How to Source Shoes from China — Step-by-Step Guide for 2026 Importers
A practical, factory-direct guide to sourcing shoes from China: from factory selection to production, with real MOQ, pricing, and lead time data from MOHE.
Why Source Directly from a Chinese Shoe Factory?
As a manufacturer with factories in Wenzhou, Putian, and Guangzhou, we see too many buyers waste money on middlemen. When you work directly with a factory, you control costs, quality, and timelines. No markups, no miscommunication layers. Just production.
We are MOHE — a shoe factory group producing over 2 million pairs annually. We make casual, athletic, and formal footwear for brands in 30+ countries. This guide is based on what we see work (and fail) for importers every day.
Step 1: Define Your Product & Target Price
Before contacting any factory, you need a clear product brief. Vague requests like "sneakers" get vague quotes. Be specific.
Key Specifications to Prepare
- Shoe type: Running shoe, canvas slip-on, leather boot? Each type uses different materials and lasts.
- Materials: Upper (mesh, PU, leather), sole (EVA, rubber, TPU), lining, insole.
- Target price: FOB (Free on Board) price per pair. For example, a basic canvas shoe starts at $3.50–$5.00 FOB; a running shoe with EVA sole is $6.00–$9.00; a leather boot can be $12.00–$18.00.
- Quantity: MOQ varies by factory. At MOHE, our MOQ is 500 pairs per style for standard materials, 1000 pairs for custom lasts or molds. Smaller MOQs (200–300) are possible for simple designs with existing molds.
Pro tip: If you are new, start with 2–3 styles at MOQ to test the market. Don't overcommit.
Step 2: Find & Vet Factories
China has thousands of shoe factories. The right one for you depends on your product and budget. Use these channels:
- Trade shows: Canton Fair (April/October) in Guangzhou, or specialized shoe fairs in Wenzhou and Putian.
- Online B2B platforms: Alibaba, Global Sources. Filter by "verified manufacturer" and check factory audit reports.
- Direct referrals: Ask other importers or industry contacts.
Red Flags to Avoid
- Factory claims "no MOQ" — usually means they are a trading company or will charge exorbitant per-pair prices.
- Unwilling to share photos of their production line or show a video call.
- Prices that are 30% lower than market average — likely low quality or bait-and-switch.
Our advice: Always request a sample before any bulk order. A reputable factory will charge for samples (usually $50–$150 including shipping) but deduct that from the first order.
Step 3: Request Samples & Negotiate Terms
Once you shortlist 3–5 factories, request samples based on your spec sheet. Provide detailed drawings or reference photos. For custom designs, we will create a tech pack and make a sample last (shoe mold) — this takes 7–15 days and costs $200–$500, refundable with order.
What to Evaluate in Samples
- Fit and comfort: Wear-test for 2–3 days.
- Material quality: Check stitching, glue adhesion, sole flexibility.
- Color accuracy: Compare to your Pantone or reference.
Negotiation Points
- Price: Ask for volume discounts. For 3000+ pairs, we typically reduce price by 5–10%.
- Payment terms: Standard is 30% deposit, 70% before shipment. For established buyers, we offer L/C or 30% deposit, 70% after inspection.
- Lead time: 30–45 days for standard styles; 45–60 days for custom molds. Rush orders (20–25 days) add 10–15% surcharge.
Step 4: Production & Quality Control
After confirming the sample and signing a contract, production begins. Here's the timeline:
- Week 1–2: Material sourcing and cutting.
- Week 3–4: Stitching and assembly.
- Week 5–6: Final assembly, inspection, packing.
Quality Control Options
- In-house QC: We have a 10-person QC team that checks every batch. You can request photos/videos during production.
- Third-party inspection: Hire SGS, Bureau Veritas, or QIMA. Cost is $300–$500 per day per inspector. We recommend a final random inspection (AQL 2.5) before shipment.
Common issues we see: Color variation in different dye lots, sole delamination, sizing inconsistency. We address these with pre-production samples and in-line checks.
Step 5: Shipping & Logistics
Most factories ship FOB from the nearest port. For us:
- Wenzhou factory: Wenzhou Port (direct to US, Europe, Southeast Asia).
- Putian factory: Xiamen Port.
- Guangzhou factory: Guangzhou Port or Shenzhen.
Shipping Costs (Approximate, as of 2025)
- Sea freight (20ft container): $1,800–$3,000 to US West Coast; $2,500–$4,000 to Europe. A 20ft container holds about 8,000–10,000 pairs of sneakers (depending on box size).
- Air freight: $4–$6 per kg. Only for urgent orders or high-value shoes.
Customs & Duties
- Tariffs: Vary by country and shoe type. For example, US tariff on leather shoes is 8–10%; on athletic shoes, 6–8%. Check HTS codes.
- Documentation: We provide commercial invoice, packing list, bill of lading, and certificate of origin. For some markets, we can arrange GSP Form A for reduced duties.
Pro tip: Use a freight forwarder who specializes in footwear — they handle consolidation and customs clearance.
Final Checklist for 2026 Importers
- [ ] Define product specs and target price.
- [ ] Find 3–5 factories via trade shows or B2B platforms.
- [ ] Request samples and evaluate quality.
- [ ] Negotiate MOQ, price, payment terms, and lead time.
- [ ] Sign contract with clear specifications and QC clauses.
- [ ] Arrange third-party inspection (optional but recommended).
- [ ] Book freight and prepare customs documents.
At MOHE, we are committed to transparent partnerships. No hidden fees, no surprises. Contact us for a free consultation or to request a sample.