What is the CBEC Personal Annual Purchase Limit Per Person in China?
China’s Cross-Border E-Commerce (CBEC, 跨境电商, kuàjìng diànshāng) personal annual purchase limit per person is 26,000 RMB (approximately $3,600 USD) per calendar year, with a maximum single transaction cap of 5,000 RMB (about $690 USD). This policy, established by the Ministry of Finance and the General Administration of Customs, allows eligible individuals to import goods through designated CBEC platforms under a preferential tax regime, with tariff rates at 0% and VAT/consumption tax charged at 70% of the statutory rate—for purchases within these limits.
What Exactly Is the CBEC Personal Annual Purchase Limit?
The CBEC personal annual purchase limit is a per-person, per-year cap on the total value of goods imported under the CBEC retail import model—also known as the “bonded import” model (保税进口, bǎoshuì jìnkǒu). This limit operates alongside a 5,000 RMB per-transaction cap, meaning no single order can exceed that value. The annual limit resets on January 1 each year and is tied to the individual’s identity (Chinese national ID or passport for foreigners living in China).
The 26,000 RMB limit was increased from 20,000 RMB in late 2018, reflecting the rapid growth of cross-border e-commerce in China and consumer demand for imported goods. According to data from the China Customs, over 150 million CBEC transactions were processed in 2023, and the total value of CBEC retail imports exceeded 900 billion RMB, with the personal annual limit covering the vast majority of individual cross-border orders. By contrast, before 2016, these goods were often treated as general trade or personal baggage, incurring full tariffs and complex customs procedures.
For context, the 26,000 RMB annual limit is roughly the equivalent of the average annual salary for a retail worker in a tier-1 Chinese city, making it a meaningful allowance for regular consumers. However, it is not intended for commercial importers—anyone exceeding this limit must switch to the general trade channel, which has different tax and regulatory requirements.
How the Purchase Limit Affects Tax Calculation
Staying within the CBEC personal annual purchase limit unlocks significant tax advantages. Here is the breakdown:
| Scenario | Tariff Rate | VAT Rate | Consumption Tax | Effective Tax Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single transaction ≤ 5,000 RMB + within 26,000 RMB annual limit | 0% (exempted) | 70% of statutory rate (typically 7.7%–10.5%) | 70% of statutory rate (if applicable) | ~9.1%–12.0% on average |
| Single transaction > 5,000 RMB but within 26,000 RMB annual limit | Full statutory rate | Full statutory rate | Full statutory rate | 20%–50%+ depending on product |
| Exceeding 26,000 RMB annual limit | Full statutory rate (general trade) | Full statutory rate | Full statutory rate | 20%–50%+ depending on product |
As the table shows, the most favorable tax treatment applies only when both the single transaction and annual limits are respected. For example, a consumer buying 3,000 RMB worth of French skincare products would pay approximately 273–330 RMB in total tax (at ~9.1%–11% effective rate), compared to over 900 RMB under general trade. This preferential regime has driven the explosive growth of platforms like Tmall Global, JD Worldwide, and Koala.
It is also worth noting that the tax exemption threshold for personal parcels (50 RMB tax-free) does not apply to CBEC imports—the 0% tariff is a separate policy. The CBEC model calculates taxes on the total transaction value, and there is no mini-exemption for small amounts.
What Happens When You Exceed the Limit?
If a consumer’s cumulative CBEC purchases in a calendar year exceed 26,000 RMB, the entire order that pushes them over the limit—and all subsequent orders—are treated as general trade imports. This has three major consequences:
- Full taxation: The goods are subject to full tariffs (typically 10%–25% for most consumer goods), full VAT (13% standard rate), and consumption tax if applicable. The effective tax rate can exceed 50% for some categories like cosmetics and luxury goods.
- Customs complexity: The goods must clear customs under the general trade model, which requires a commercial invoice, packing list, and import declaration—slowing delivery and increasing administrative burden.
- Platform restrictions: Many CBEC platforms (e.g., Tmall Global, JD Worldwide) will block further orders for that individual once the limit is reached. The system automatically tracks the limit using the buyer’s identity number, and platforms are legally obligated to enforce it.
To avoid these consequences, consumers can monitor their annual CBEC spending through the China Customs’ “Cross-Border E-Commerce Personal Purchase Record” query system (available via the China Customs WeChat mini-program or website). Alternatively, they can divide their consumption across multiple family members’ identities—but each identity must be that of a real individual, and using fraudulent identities is illegal.
For context, the 26,000 RMB limit was tripled from 8,000 RMB (the initial limit when CBEC was piloted in 2015) and has remained stable since 2018. While consumer advocacy groups have called for a further increase to 50,000 RMB given inflation and growing demand, no policy change has been announced as of early 2025. The limit is reviewed annually by the Ministry of Finance, but adjustments are rare.
CBEC vs. Other Import Channels: Which Should You Use?
Understanding the CBEC personal annual purchase limit is critical for choosing the right import channel. Here is a decision framework based on your situation:
If you are an individual consumer buying imported goods for personal use, and your total annual spending stays under 26,000 RMB—choose CBEC. You benefit from tariff exemption, reduced VAT, faster customs clearance, and seamless integration with major e-commerce platforms.
If you expect to import more than 26,000 RMB worth of goods in a year—whether for personal or semi-commercial use—choose general trade or a dedicated import agent. While taxes will be higher, you avoid the risk of blocked orders and ensure compliance with customs regulations.
If you are a foreign business targeting Chinese consumers, CBEC is ideal for testing products with low volumes (e.g., 5,000–10,000 RMB per product line). For higher volumes, consider establishing a 外商独资企业 (WFOE, wàishāng dúzī qǐyè) or appointing a 保税区运营商 (bonded zone operator, bǎoshuì qū yùn yíng shāng) to manage general trade imports.
3 Common Pitfalls with the CBEC Purchase Limit
NEXT STEPS
Now that you understand the CBEC personal annual purchase limit, here are three actionable steps to implement your cross-border e-commerce strategy effectively:
- Check your remaining CBEC allowance: Before importing any goods, ensure your annual limit has not been exceeded. Use the China Customs query tool to track consumption in real time. Read our CBEC Tax Calculator Guide for step-by-step instructions.
- Compare CBEC vs. general trade for your product: If you are a business, evaluate whether CBEC or general trade is more profitable for your imported goods. Our CBEC vs. General Trade Comparison breaks down cost, speed, and regulatory differences for 10 popular product categories.
- Register for CBEC platform access: If you are a foreign seller, you need to register on platforms like Tmall Global or JD Worldwide. See our How to Register for CBEC Purchases guide for the full application process and required documentation.
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