Checklist
What serious buyers should verify first.
The lowest FOB price is rarely the safest starting point. Tea quality shifts by harvest, grade, storage, and processing. A reliable supplier helps you reduce uncertainty before the first bulk order.
1. Product focus
A focused supplier should be able to explain why each tea exists in the catalog. For early buying, six well-documented teas are stronger than thirty vague SKUs.
Start with commercial anchors such as Jasmine Green, Chinese Black Tea, and Chinese Matcha, then add Floral Wellness Blend when the buyer needs gifting or lifestyle retail appeal.
2. Traceability
Ask for origin, harvest notes, lot code, storage condition, and grade definition. If the supplier cannot explain the difference between grades, the buyer cannot defend the retail price.
3. Lab reports
For regulated food markets, lab reports and residue checks should be planned before bulk shipment. Ask which lab is used, what the test covers, and whether the report is lot-specific.
4. Export documents
Confirm commercial invoice, packing list, Certificate of Origin, phytosanitary certificate when required, and any market-specific document expectations before deposit.
5. Sample discipline
A useful sample kit should include tasting notes, specifications, recommended brewing, packaging options, and indicative wholesale pricing. A loose sample without context slows the decision.
6. Repeatability
Ask whether the supplier can repeat the same grade, packaging, and document flow across multiple orders. One successful sample is not enough if repeat shipment control is weak.
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