sourcing-101
Why Source from China in 2026
$3.5T of goods leave Chinese ports every year. An honest look at why — and when China is the wrong answer for your product.
By Rich Bee ·February 20, 2026 · 2 min read
More than $3.5 trillion in goods leaves Chinese ports every year. That number didn't happen by accident. It's what four decades of industrial build-out, supply chain concentration, and accumulated manufacturing know-how look like at a scale no other country has reached.
We're not trying to sell you on China. What follows is a straight read on where it actually beats the alternatives and where it doesn't.
China vs. Other Manufacturing Countries
See the full comparison table in our China Sourcing 101 guide.
The Real Reason People Choose China
It isn't really about price. It's about options. Say you need 500 units of a custom product with your logo, a specific Pantone shade, and your own packaging. In China, twenty factories will be bidding on that order by Tuesday. In most other countries you'd still be waiting weeks for a single quote.
The thing that's genuinely hard to replicate is supply chain density. Within a 50-kilometer radius of Shenzhen you can source every component of a consumer electronics product, from the PCB to the packaging box, without a single part crossing a national border.
When China Might Not Be Your Best Bet
Be honest with yourself about a few cases:
- Very small orders (under $2,000). Transaction costs eat into your margins. Look at Alibaba's ready-to-ship options instead of commissioning a custom run.
- Products that need specific EU/US certifications. Some factories claim certifications they don't actually hold, so set aside budget for independent testing.
- Ultra-fast fashion. If your trend cycle is two weeks, Turkey or nearshore production may beat ocean freight timelines.
- Political sensitivity. Depending on your target market, "Made in China" may carry baggage. Know your end customer.
This is Part 1 of 8 in the Rich Bee China Sourcing 101 series. Next: China's Manufacturing Map: Don't Go to Beijing for Auto Parts · All chapters: Sourcing 101 full guide
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