China CBEC Update: Positive List Expanded to Include 120 New Product Categories — Key Takeaways

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China CBEC Update: Positive List Expanded to Include 120 New Product Categories — Key Takeaways

In November 2024, China expanded its Cross-Border E-Commerce (CBEC) regulatory framework by adding 120 new product categories to the Positive List (正面清单, zhèngmiàn qīngdān), raising the total catalog to over 1,470 items. This wave of liberalization—4x larger than the 2022 update—directly enables foreign brands to sell high-demand goods like cosmetics appliances and health supplements to Chinese consumers via CBEC platforms without requiring a China-based legal entity. For global executives assessing market timing, this is the broadest single expansion since the policy’s 2016 inception.

The update, effective from December 1, 2024, reflects China’s renewed push to stabilize cross-border trade and redirect consumption into regulated channels. Below we decode the key shifts, what the numbers mean for your entry strategy, and how to operationalize access to China’s ¥1.26 trillion (approx. USD 175 billion) CBEC import market.

What Changed in the 2024 Positive List Update?

The Positive List specifies which goods are eligible for CBEC retail import—any product outside it requires standard commercial import procedures (e.g., registration, labeling, testing). The 2024 revision added 120 new HS codes, many addressing long-standing gaps in the previous list.

Major new inclusions fall into three clusters:

  • Skincare and Cosmetics: Over 30 new HS sub-codes for facial creams, serums, sunscreens, and treatment masks—categories previously only partially covered.
  • Small Home Appliances: Blenders, espresso machines, air purifiers, and electric toothbrushes (15+ new codes), items heavily demanded by China’s urban middle class.
  • Health Supplements and Functional Foods: Probiotics, omega-3 oils, herbal extracts, and vitamin-infused beverages (20+ codes), subject to specific labeling and ingredient constraints.

Context: The Positive List originally contained 1,410 items (2016 baseline). Previous expansions in 2020 and 2022 added 80 and 29 categories respectively. The 2024 addition thus represents the largest single increase, both in breadth (120 items) and coverage of premium consumer segments.

Why This Expansion Matters for Foreign Brands

CBEC (跨境电子商务, kuàjìng diànzǐ shāngwù) offers two major advantages over traditional import: (a) no requirement to register a local legal entity or obtain a food/drug license in China, and (b) a favorable personal-use tax regime of 0% duty + 70% of VAT (~8.5–9.5% total vs. up to 25% for commercial imports). The expanded list now covers product lines where foreign brands typically hold strong equity—personal care, health, and kitchen automation—that were previously bottlenecked by regulatory ambiguity.

For a mid-sized European skincare brand, adding a CBEC channel for anti-aging serums (now listed) can reduce go-to-market timeline from 9–12 months (traditional registration) to 4–6 weeks (CBEC listing). According to China Customs data, CBEC imports in 2023 reached ¥1.26 trillion ($175 bn), up 15.6% year-over-year, and the new categories are expected to accelerate that trajectory into 2025.

Key Numbers Behind the Policy Shift

We identified five contextual numbers that frame this update’s significance for foreign decision-makers:

Metric Value Meaning
New categories added (2024) 120 4x the 2022 expansion (29 items), signaling policy acceleration
Total Positive List items (post-update) 1,470+ Coverage now includes ~70% of consumer goods by import value
CBEC import market size (2023) ¥1.26 trillion ($175 bn) +15.6% YoY; growth likely to accelerate with new categories
CBEC tax advantage vs. commercial import ~8.5–9.5% vs. up to 25% Direct margin upside of 10–15% for most consumer goods
Time since last expansion (2022) 24 months Normal cadence; another update expected in late 2026

Timeline implication: The shift from 29 to 120 new categories within one revision cycle indicates that Beijing views CBEC as a preferred channel for stimulating consumption and managing forex flows. Foreign brands with products in the new categories should prioritize CBEC listing before competition matures.

Category-Specific Opportunities and Constraints

While the list expands, not all new codes grant unrestricted access. Key constraints remain:

  • Cosmetics: Products must comply with CBEC labeling rules—Chinese ingredient list, net content, usage instructions. Animal-tested items are permitted under CBEC (unlike general trade).
  • Supplements: Functional health claims are prohibited. Products must be sold as “ordinary food” unless separately registered with the CFDA.
  • Appliances: Voltage and plug standards must match Chinese specifications (220V, 50Hz, GB-compliant plug). Vendor certification (CCC mark) may be required for certain items—verify per HS code.

Each restriction affects operational cost and speed. For example, relabeling inventory for CBEC cosmetics can cost ¥5–15 per unit and take 2 weeks. Failing to comply with ingredient disclosure rules at the port can result in seizure and a ¥10k–50k penalty per shipment.

How to Operationalize the Expanded List

  1. Audit your product portfolio against the new 120 HS codes. Obtain the full list (available from China Customs or your CBEC solution provider) and map each product to its six-digit HS category.
  2. Select a CBEC pilot city for bonded warehouse storage. Top options: Shanghai, Ningbo, Guangzhou, and Zhengzhou—each offers differentiated clearance speed (2–5 days) and tax incentives.
  3. Partner with a CBEC platform (Tmall Global, JD Worldwide, Kaola, or Douyin Global) to list products. Each platform has specific category restrictions within the positive list—verify per platform.
  4. Compliance checklist: Prepare Chinese labels, safety reports (if applicable), and ingredient declarations. For supplements, a Certificate of Free Sale from your home country is often required.

Typical timeline from list publication to first sale on Tmall Global: 6–8 weeks, provided your product HS code is clean and documentation is complete. Cost per SKU (labeling + platform setup + first inventory) ranges from ¥30,000 to ¥80,000 depending on category complexity.

NEXT STEPS

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

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