Can I use an e-commerce platform instead of a physical distributor in China?
Table of Contents
- The Two Channels: E-Commerce vs. Physical Distribution
- Cross-Border E-Commerce (CBEC): How It Works
- Major E-Commerce Platforms for Foreign Brands
- When E-Commerce Alone Is Sufficient
- When You Still Need a Physical Distributor
- The Hybrid Model: Combining Both Channels
- Head-to-Head Comparison
- Cost Comparison by Channel
- Transitioning from E-Commerce to Physical Distribution
- Frequently Asked Questions
1. The Two Channels: E-Commerce vs. Physical Distribution
China’s retail landscape has been reshaped by e-commerce more dramatically than any other major economy. With over 900 million internet users and the world’s largest e-commerce market (USD 2.3+ trillion in 2025), selling online in China is not just an alternative — for many consumer categories, it is the primary channel.
However, e-commerce does not replace physical distribution for all scenarios. Understanding the fundamental difference is crucial:
- E-Commerce (B2C): You sell directly to individual consumers. The platform handles transaction processing, payment (via Alipay or WeChat Pay), and often logistics (via the platform’s integrated logistics network). No distributor needed.
- Physical Distribution (B2B): You sell to a Chinese company (distributor) which then resells to other businesses — sub-distributors, retailers, hospitals, hotels, factories. The distributor handles warehousing, logistics, and retailer relationships.
If your end customer is an individual consumer buying for personal use, e-commerce platforms are a viable — often superior — alternative to a physical distributor. If your end customer is another business, physical distribution remains essential.
2. Cross-Border E-Commerce (CBEC): How It Works
China’s cross-border e-commerce (CBEC) regulatory framework allows foreign companies to sell directly to Chinese consumers without establishing a Chinese entity or appointing a distributor. Here is how it works:
2.1 The Bonded Warehouse Model
The most common CBEC model works as follows:
- Foreign company ships goods in bulk to a bonded warehouse in a designated CBEC pilot city (e.g., Shanghai, Ningbo, Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Tianjin, Zhengzhou)
- Chinese consumers place orders on Tmall Global, JD Worldwide, or Kaola
- The platform transmits order data to customs electronically
- Goods clear customs individually under the personal-use import regime
- Goods are dispatched from the bonded warehouse to the consumer — typically within 1–3 days
2.2 Key Regulatory Features
- No local entity required — the platform acts as the “importer of record” or coordinates with a licensed third-party
- Personal-use tariff exemptions — goods under RMB 5,000 per order are exempt from customs duty; VAT and consumption tax are charged at 70% of the standard rate
- Annual cap — RMB 26,000 per person per year (about USD 3,600)
- Positive list requirement — products must be on the CBEC positive list (updated periodically), which covers most consumer goods including food, cosmetics, electronics, apparel, home goods, and medical devices
- Some registration exemptions — certain products that require NMPA registration for physical distribution (e.g., some cosmetics and medical devices) may be sold through CBEC with reduced requirements
3. Major E-Commerce Platforms for Foreign Brands
| Platform | Model | Market Share (B2C Import) | Key Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tmall Global (天猫国际) | Marketplace | ~38% | Largest import platform; brand flagship stores; Alibaba logistics (Cainiao); integrated with Alipay |
| JD Worldwide (京东国际) | 1P + Marketplace | ~27% | JD buys inventory (1P) or hosts brand stores; JD Logistics for fast delivery; strong in electronics and premium goods |
| Kaola (考拉海购) | Marketplace | ~8% | NetEase-owned; strong in Japan/Korea beauty and母婴; now part of Alibaba ecosystem |
| Douyin (TikTok China) | Social Commerce | Growing rapidly | Livestream and short-video driven sales; requires local warehousing in many cases |
| Pinduoduo (拼多多) | Social / Group Buying | ~10% (import) | Price-sensitive consumers; group-buying model; growing cross-border selection |
| WeChat Mini Programs | DTC (Direct-to-Consumer) | Niche | Brand-owned store within WeChat; full CRM integration; requires local entity for payment settlement |
4. When E-Commerce Alone Is Sufficient
E-commerce platforms can fully replace physical distribution when the following conditions are met:
4.1 Your Product Is Consumer-Oriented
Individual consumers buy your product for personal use. This covers most FMCG, apparel, electronics, beauty, pet supplies, home goods, and nutritional supplements.
4.2 Your Price Point Fits the CBEC Cap
Single orders under RMB 5,000 (about USD 700) qualify for CBEC duty benefits. If your product’s typical order value exceeds this, the cost advantage of CBEC diminishes.
4.3 Your Product Is on the CBEC Positive List
The vast majority of consumer goods are covered, but it is worth checking. Products that are NOT on the positive list include: some food categories requiring GACC facility registration, certain precious metals, and goods subject to tariff-rate quotas.
4.4 You Are Testing the Market
If you are unsure about China demand, CBEC is the lowest-risk entry method. You can launch a Tmall Global store with minimal upfront investment (RMB 50,000–150,000 deposit), test demand, gather consumer data, and decide whether to invest in physical distribution based on real sales data.
4.5 You Want Brand Control
Selling directly through your own platform store gives you full control over pricing, promotions, and brand presentation — something you largely surrender with a physical distributor.
E-Commerce Advantages
- No distributor needed
- Lower upfront investment
- Direct consumer data access
- Full brand and pricing control
- Faster market entry (4–8 weeks)
- No local entity required (CBEC)
E-Commerce Limitations
- B2C only — no B2B sales
- Annual cap per consumer (RMB 26,000)
- High platform commissions (5–20%)
- Limited to CBEC positive list products
- No offline retail presence
- No institutional / government procurement
5. When You Still Need a Physical Distributor
There are several scenarios where e-commerce alone is insufficient and a physical distributor is necessary:
5.1 B2B Sales
If you want to sell to Chinese businesses, hospitals, schools, hotels, restaurants, or government institutions, you need a distributor. These buyers purchase through procurement systems, require contracts, and need local account management. Neither Tmall Global nor JD Worldwide serves this channel effectively.
5.2 Offline Retail Distribution
If you want your product on shelves in Chinese supermarkets, convenience stores, department stores, or specialty retailers, you need a distributor. Most Chinese retailers buy from distributors, not directly from foreign suppliers. The distributor manages the complex network of regional wholesalers and retail buyers.
5.3 High-Value / Complex Products
Industrial equipment, medical devices, enterprise software, and capital goods require demonstrations, installation, training, and after-sales support that e-commerce platforms cannot provide. Physical distributors provide the local technical and sales infrastructure.
5.4 Products Requiring Physical Inspection
Fresh food, temperature-sensitive goods, and products requiring on-site sampling or testing before purchase need physical inventory and handling that is incompatible with the bonded-warehouse CBEC model.
5.5 Large-Volume / Wholesale Transactions
If your typical transaction is a full container (20-foot or 40-foot equivalent), the CBEC model’s RMB 5,000-per-order cap makes it completely impractical. Physical distributors operate at wholesale volumes.
Physical Distribution Advantages
- B2B and wholesale capability
- Offline retail access
- No per-consumer purchase cap
- Local relationship network
- After-sales service provision
- Institutional procurement access
Physical Distribution Limitations
- Higher upfront commitment (MOQs)
- Less brand/pricing control
- Slower to scale across regions
- Distributor compliance risk
- Requires local entity or distributor relationship
- Margins shared across the chain
6. The Hybrid Model: Combining Both Channels
Many of the most successful foreign brands in China use a hybrid approach — CBEC for direct-to-consumer online sales and physical distributors for offline retail and B2B sales:
| Channel | Purpose | Products | Customer |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tmall Global / JD Worldwide | DTC e-commerce, brand awareness, data collection | Full consumer range | Individual consumers |
| Physical Distributor(s) | Offline retail, B2B, institutional sales | Key SKUs with highest demand | Retailers, businesses, institutions |
| Douyin / Livestream | Social commerce, viral marketing | Hero products | Individual consumers |
| Local Entity (WFOE) | Full market control (after scaling) | All products | All segments |
Key challenge of the hybrid model: Channel conflict. If your Tmall Global store sells at a lower price than your distributor’s retail partners, the distributor will complain (and rightfully so). Manage this through:
- SKU differentiation: Sell different product variants or bundle configurations online vs. offline
- Pricing parity: Maintain consistent retail pricing across channels
- Territory segmentation: Restrict your own e-commerce to areas where the distributor is not active
- Commission structure: Compensate the distributor for online sales originating from their territory
7. Head-to-Head Comparison
| Criterion | E-Commerce Platform | Physical Distributor |
|---|---|---|
| Time to first sale | 4–8 weeks | 3–6 months |
| Upfront investment | USD 7,000–20,000 (platform deposit) | USD 15,000–100,000+ (MOQ + compliance) |
| Local entity required | No (CBEC) | No (but helps) |
| Target customer | Individual consumers | Businesses and consumers (via retail) |
| Brand control | High (self-operated store) | Low to moderate |
| Customer data access | High | Low (distributor owns the relationship) |
| Platform commission | 5–20% of GMV | N/A (margin built into distributor pricing) |
| Geographic coverage | National (platform nationwide) | Varies by distributor network |
| Logistics complexity | Low (platform handles last mile) | Moderate (distributor handles) |
| Returns management | Platform-managed | Distributor-managed |
| Scalability | Fast (traffic-driven) | Gradual (relationship-driven) |
8. Cost Comparison by Channel
Here is a rough cost breakdown for entering China with USD 100,000 in first-year revenue through each channel:
| Cost Item | E-Commerce (CBEC) | Physical Distributor (1 Province) |
|---|---|---|
| Platform deposit / setup | USD 10,000 | USD 0 |
| Initial inventory (MOQ) | USD 20,000 | USD 35,000 |
| NMPA registration (if applicable) | USD 3,000–5,000 (simplified) | USD 5,000–20,000 (full) |
| Labeling / translation | USD 2,000 | USD 3,000 |
| Platform commission (year 1) | USD 10,000–20,000 | USD 0 |
| Marketing / promotions | USD 15,000 | USD 5,000 (co-op with distributor) |
| Logistics to warehouse | USD 5,000 | USD 5,000 |
| Total Estimated Cost | USD 60,000–77,000 | USD 48,000–68,000 |
Note: The e-commerce channel costs more in fees and marketing but requires less upfront inventory. The distributor channel has higher inventory commitment but lower ongoing costs once the relationship is established.
9. Transitioning from E-Commerce to Physical Distribution
The most common entry path for foreign brands in China today is:
- Phase 1 (Months 1–6): Launch on Tmall Global or JD Worldwide to test demand, gather consumer feedback, and build brand awareness
- Phase 2 (Months 6–12): If online sales demonstrate strong demand, identify and vet potential distributors using the e-commerce data as proof of concept
- Phase 3 (Months 12–24): Appoint one or two provincial-level distributors for offline retail, while maintaining your e-commerce presence
- Phase 4 (Month 24+): Consider establishing a WFOE to control both channels directly
This phased approach minimizes risk. You validate demand before committing to inventory, and you can approach distributors with real China sales data rather than just “potential.”
10. Frequently Asked Questions
Can Chinese businesses buy from my Tmall Global store?
Technically yes, but it is not designed for that purpose. A business that places a large order on Tmall Global will trigger customs scrutiny because CBEC is for personal use only. The order may be rejected or subjected to full import duties and procedures, defeating the purpose. For B2B sales, use a distributor.
Do I need a Chinese trademark to sell on Tmall Global?
Yes. Tmall Global requires all foreign brands to hold a registered Chinese trademark before listing. This applies even if you have international trademark registrations. The trademark registration process takes 9–12 months in China, so start early. There are no exceptions to this requirement.
Can I use both a distributor AND sell on Tmall Global at the same time?
Yes, but carefully. The most common approach is to give your distributor the offline channel and manage Tmall Global yourself or through a specialized Tmall operator. Ensure your pricing and product mix do not create channel conflict. Some distributors are willing to manage the Tmall Global store for you — this can align incentives.
What about WeChat Mini Programs — do they need a distributor?
WeChat Mini Programs require a local entity for payment settlement (WeChat Pay requires a Chinese bank account). If you do not have a WFOE, you will need a distributor or third-party service provider with a local entity to operate the Mini Program. This makes WeChat less accessible for pure CBEC brands than Tmall Global.
Does Douyin (TikTok China) require a local entity?
Douyin’s cross-border program (Douyin Global) does allow foreign brands to sell through CBEC without a local entity, similar to Tmall Global. However, many Douyin operations require local warehousing and influencer management, making a distributor or local agency partner valuable even if not strictly required.
What is the exit strategy if e-commerce fails?
Low. CBEC has minimal exit costs — you stop shipping to the bonded warehouse, close the store, and recover any remaining inventory. This is significantly easier than unwinding a physical distribution agreement or winding down a WFOE. This low exit barrier is one of CBEC’s strongest advantages for market testing.
This article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or commercial advice. Platform policies, commission rates, and regulatory requirements change frequently. Always verify current terms with the platform and consult with China market entry professionals regarding your specific situation.
