China is Australia’s largest import source by value and has been for over a decade. The supply chain between Chinese manufacturers and Australian businesses is deep, well-worn, and increasingly sophisticated on both sides. For Australian importers, the route from a Chinese factory to an Australian warehouse has a consistent structure — ChAFTA duty advantages, biosecurity compliance at the Australian border, and a freight network that handles everything from a single carton to a 40-foot container.

The businesses that import from China efficiently have the same framework in place on every shipment: correct HS classification, a Certificate of Origin to claim ChAFTA 0% duty, ISPM 15 compliant packaging, pre-arrival compliance checks for regulated product categories, and a customs broker who lodges an accurate declaration. Getting any one of these wrong costs money — in duty paid unnecessarily, in DAFF treatment costs, in demurrage during a customs hold, or in ACCC recalls. Getting all of them right is the margin advantage that compounds over hundreds of shipments.
This guide covers the complete China-to-Australia import framework — from ChAFTA and HS codes through biosecurity and product safety compliance to freight mode, transit times, and the compliance checklist.
ChAFTA: The Duty Advantage That Requires Active Management
The China-Australia Free Trade Agreement (ChAFTA), in force since December 2015, has eliminated import duties on the vast majority of goods imported from China to Australia. As of 2026, over 96% of Australian imports from China enter at 0% duty under ChAFTA.
But ChAFTA doesn’t apply automatically. It requires:
- A valid Certificate of Origin (CoO) issued by an authorised Chinese body — CCPIT (China Council for the Promotion of International Trade) or CIQ (China Inspection and Quarantine)
- The CoO must be requested before or at the time of shipment — it cannot be backdated after the vessel loads
- The goods must meet ChAFTA Rules of Origin — generally, goods must be wholly obtained or substantially transformed in China
- The CoO must be presented to ABF with the import declaration at the time of clearance
Without a CoO, the MFN (Most Favoured Nation) duty rate applies. For clothing: 10%. For footwear: 10%. For furniture: 5%. On a AUD 200,000 annual clothing import program, the difference between ChAFTA 0% and MFN 10% is AUD 20,000 per year in duty — plus GST on that duty. Managing the Certificate of Origin process on every shipment is not administrative overhead; it is a direct cost lever.
HS Code Classification: The Foundation of Every Import
Every imported product is classified under an HS (Harmonised System) code that determines its duty rate, any applicable FTA treatment, whether special import conditions apply, and what the customs declaration must state. HS code errors are among the most common causes of Australian customs holds.
Getting HS classification right means:
- Correctly identifying the product’s principal function and composition (not just its trade name)
- Using the current Australian Customs Tariff Schedule — not an outdated version or a generic international HS code
- Applying any applicable Chapter Notes or Explanatory Notes for borderline classifications
- Seeking a Tariff Classification Advice from ABF for any product where there is genuine ambiguity
Common misclassification traps for China imports: electronic products classified too broadly (many electronics subheadings attract different rates); composite goods where the principal component isn’t obvious; goods that straddle two HS chapters (e.g., a product that could be classified as a textile or as a manufactured article).
Your customs broker should confirm the HS code before the first import of any new product. Once established, use the same code consistently. Changing classification between shipments flags inconsistency and may trigger an ABF review.
Customs Value and GST: The Numbers That Drive Your Landed Cost
Australia uses the CIF (Cost, Insurance, Freight) customs value method. The customs value = invoice price of goods + international freight + insurance. Import duty and GST are both calculated on this base — which means underestimating your CIF customs value (by using FOB value only, or by omitting freight) also underestimates your duty and GST liability.
GST of 10% applies to the customs value plus any import duty payable. For 0% duty ChAFTA goods, GST is 10% of the CIF customs value alone. GST paid at import is recoverable as an input tax credit for GST-registered Australian businesses on their BAS. The net GST cost for a GST-registered importer is zero — but the cash flow timing of payment at import and recovery on the next BAS matters.
For a worked landed cost calculation showing all components — THC, wharfage, brokerage, biosecurity levy, and last-mile delivery stacked against the customs value — see our import duty and GST guide for Australian importers.
DAFF Biosecurity: The Non-Negotiable Compliance Layer
Every commercial import from China — regardless of product type — must comply with Australia’s biosecurity requirements under the Biosecurity Act 2015. DAFF (Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry) enforces these at the border.
ISPM 15 wooden packaging: All wooden pallets, crates, dunnage, and wooden packaging material must be heat-treated or fumigated and marked with the ISPM 15 stamp. This is the most common cause of DAFF holds for general cargo from China. Require ISPM 15 marked pallets in every purchase order and request packing photos confirming the stamp before the vessel loads.
Product-specific biosecurity conditions: Certain product categories have specific import conditions listed in DAFF’s BICON database (bicon.agriculture.gov.au). Plant-derived products (herbal ingredients, natural fibres, wooden goods), animal-derived materials (leather, wool, gelatin, animal fats), and food products all have conditions — documentary requirements, treatment requirements, or import permits. Check BICON before ordering any product in these categories. Australia’s biosecurity import conditions are specific to product category and origin — not a generic requirement.
Anti-dumping register: Check the ABF anti-dumping register before importing any product category where Australian manufacturing interests are significant (steel, aluminium, certain plastics, some textiles). Anti-dumping and countervailing duties are levied in addition to standard import duty and can be substantial. Most consumer goods and electronics are not affected, but industrial materials require a register check.
ACCC Product Safety: What Must Comply Before Goods Enter the Market
The ACCC administers mandatory product safety standards under the Australian Consumer Law. These are not import-clearance requirements in the same way as customs duty or biosecurity conditions — they don’t stop goods at the border. But goods placed on the Australian market that don’t comply with mandatory standards are subject to recalls, banning orders, and importer liability.
Product categories with mandatory Australian safety standards include:
- Children’s toys (AS/NZS ISO 8124 series)
- Electrical and electronic goods (AS/NZS 3820 and product-specific standards)
- Children’s furniture (cots, highchairs, prams)
- Personal protective equipment
- Helmets (bicycle, motorcycle)
- Cosmetics (ingredient restrictions)
- Sunscreen (TGA regulation)
For Chinese suppliers, verify compliance certificates from accredited testing laboratories. Chinese export certificates (CCC mark, etc.) are not the same as Australian standard compliance — require the specific AS/NZS test report from the supplier for each product model.
TGA Requirements for Therapeutic Goods
Medicines, supplements, medical devices, and therapeutic products are regulated by the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) under the Therapeutic Goods Act 1989. Chinese-manufactured therapeutic goods must be listed or registered on the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods (ARTG) or covered by a valid import permit before import. Goods arriving without ARTG registration or an import permit will be detained by ABF and may be seized.
For detailed guidance on importing supplements and therapeutic goods from China, specific compliance requirements are covered in the product-specific import guides in the Swift Cargo article library. Product-specific compliance guides for electronics from China cover the IEC certification, EESS registration, and ACMA compliance pathway.
Freight: FCL vs LCL from China to Australia
The two primary sea freight modes for China-to-Australia imports:
| Mode | Best For | Volume Threshold | Transit (Door-to-Door) |
|---|---|---|---|
| LCL (groupage) | Smaller orders, multiple suppliers, first orders | Up to ~12 CBM | 25–38 days |
| FCL 20ft | Single-supplier orders, 12–25 CBM | 12–25 CBM usable | 22–32 days |
| FCL 40ft HC | Large single-supplier orders, fragile goods | 25–65 CBM usable | 22–32 days |
LCL (Less than Container Load) consolidates your cargo with other exporters’ shipments. You pay per CBM. Ideal for 1–12 CBM orders, for testing a new supplier with a small first order, or for consolidating from multiple suppliers. Adds handling steps at origin CFS and destination CFS, which marginally increases inspection risk and handling time.
FCL (Full Container Load) gives you the entire container. You pay a flat rate regardless of how full it is — so the per-unit freight cost drops as you fill the container. Better handling security (no co-loading), faster port clearance, and preferred for fragile goods (electronics, glassware, solar panels) where additional handling introduces breakage risk.
The crossover: once your order volume consistently exceeds 12 CBM, FCL economics are almost always better. The efficiency gain from FCL compounds across dozens of shipments per year.
Key Chinese Ports and Transit Times to Australia
| Chinese Origin Port | Australian Destination | Vessel Transit (FCL) | Door-to-Door |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shanghai / Ningbo | Sydney (Port Botany) | 16–22 days | 22–32 days |
| Shanghai / Ningbo | Melbourne | 17–23 days | 23–33 days |
| Shenzhen (Yantian) | Sydney | 14–18 days | 20–28 days |
| Guangzhou (Nansha) | Melbourne | 15–19 days | 21–29 days |
| Tianjin / Qingdao | Sydney / Melbourne | 18–25 days | 24–35 days |
Add 2–5 business days for ABF customs clearance after vessel arrival. DAFF biosecurity inspection may add further time if goods are selected or if packaging is non-compliant. A pre-arrival compliance check — confirming ISPM 15 compliance, verifying the CoO is issued, and pre-lodging the import declaration with your broker — shortens the clearance window materially.
The China Import Compliance Checklist
| Step | Action | When |
|---|---|---|
| HS code confirmed | Verify with customs broker; seek ABF ruling if ambiguous | Before first import of any new product |
| ChAFTA CoO instructed | Brief supplier to prepare CoO from CCPIT or CIQ before loading | Each shipment; before vessel loads |
| ISPM 15 packaging confirmed | Specify in PO; require packing photos showing ISPM 15 stamp | Each shipment |
| BICON conditions checked | Check DAFF BICON for product-specific import conditions | Before ordering any new product category |
| ACCC standards confirmed | Obtain AS/NZS test report from accredited lab for regulated products | Before placing first order of regulated goods |
| TGA/ARTG checked | Verify ARTG listing or import permit for therapeutic goods | Before any therapeutic goods shipment |
| Anti-dumping register checked | Search ABF register for applicable duties on industrial materials | Before ordering industrial/material goods categories |
| Import declaration pre-lodged | Provide full document set to customs broker before vessel arrives | 5–7 days before expected vessel arrival |
| Cargo insurance confirmed | Marine all-risk policy in place for each shipment | Each shipment |
Frequently Asked Questions
What duty rate applies to goods from China to Australia?
ChAFTA 0% with a valid CCPIT or CIQ Certificate of Origin. Without a CoO, MFN rates apply: electronics 0–5%, clothing 10%, furniture 5%, footwear 10%. GST 10% applies regardless of duty rate.
How does ChAFTA work?
Present a valid CoO (from CCPIT or CIQ, issued before loading) with your import declaration. ABF applies ChAFTA 0% duty. No CoO = MFN rate by default. The CoO cannot be backdated — instruct your supplier before the vessel loads, every shipment.
What are Australia’s biosecurity requirements for China imports?
ISPM 15 compliant wooden packaging on all shipments. Product-specific conditions from DAFF BICON for plant, animal, and organic material categories. Non-compliance means a DAFF hold, treatment costs (AUD 200–800 per container), and 5–12 days delay minimum.
Do I need ACCC approval to import goods from China?
Not pre-import approval as such — but regulated product categories must comply with mandatory Australian safety standards before entering the market. Obtain AS/NZS test reports from accredited laboratories for children’s goods, electrical products, PPE, and other regulated categories.
How long does sea freight from China to Australia take?
FCL from Shanghai/Ningbo: 22–32 days door-to-door. From Shenzhen: 20–28 days. LCL: 25–38 days. Add 2–5 business days ABF customs clearance after arrival. Confirm current routing conditions with your freight forwarder.
Managing Your China Import Program
Swift Cargo handles FCL and LCL freight from all major Chinese ports to Australian destinations, with customs brokerage, ChAFTA CoO management, ISPM 15 supplier briefing, and DAFF compliance coordination included. Whether you’re setting up a new China import relationship or optimising an existing program, a freight assessment is the starting point.
Contact Swift Cargo for a China-to-Australia import assessment →
