel, toys)
Standard (Direct import + retail) 10,000,000 3,000,000 30,000 – 55,000 5,000 – 10,000 Moderate-risk (kitchen appliances, sports equipment, baby products)
Comprehensive (High-risk / industrial) 20,000,000 5,000,000 55,000 – 120,000 10,000 – 25,000 High-risk (chemicals, medical devices, car parts, power tools)

Note: Premiums vary based on product type, annual projected sales volume, claims history, and whether the brand holds a valid quality certification (e.g., CCC certification or GB/T 19001). Foreign brands with no local claims record typically receive a 0% – 10% loading factor rather than a discount.

Step-by-Step Process to Secure a Policy

Step 1: Determine Your Legal Entry Pathway

Chinese insurers issue policies only to entities with a Chinese Tax Identification Number (纳税人识别号, nàshuìrén shìbié hào) or, in limited cases, to foreign brands operating through a licensed third-party logistics (3PL) warehouse that acts as the policy named insured. If your brand sells directly via cross-border e-commerce (跨境电商, kuàjìng diànshāng) with a bonded warehouse model, you will likely need a “dual-named” policy where both your offshore parent and your Chinese 3PL are listed as additional insureds.

Step 2: Prepare Required Documentation

Chinese insurers demand a standardized application package. Missing documents cause underwriting delays of 10–15 business days. Required items include:

  • Product catalog with HS codes and photos (front, back, and label)
  • CCC certificate or exemption letter (for categories requiring 中国强制性产品认证, zhōngguó qiángzhìxìng chǎnpǐn rènzhèng)
  • User manual in Chinese (simplified)
  • Quality inspection report from a CNAS-accredited lab (within 12 months of application)
  • Proof of annual sales volume in RMB (e.g., last 12 months of customs declarations)
  • Executed WFOE registration or 3PL service agreement

Step 3: Submit to a Licensed Domestic Insurer

Only insurers licensed by the CBIRC can issue valid product liability policies that Chinese courts and platforms will accept. The largest writers for foreign brands in 2025 are PICC Property and Casualty (中国人民财产保险股份有限公司, Zhōngguó Rénmín Cáichǎn Bǎoxiǎn Gǔfèn Yǒuxiàn Gōngsī), China Pacific Insurance (中国太平洋保险, Zhōngguó Tàipíngyáng Bǎoxiǎn), and Ping An Property & Casualty (平安财产保险, Píng’ān Cáichǎn Bǎoxiǎn). For the Best Coverage cross-border distributors, AXA Tianping and AIG China offer international-standard policies with English-language claims handling — but premiums are typically 18–30% higher than domestic carriers.

Step 4: Review Policy Wording and Exclusions

Standard Chinese product liability policies exclude coverage for:

  • Defective design claims (product defect vs. manufacturing defect — only the latter is covered unless you purchase a design defect extension, which adds 15–25% premium)
  • Third-party recall costs (separate recall insurance required, typically RMB 50,000–200,000 annually)
  • Consequential damages including loss of profits, brand reputation damage, or contractual penalties
  • Claims arising from failure to comply with mandatory Chinese GB standards (a common trap for imported products)

Decision Framework: Choosing Your Coverage Strategy

If your annual import sales are below RMB 2 million and you sell exclusively through Tmall Global or JD Worldwide with bonded warehouse fulfillment, choose a Basic cross-border e-commerce policy with a named 3PL as additional insured. If your products involve mechanical moving parts, electronics that heat above 60°C, or child-safety claims risk, choose a Standard or Comprehensive policy and purchase the design defect extension — the extra RMB 6,000–18,000 in annual premium is negligible compared to a single uncovered design-defect claim that could exceed RMB 3 million. If you operate a wholly foreign-owned enterprise (外商独资企业, WFOE, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) with direct import and distribution, always select a Comprehensive policy with a minimum aggregate limit of RMB 20 million to satisfy both court expectations and downstream retailer contracts.

3 Common Pitfalls When Buying Product Liability Insurance in China

Pitfall 1: Relying on your overseas policy without verifying Chinese acceptance. Many foreign brands assume their global product liability policy (e.g., written in New York or London) covers Chinese claims. It usually does not — or it covers them only after a costly extended jurisdiction endorsement. Cost: RMB 150,000–500,000 in unexpected legal defense fees and uncovered settlements. Fix: Have your overseas insurer issue a specific China-domiciled policy or a “fronting” arrangement with a CBIRC-licensed local carrier. Ensure the policy wording explicitly lists China (中国, Zhōngguó) as a covered territory.
Pitfall 2: Not updating coverage as sales volume grows. Chinese insurers typically reassess premiums annually based on the previous 12 months of actual sales. If your brand experiences a sudden surge — e.g., from RMB 3 million to RMB 10 million in annual sales — and you fail to notify the insurer, claims that occur during the period of underinsurance may face proportional reduction. Cost: Claim payout reduced by 30–70%, potentially leaving you with an uncovered burden of RMB 1–2 million. Fix: Include a “turnover adjustment” clause in your policy allowing mid-term premium adjustments every six months.
Pitfall 3: Using a non-English policy with ambiguous translations. Many domestic Chinese insurers issue policies only in Chinese. When a claim occurs, the policy language — which may contain hidden exclusions or sub-limits — becomes the governing text. Foreign brands have lost coverage over translated terms like “产品质量缺陷” (product quality defect) interpreted differently by Chinese courts. Cost: Denied claims ranging from RMB 200,000 to RMB 4 million. Fix: Require a bilingual policy (中英文对照, zhōng yīngwén duìzhào) with an English version stated as equally authentic. Have a qualified lawyer review the Chinese wording clause-by-clause before binding.

Cost Comparison: DIY vs. Broker-Assisted Placement

Approach Average Time to Bind Total First-Year Cost (Premium + Fees) Policy Language Support Claims Handling Risk of Wrong Coverage
DIY — Direct application to PICC/PingAn online portal 18–25 business days RMB 14,000 – 32,000 (standard premium only) Chinese only Phone hotline, Chinese only, average 10 days to assign adjuster High (exclusions missed, wrong tier)
Domestic insurance broker (e.g., Huatai, Huaxin) 10–15 business days RMB 18,000 – 40,000 (includes 5–15% broker commission) Limited bilingual — broker translates summary Broker mediates, adjuster assignment in 5 days Medium
International broker with China desk (e.g., Marsh, Aon, Willis Towers Watson) 5–10 business days (pre-bound) RMB 25,000 – 60,000 (10–20% broker commission + translation fees) Full bilingual policy (English + Chinese equally authentic) Dedicated English-speaking claims manager, adjuster in 2 days Very Low

Costs shown are for the Standard coverage tier (RMB 10M aggregate). International broker fees are higher but include legal review of exclusions and a multi-carrier market search.

How to Maintain Coverage Year-Round

Once your policy is bound, annual compliance does not stop with payment. Chinese insurers require policyholders to submit semi-annual sales declarations (半年度申报表, bàn niándù shēnbàobiǎo) by March 31 and September 30 each year. Missing these deadlines triggers automatic premium adjustment upward by 8–12% and can lead to a “no claims cooperation” penalty that reduces your payout ratio by up to 15%. Additionally, any product design change — even a minor label revision — must be reported in writing within 14 days. Failure to do so voids coverage for claims arising from the unapproved change. For brands with multiple SKUs, maintaining a product master list (产品清单, chǎnpǐn qīngdān) with the insurer on a rolling quarterly update cycle is the safest practice.

NEXT STEPS

  1. Conduct a compliance audit of your current insurance placement — even if you have a policy, verify it meets Chinese regulatory standards. Read our guide China Product Safety Compliance Checklist for a step-by-step audit framework.
  2. Choose the right entry structure — your insurance needs differ if you are using a WFOE, a bonded warehouse 3PL, or direct cross-border e-commerce. Compare setups in WFOE vs. Cross-Border E-Commerce: Insurance Requirements.
  3. Request a bilingual policy review — before binding any new coverage, have a China-focused legal expert examine your policy wording for exclusions and sub-limits. Use our China Insurance Policy Review Service for a fixed-fee clause-by-clause analysis (RMB 3,500 per policy, turnaround 5 business days).

— China Gateway 360 —
Remote China market entry support, built around execution.

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