How to Comply with GHS Labeling in China: 2026 Guide for Foreign Chemical Companies
This guide outlines the mandatory steps for foreign chemical companies to comply with China’s revised Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals (GHS) labeling requirements, which are fully enforced from 2026 under the new national standard GB/T 16483-2025 and the updated GB 30000 series. Key changes introduce 50+ new hazard categories, stricter language mandates, and digital compliance tracking, affecting over 10,000 imported chemicals annually and requiring immediate action from exporters to China.
What Is China’s GHS Labeling Regulation?
China’s system for GHS labeling is governed by the 全球化学品统一分类和标签制度 (Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labelling of Chemicals, GHS, quánqiú huàxué pǐn tǒngyī fēnlèi hé biāoqiān zhìdù), implemented through the GB 30000 series of national standards. Starting from January 1, 2026, all chemical products imported into China must follow the revised GB/T 16483-2025 standard, which aligns China’s system with UN GHS Rev. 8. This revision expands the classification from about 60 hazard categories to over 110 categories, requiring many foreign companies to retest and reclassify their products.
The enforcement body is the 应急管理部 (Ministry of Emergency Management, MEM, yìngjí guǎnlǐ bù), which conducts inspections at ports and manufacturing facilities. In 2024, MEM reported that 32% of all chemical import violations involved incorrect labeling, with penalties reaching up to 300,000 RMB per violation. The 2026 update specifically targets new hazards like pyrophoric gases and desensitized explosives, which previously were not fully covered under the older GB 13690-2009 system.
Key Labeling Elements for the 2026 Standard
The new standard mandates 14 mandatory elements on every label attached to a product or its packaging. Compared to the 2020 version, the 2026 update adds a requirement for a Unique Chemical Identifier (UCI) for each impurity at ≥1% concentration, and opens room for two-dimensional barcodes linked to electronic safety data sheets.
| Element | 2020 Requirement | 2026 Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Product identifier | Chemical name or CAS number | CAS number + UCI (for impurities at ≥1%) |
| Signal words | “危险 (Danger)” or “警告 (Warning)” | Same, but now covers 22 new categories |
| Hazard pictograms | 9 standard pictograms | Same 9, but expanded color/size rules |
| Precautionary statements | P-codes from UN GHS | P-codes + mandatory Chinese translations (P280 for “戴防护手套/wear protective gloves”) |
| Supplier information | Company name and address | Must include 24-hour emergency contact phone |
| Digital link | Not required | QR code linking to electronic SDS (recommended) |
Step-by-Step Compliance Process
Step 1: Obtain a Chinese Business License or Appoint an Agent
Foreign companies must either incorporate a 外商独资企业 (Wholly Foreign-Owned Enterprise, WFOE, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) in China or appoint a licensed Chinese agent to act as the “responsible manufacturer” for labeling purposes. If you sell through a Chinese distributor, that distributor must register the chemical with the 危险化学品登记 (Hazardous Chemicals Registration, wēixiǎn huàxué pǐn dēngjì) system at the MEM portal. Without this registration, your labels cannot be legally produced. In 2025, registration took an average of 45 working days, up from 30 in 2023 due to higher scrutiny.
Step 2: Classify Your Chemical According to GB/T 16483-2025
You must classify every hazard class based on test data or literature from the 29 standard categories in GB/T 16483-2025. Compared to the UN GHS, China adds stricter thresholds for skin sensitization and acute toxicity. For example, a chemical with an LD50 (oral) of 200 mg/kg in the US may be classified as Category 3 (toxic) under UN GHS but as Category 2 (highly toxic) under Chinese rules—requiring a “危险 (Danger)” signal word. Many companies in 2024 faced 100,000 RMB fines for under-classifying GHS toxicity in imports.
Step 3: Draft and Print Compliant Labels
Labels must have Chinese as the primary language, with English only as supplementary and in smaller typeface. The hazard pictogram must be at least 2×2 cm, placed on the front panel. For small packages (≤50 mL), a fold-out label is allowed, but key elements like the product identifier must remain visible. In 2025, a survey by the China Chemical Industry Association showed that 44% of foreign companies failed first-time label audits due to missing or inaccurate Chinese precautionary statements.
Decision Framework for Label Format
If your chemical is a pure substance and you have test data from a GB/T 16483-2025 certified lab, choose a standard single-page label with all 14 elements sorted by hazard level (danger first, warning second). If your chemical is a mixture with more than 5 components, choose a two-page label: the first page lists the most severe hazards, and the second page includes all precautionary statements. For multi-ingredient products, many companies find that using a digital SDS portal (linked via a QR code on the label) reduces physical space requirements by 30% while maintaining 100% compliance.
Case Example: A German Specialty Chemicals Company
A German firm exporting 200 industrial lubricants to Shandong port faced a compliance audit in July 2025. Their labels used a 2020-format hazard statement: “Causes serious eye damage (H318)”, which was valid under the old standard. Under the 2026 update, this chemical was reclassified as “Specific target organ toxicity (single exposure) Category 1” due to new neurotoxicity data, requiring a signal word change from “危险” to “警告” and adding a new precautionary statement. The company had to reprint 15,000 labels at a cost of 220,000 RMB. By using a digital sticker system linked to an electronic SDS, they reduced reprint costs by 60% for subsequent batches.
Three Common Pitfalls for Foreign Companies
NEXT STEPS
- Re-classify your portfolio now. Obtain a full GHS report from a CNCA-accredited lab for your top 10 highest-volume chemicals. Read our guide on Chemical Registration in China for lab recommendations.
- Implement digital label management. Use a China-hosted SDS platform to manage label updates. See How to Write a GHS SDS for template integration.
- Audit your supply chain. Check that your Chinese distributor is registered on the MEM portal. Visit Chemical Import Rules for a 2026 checklist.
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