If you are buying handbags from China for the first time — or you have been buying through a Yiwu or Hong Kong agent and want to go direct — this guide walks through what an experienced importer actually does, step by step. We have been on the factory side for sixteen years; the friction points are the same every year.

1. Decide what kind of partner you actually need

Three real options, with very different economics:

  • Wholesaler / trading company. Buys from many factories, resells to you. Faster catalog, higher price (+15-25%), good for very small orders (10-50 pcs per SKU). Almost always in Yiwu, Guangzhou or HK.
  • Factory direct. One brand, one product line, lower price, higher MOQ (50-200 pcs per SKU), longer lead time, much better for OEM customization. The right choice if you have a brand.
  • Sourcing agent. Works on commission (typically 5-10%), helps you find factories, manages QC. Useful for first-timers who don't speak Chinese and can't visit. Cost is real but defensible.

The wrong assumption is that "factory direct" is always cheaper. Below 100 pcs per SKU, a good wholesaler often beats a factory because factories spread fixed setup cost over a larger run.

2. Where to find factories (without Alibaba PTSD)

Alibaba is fine but noisy. After sixteen years on the supply side, here is the realistic stack:

  • Alibaba — start here, filter by "Verified Supplier" + "Trade Assurance" + "Years on Alibaba ≥ 5".
  • Made-in-China.com — fewer factories, often higher quality, less spammy outreach.
  • Canton Fair (Spring/Autumn, Guangzhou) — Phase 3 has handbag halls; meeting four factories in one day beats four months of email.
  • 1688.com — domestic Chinese platform, 30-40% cheaper than Alibaba prices, but no English UI and Chinese-only payment.
  • Industry referral — ask buyers in your category at trade events. The best factories rarely advertise.

3. The qualification call — what to ask in 20 minutes

Once you have 3-5 candidate factories, get on a call. The questions that separate real factories from middlemen:

  1. "Send a video tour of the factory floor right now." Live, not pre-recorded. A trading company can't do this.
  2. "What is your MOQ on this specific SKU, with my color, my logo?" A vague "50-1000 pcs" answer means they will subcontract.
  3. "What is your monthly production capacity for this category?" Real factories know the number. 3,000-15,000 pcs/month is typical mid-size.
  4. "Who else have you produced for in my country?" They won't name customers (NDA), but they should be able to describe the type of brand and country.
  5. "What is the price for sample + lead time + sample shipping cost?" Free samples are usually a red flag — paid samples (refunded against bulk) are the professional norm.

4. The sample stage — the only thing that matters

A factory's beauty shots on Alibaba mean nothing. A sample in your hand means everything. Budget $80-$200 per sample (material + labor + DHL shipping). Two non-obvious things to check:

  • Stitch density. Premium handbags run 10-12 stitches per 3 cm; cheap factories run 6-8. Count under a magnifier.
  • Edge paint. Bend the bag's edge 90°. If paint cracks, the factory is using 1-coat edge paint and the bag will fail at retail within 6 months. Real edge paint is 3-4 coats.

5. Payment terms that actually protect you

Standard first-order terms with a new factory:

  • 30% deposit on PO, 70% balance against B/L copy (bill of lading, after goods are at the port). This is the international norm.
  • Avoid 100% TT up front — only used by middlemen with no working capital.
  • LC at sight for orders > $20,000 with a new factory; cost ~1% but real legal protection.
  • Alibaba Trade Assurance — useful for small first orders ($1-10K), basically holds your funds in escrow until you confirm receipt.

6. The four mistakes that wreck first orders

  1. Skipping the sample. Save $150 on sample, lose $5,000 on a 500-pc bulk order with the wrong color.
  2. Assuming "Made in China" is one quality level. There is a 10x quality range between Guangzhou and Yiwu factories on the same product type.
  3. Ignoring compliance. Your goods will sit at US customs if they fail CPSIA, or at Hamburg if they fail REACH. Ask the factory for current test reports before ordering.
  4. Negotiating only on price. Squeezing the price 10% gets you swapped materials, shorter QC, downgraded hardware. The factory has to make money. Negotiate on MOQ, terms, and lead time first; price last.

7. When to fly out

For first orders under $10K, a factory visit is overkill. Above $30K or before any private-label commitment, fly. Two days in Guangzhou — one factory visit + one Canton Fair walk — gives you more information than three months of email.