What Documents Are Required for China Customs Clearance?

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What Documents Are Required for China Customs Clearance?

Importing goods into China requires a defined set of customs clearance documents that must be submitted through the China International Trade Single Window (Single Window). The exact documents depend on the product type, shipment value, country of origin, and the importer’s registration status. At minimum, every import declaration requires a commercial invoice, packing list, bill of lading or air waybill, and the customs declaration form. Additional documents such as certificates of origin, import licenses, and product registration certificates are required for regulated products. This FAQ provides a comprehensive document checklist organized by shipment type and regulatory requirement.

Short Answer

Every China import shipment requires: commercial invoice, packing list, bill of lading or air waybill, customs declaration form, and contract/purchase order. Regulated products additionally require certificates of origin, import licenses, product registration certificates, quarantine permits, and CCC certification depending on the HS code category.

1. What are the core documents required for every import?

The following documents are mandatory for all import customs declarations in China, regardless of product type or shipment value:

Document Format Key Content Requirements
Commercial Invoice Electronic (PDF/XML) Seller and buyer details, HS code, quantity, unit price, total value, currency, trade terms, country of origin, shipment marks
Packing List Electronic Package numbers, weight (gross/net), dimensions, container numbers, seal numbers, product description per package
Bill of Lading / Air Waybill Electronic or endorsed copy Consignee and notify party details, vessel/flight number, port of loading/discharge, container numbers, cargo description matching invoice
Customs Declaration Form Single Window electronic submission Auto-generated from submitted documents; requires HS code, duty calculation data, regulatory permit references
Contract / Purchase Order Electronic Signed by buyer and seller; must match invoice values and trade terms
Import-Export Enterprise Registration Reference number Importer’s GACC registration number must be valid

What to know: All documents submitted through the Single Window must be consistent across every field — the product description, quantity, and value must match exactly between the invoice, packing list, bill of lading, and declaration form. Inconsistencies are the most common cause of customs holds and inspection triggers.

2. What documents are needed for preferential duty claims under FTAs?

To claim reduced or zero duty rates under China’s Free Trade Agreement (FTA) network — covering ASEAN, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand, Switzerland, Iceland, Costa Rica, Peru, Chile, Pakistan, Georgia, Mauritius, Cambodia, and RCEP member states — the following additional documents must be submitted:

  • Certificate of Origin (Form FTA): The specific certificate form depends on the agreement — e.g., Form E for ASEAN-China, Form F for China-Chile, Form P for China-Pakistan. Must be issued by the exporting country’s authorized issuing body.
  • Certificate of Origin (RCEP Form): For RCEP claims, the CO must show the product-specific rule of origin criterion (WO, PE, QVC, or CTC) explicitly marked on the certificate.
  • Declaration of Origin (for RCEP): Approved exporters may self-declare origin under RCEP’s approved exporter scheme, eliminating the need for a third-party certificate.
  • Direct Transport Certificate (if required): Some FTAs require evidence that goods were shipped directly between the FTA parties without intermediate processing in non-party countries.
  • Third-party invoicing declaration: If the invoice is issued by a company in a non-party country, additional declarations may be required.

What to know: In 2025-2026, GACC has intensified verification of FTA origin claims, particularly for RCEP and China-ASEAN trade. Customs may request production cost breakdowns or factory visit reports for high-risk origin claims. Ensure your origin documentation is complete and accurate before shipping.

3. What documents are required for regulated products?

Regulated product categories require additional permits and certificates submitted during the customs clearance process. Here is a product-specific document matrix:

Product Category Required Document(s) Issuing Authority
Food and agricultural products CIQ Import Permit, Phytosanitary Certificate, Health Certificate, Animal Quarantine Certificate GACC (CIQ division)
Chemicals and hazardous materials MSDS (Chinese version), Hazardous Chemicals Registration Certificate, Environmental clearance Ministry of Emergency Management, MEE
Medical devices NMPA Medical Device Registration Certificate, GMP Certificate, Free Sale Certificate NMPA
Pharmaceuticals and APIs NMPA Drug Registration Certificate, Drug Import Permit, GMP Certificate NMPA
Cosmetics NMPA Cosmetics Registration/Filing Certificate, Free Sale Certificate, test reports NMPA
Electronics and electrical products CCC Certificate, China Energy Label, SRRC Certificate, MIIT Network Access License CNCA (CCC), MIIT (SRRC)
Wood and wood packaging ISPM-15 compliant fumigation certificate, Phytosanitary Certificate Exporting country’s plant protection authority
Used machinery / second-hand goods Pre-shipment Inspection Certificate, age verification, environmental clearance CCIC or AQSIQ authorized agency

What to know: Many regulated product permits must be obtained before the shipment departs from the exporting country. For example, NMPA registration for medical devices takes 6-12 months, and CIQ import permits for food products take 30-60 days. Plan permit timelines well in advance of your shipping schedule.

4. What documentation is needed for samples, gifts, and low-value shipments?

Small-value shipments — samples, gifts, or goods valued under 5,000 RMB (approximately 700 USD) — still require customs clearance but with simplified documentation:

  • Commercial invoice or proforma invoice clearly marked No Commercial Value or Sample
  • Packing list (simplified)
  • Bill of lading or air waybill
  • Simplified customs declaration through the Single Window express channel

Shipments valued under 50 RMB (approximately 7 USD) are generally exempt from customs duties and formal clearance requirements, provided they are not regulated products and are not part of a commercial transaction.

What to know: Even sample shipments of regulated products (e.g., sample cosmetics or sample medical devices) require relevant product permits. GACC does not waive regulatory requirements based on shipment value alone.

5. What documents are needed for temporary importation or bonded warehouse entry?

For goods entering China under temporary importation (ATA Carnet) or into a bonded warehouse or Free Trade Zone, the following documents are required:

ATA Carnet (temporary importation):

  • Valid ATA Carnet issued by the exporting country’s chamber of commerce
  • Commercial invoice (proforma acceptable)
  • Packing list
  • Bill of lading or air waybill
  • Temporary importation guarantee deposit (typically 110-150% of estimated duties)

Bonded warehouse / FTZ entry:

  • Standard customs declaration form (marked Bonded or FTZ Entry)
  • Commercial invoice
  • Packing list
  • Bill of lading or air waybill
  • Bonded warehouse receipt or FTZ operator confirmation
  • All product-specific permits (even though duties are suspended, regulatory permits still apply)

What to know: Temporary imports under ATA Carnet are limited to specific categories (commercial samples, professional equipment, exhibition goods) and have a maximum stay of 6 months in China, extendable to 12 months with GACC approval.

6. What digital documentation requirements apply in 2026?

China’s customs digitalization has advanced significantly, and several electronic-only documentation requirements apply as of 2026:

  • Electronic Port IC Card: Required for all customs declaration entities to access the Single Window. These are physical USB tokens or cloud-based certificates.
  • Digital signatures: All declarations must be digitally signed using the entity’s Electronic Port certificate. Physical signatures are no longer accepted on standard declarations.
  • Electronic tax payment authorization: Importers must maintain a valid electronic tax payment agreement with their bank and GACC for automatic duty and VAT payments.
  • Blockchain trade records (pilot): In Shanghai Free Trade Zone and select pilot zones, GACC accepts blockchain-verified trade records as supporting evidence, reducing the need for physical document verification.
  • e-Certificate of Origin: RCEP and several bilateral FTAs now accept fully electronic Certificates of Origin exchanged through customs-to-customs data channels, eliminating paper certificates.

7. What are the common document-related reasons for customs holds?

Based on GACC compliance data, the following document issues are the most common triggers for customs holds and inspections:

  1. Invoice-packing list discrepancies: The quantity, weight, or product description on the invoice does not match the packing list. Even minor discrepancies trigger a hold.
  2. Missing or expired regulatory permits: A product requires CCC certification but the certificate number is not included, or the CCC certificate has expired.
  3. HS code mismatch with product description: The declared HS code appears inconsistent with the product description provided in the invoice. GACC’s AI risk engine flags these automatically.
  4. Value discrepancies: The declared customs value appears significantly below the prevailing market price for similar goods, triggering a valuation review.
  5. Certificate of Origin errors: The CO does not match the origin criterion for the claimed FTA preference, or the issuing authority is not recognized by GACC.
  6. Missing endorsements: The bill of lading lacks necessary endorsements or the consignee details do not match the customs registration.

What to know: The Single Window’s automated document validation system checks over 200 consistency rules before a declaration is accepted. Pre-validating your documents using a customs broker’s compliance tool can reduce rejection rates by 70-80%.

8. What is the document retention requirement for customs records?

Chinese customs law requires importers to retain all customs clearance documents for a minimum of 3 years from the date of customs clearance. This applies to both physical and electronic records. Key retention requirements include:

  • Storage format: Documents can be retained in electronic or physical form, but must be readily accessible for GACC audit inspections.
  • Post-clearance audits: GACC may conduct post-clearance audits up to 3 years after clearance. Companies must be able to produce original documents within 5-10 working days of an audit notice.
  • AEO record-keeping: AEO-certified companies must maintain enhanced documentation, including internal audit reports, training records, and supplier compliance files, for the full certification validity period (3 years).
  • Consequences of record failure: Failure to maintain adequate customs records can result in penalties of 10,000-50,000 RMB and a downgrade of the importer’s customs credit score.

Bottom line: Implementing a systematic document management process — with standardized document templates, pre-submission validation checklists, and a central document repository with 3-year retention — is one of the most effective investments a China importer can make for smooth customs clearance and audit readiness.

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