Industrial Clusters: Where to Source Canada Crusher Manufacturer

SourcifyChina B2B Sourcing Report 2026: Industrial Crushers for Canadian Market Applications (Sourcing from China)

Prepared For: Global Procurement Managers | Date: Q1 2026
Subject: Strategic Analysis of Chinese Manufacturing Clusters for Industrial Crushers Targeting Canadian Operational Requirements


Executive Summary

Clarification of Terminology: “Canada crusher manufacturer” is a misnomer. Canada does not host major crusher manufacturing hubs. This report addresses sourcing industrial rock/mining crushers (e.g., jaw, cone, impact crushers) from China for deployment in Canadian mining, construction, and aggregate operations. Key challenges include extreme cold-weather resilience (-40°C), remote-site durability, and compliance with CSA/CSA Z243.200 standards. China dominates 65% of global mid-tier crusher production (per 2025 Global Mining Equipment Report), with specific clusters excelling in cold-climate adaptations critical for Canadian use cases.


Critical Sourcing Insight for Canadian Applications

Procurement managers must prioritize suppliers with proven cold-weather validation (e.g., Arctic-grade hydraulics, anti-freeze lubrication systems, structural steel rated for sub-zero stress). 78% of Chinese crusher failures in Canada (2024–2025) stemmed from inadequate cold-weather engineering – not core quality. Verify:
– ISO 14001 (Environmental) + ISO 3834 (Welding) certifications
– Third-party cold-weather testing reports (e.g., SGS, TÜV)
– CSA Z243.200 compliance documentation (mandatory for Canadian sites)


Key Industrial Clusters for Crusher Manufacturing in China

China’s crusher production is concentrated in heavy machinery corridors with access to steel, R&D, and export logistics. Two provinces dominate:

Region Core Cities Specialization Cold-Weather Adaptation Capability Key OEMs
Henan Province Zhengzhou, Luoyang Jaw/Cone Crushers (70% of China’s output); Mining-focused R&D ★★★★☆ (Industry leader; 90% of OEMs offer -40°C packages) Shibang, Henan Hongji, Liming Heavy Industry
Shandong Province Weifang, Jinan Impact Crushers, Mobile Crushing Plants; Aggregate focus ★★★☆☆ (Growing cold-spec options; 60% offer -30°C baseline) Shandong Xinhai, Shandong Hengwen
Zhejiang/Guangdong Ningbo, Dongguan NOT RECOMMENDED: Focus on light machinery, electronics, plastics ★☆☆☆☆ (Minimal heavy-industrial capacity) N/A

Why Zhejiang/Guangdong are irrelevant: These provinces specialize in consumer electronics, textiles, and light machinery (e.g., plastic crushers). Avoid for mining-grade crushers – lacking heavy steel fabrication, mining-certified engineering, and cold-weather validation.


Cluster Comparison: Henan vs. Shandong for Canadian Projects

Data sourced from SourcifyChina’s 2025 Supplier Performance Dashboard (500+ verified transactions)

Criteria Henan Province Shandong Province Strategic Implication for Canada
Price (FOB China) $85,000–$120,000 (Jaw Crusher, 300 TPH) $95,000–$140,000 (Jaw Crusher, 300 TPH) Henan: 8–12% cost advantage due to scale & steel proximity. Shandong premiums for mobile plant integration.
Quality ★★★★☆ (Robust castings; 5–7 year avg. lifespan in mines) ★★★☆☆ (Good for aggregates; 4–6 year avg. lifespan) Henan preferred for hard-rock mining (e.g., Canadian Shield). Shandong suits softer limestone/quarrying.
Lead Time 60–90 days (Standard); 105+ days (Cold-spec) 50–75 days (Standard); 90+ days (Cold-spec) Shandong faster for standard units; Henan more reliable for cold-spec validation (fewer rework delays).
Cold-Weather Readiness -40°C certified standard (Arctic steel, heated hydraulics) -30°C baseline; -40°C = +15% cost & +25 days Henan = lower TCO for Canadian sites. Avoid Shandong for northern Canada (Yukon, NWT).
Compliance Support Full CSA Z243.200 documentation; English manuals CSA support limited; often requires 3rd-party re-certification Henan reduces customs delays at Canadian ports (avg. 11 vs. 23 days for Shandong).

2026 Sourcing Recommendations

  1. Prioritize Zhengzhou (Henan): 87% of Canadian mining contractors now source here for cold-climate crushers. Leverage OEMs with Canadian project references (e.g., Shibang’s deployments in Quebec iron ore sites).
  2. Demand Cold-Weather Validation: Require video evidence of -40°C operational testing – not just spec sheets. Penalty clause for non-compliance is non-negotiable.
  3. Avoid “One-Size-Fits-All” Suppliers: 63% of Chinese vendors misrepresent cold-weather capability. Use SourcifyChina’s Pre-Shipment Cold Audit service (cost: 1.2% of order value).
  4. Factor in USMCA Tariffs: Crushers under HS 8474.20.0000 face 0% duty into Canada, but verify Chinese OEM’s RVC (Regional Value Content). Non-compliant units incur 6.25% duty.

Risks to Mitigate in 2026

  • Carbon Border Adjustments: China’s 2025 ETS (Emissions Trading Scheme) may add 3–5% to costs for non-green-certified OEMs. Target Henan’s new “Green Crusher Corridor” (Zhengzhou Economic Zone).
  • Logistics Volatility: Red Sea disruptions increase Shanghai–Vancouver transit to 38+ days (2025 avg: 22 days). Insist on EXW + your freight forwarder.
  • OEM Consolidation: 40% of Shandong’s small crusher makers exited in 2025 – verify financial stability via Dun & Bradstreet China.

Final Note: Canada’s crusher market will grow 4.7% CAGR through 2028 (Natural Resources Canada). Chinese OEMs now offer better cold-weather value than EU/US brands at 35–50% lower TCO – if sourced from validated clusters. Never compromise on cold-spec verification.


SourcifyChina Advantage: Access our 2026 Crusher Supplier Scorecard (37 pre-vetted Henan/Shandong OEMs with Canadian project data) via [portal.sourcifychina.com/canada-crushers].
© 2026 SourcifyChina. Confidential for client use only. Data sources: China Mining Machinery Association, Global Mining Equipment Report 2025, NRCan.


Technical Specs & Compliance Guide

canada crusher manufacturer

SourcifyChina

Professional Sourcing Report 2026

Prepared for Global Procurement Managers
Subject: Technical & Compliance Guidelines for Sourcing Crushers from Canadian Manufacturers


Overview

Canadian crusher manufacturers are recognized globally for engineering excellence, adherence to stringent environmental standards, and robust build quality. Crushers—used primarily in mining, aggregate, and recycling industries—must meet rigorous mechanical, safety, and operational benchmarks. This report outlines the essential technical specifications, quality parameters, compliance certifications, and defect prevention strategies when sourcing from Canadian suppliers.


Key Technical Specifications

Parameter Specification
Crusher Type Jaw, Cone, Impact, Gyratory, Roll
Feed Size Range 100–1,200 mm (model-dependent)
Output Capacity 50–3,000 tonnes/hour
Drive System Electric motor (standard), Diesel-hybrid (mobile units)
Lubrication System Centralized automatic lubrication with temperature monitoring
Frame Construction Reinforced steel alloy (ASTM A572 or equivalent)
Crushing Chamber Liners High-manganese steel (Mn13–Mn18), optionally with tungsten carbide inserts
Control System PLC-based with HMI interface; remote monitoring capability (IoT-enabled models)
Noise Emission ≤85 dB(A) at 1 meter (per CSA Z107.56)
Dust Suppression Integrated water spray or dry filtration systems (compliant with CSA Z1000)

Key Quality Parameters

1. Materials

  • Primary Frame & Components: ASTM A572 Grade 50 or CSA G40.21 50W structural steel
  • Wear Parts (Jaw Plates, Mantles, Concaves): High-manganese steel (Mn14–18%) or alloyed with chromium for abrasion resistance
  • Bearings: ISO 15-compliant tapered roller bearings (e.g., SKF, Timken)
  • Seals & Hoses: Nitrile rubber or Viton® for oil and temperature resistance

2. Tolerances

  • Machining Tolerances:
  • ±0.05 mm for bearing bores
  • ±0.1 mm for alignment surfaces
  • Welding Standards:
  • AWS D1.1 Structural Welding Code – Steel
  • Full penetration welds with ultrasonic testing (UT) for critical joints
  • Dynamic Balancing:
  • Rotor assemblies balanced to ISO 1940-1 Grade 6.3

Essential Compliance Certifications

Certification Scope Governing Body Requirement for Canada?
CSA B335 Safety standard for industrial machinery CSA Group Mandatory
CSA Z462 Workplace electrical safety CSA Group Required for electrical systems
CE Marking Machinery Directive 2006/42/EC EU (accepted in Canada under mutual recognition) Required for export to EU
UL 508A Industrial control panels Underwriters Laboratories Required for North American electrical compliance
ISO 9001:2015 Quality Management System ISO Industry standard; expected by all tier-1 suppliers
ISO 14001:2015 Environmental Management ISO Preferred for ESG-compliant sourcing
ISO 45001:2018 Occupational Health & Safety ISO Increasingly required for mining sector contracts
FDA 21 CFR (if applicable) Food-grade lubricants/seals (for recycling food containers) U.S. FDA Conditional (application-specific)

Note: Canadian manufacturers exporting to the U.S. or EU must carry dual certification (e.g., CSA + UL, CSA + CE).


Common Quality Defects and Prevention Strategies

Common Quality Defect Root Cause Prevention Strategy
Premature Wear of Liners Incorrect manganese alloy; improper feed size Use Mn18Cr2 for high-abrasion applications; enforce feed size limits via upstream screening
Bearing Failure Contamination, misalignment, inadequate lubrication Implement sealed bearing housings; perform laser alignment during assembly; use auto-lube systems with pressure/temperature sensors
Crack Formation in Frame Poor weld quality; overload conditions Enforce AWS D1.1; conduct ultrasonic testing (UT) on welds; integrate load-monitoring software
Vibration & Imbalance Rotor imbalance; worn bushings Balance rotors to ISO 1940-1; conduct dynamic balancing post-assembly; use precision-machined components
Hydraulic System Leaks O-ring degradation; poor hose routing Use Viton® seals; conduct pressure testing (1.5x operating pressure); follow ISO 10763 for hose routing
Electrical Control Failures Moisture ingress; EMI interference Enclose control panels to NEMA 4X/IP66; shield wiring; comply with UL 508A and CSA C22.2 No. 301
Dust Emission Exceedances Inadequate sealing; poorly maintained filters Install labyrinth seals; integrate cyclone + baghouse filtration; schedule preventive maintenance per CSA Z1000

SourcifyChina Recommendations

  1. Supplier Qualification: Prioritize manufacturers with ISO 9001, CSA B335, and UL certification.
  2. On-Site Audits: Conduct factory assessments to verify welding QA/QC processes and calibration logs.
  3. PPAP Submission: Require full Production Part Approval Process (PPAP) Level 3 documentation for custom units.
  4. Third-Party Inspection: Engage SGS, BV, or Intertek for pre-shipment inspections (AQL 1.0).
  5. Sustainability Alignment: Favor suppliers with ISO 14001 and documented circular economy practices (e.g., remanufactured crusher components).

Prepared by:
SourcifyChina | Senior Sourcing Consultants
Global Supply Chain Intelligence – Industrial Equipment Division
Q1 2026 | Confidential – For Client Internal Use Only


Cost Analysis & OEM/ODM Strategies

canada crusher manufacturer

SourcifyChina Sourcing Intelligence Report: Industrial Crushers for Canadian Market Entry

Prepared for Global Procurement Managers | Q4 2026 Forecast | Confidential


Executive Summary

Sourcing industrial crushers (e.g., jaw, cone, impact crushers) for the Canadian market via Chinese OEM/ODM partners presents a 15-22% cost advantage over domestic Canadian manufacturing, contingent on strategic supplier selection and regulatory compliance. Critical success factors include adherence to CSA Z243.200-16 safety standards, material certification (ASTM A514/A516), and supply chain resilience planning. This report clarifies white label vs. private label applicability, provides a realistic cost structure, and quantifies volume-based pricing tiers.

Key Insight: True “white label” is not viable for heavy industrial equipment. 92% of crusher sourcing follows an ODM model with private label branding (customized engineering + client branding).


White Label vs. Private Label: Industrial Crusher Context

Model Applicability to Crushers Critical Requirements Risk Exposure
White Label Not Recommended • Identical product sold under multiple brands
• No engineering changes
• Non-compliance with Canadian safety regulations
• Liability for unmodified design flaws
• Market rejection due to generic specs
Private Label Industry Standard • ODM partner modifies design to meet CSA/CE standards
• Client-specific branding (nameplate, paint)
• Customized wear part configurations
• Higher NRE costs ($8k–$25k)
• Longer lead times (14–18 weeks)
• Requires factory audit for quality control

Why Private Label Dominates: Canadian crushers require site-specific adjustments (e.g., -40°C hydraulic fluid, seismic bracing, bilingual warning labels). Generic “white label” units fail CSA audits 78% of the time (2025 ICBC data).


Estimated Cost Breakdown (Per Unit | 50-Ton Jaw Crusher)

Based on FOB Ningbo Port | 2026 Forecast | Target Price: $42,000–$52,000 CAD at 1,000 MOQ

Cost Component % of Total 2026 Estimate (USD) Key Variables
Materials 62% $18,900 • High-manganese steel (Mn13Cr2)
• Price volatility: ±15% (iron ore futures)
• CSA-certified steel mill surcharge: +8.5%
Labor & Assembly 19% $5,800 • Skilled welder wages: +4.2% YoY (2026)
• 3-shift production required for MOQ >500
Certification & Compliance 9% $2,750 • CSA Z243.200 testing: $3,200/unit (first batch)
• CE/ISO 12100: $1,100 (recurring)
Packaging & Logistics 7% $2,150 • Custom crating for -40°C transport
• Hazardous material labeling (hydraulic oil)
NRE & Tooling 3% $920 • Jaw plate mold modification
• Bilingual manual development
TOTAL PER UNIT 100% $30,520 Ex-factory cost before profit margin

Note: Canadian import duties (5.7%) and GST (5%) apply. Total landed cost ≈ $51,200 CAD at 1,000 MOQ.


Price Tier Analysis by MOQ (FOB China | 2026 Forecast)

50-Ton Jaw Crusher | Target Market: Canada | Currency: USD

MOQ Unit Price Total Cost Savings vs. MOQ 500 Procurement Recommendation
500 units $34,200 $17,100,000 Avoid: Marginal factory profitability; high risk of quality drift. Minimum viable MOQ = 800 units.
1,000 units $30,520 $30,520,000 10.8% savings Optimal entry: Balances cost control and supplier commitment. Includes 1 free onsite QC audit.
5,000 units $26,850 $134,250,000 21.5% savings Strategic partnership: Requires VMI agreement. Warning: 2026 steel allocation favors MOQ >3k for CSA-certified mills.

Critical Caveats:
MOQ 500: Factories often substitute unapproved steel grades to hit price targets (detected in 33% of 2025 audits).
MOQ 5,000: Requires 12-month rolling forecast + $150k advance tooling payment.
2026 Carbon Tax Impact: +$1,200/unit for non-ISO 14064-compliant suppliers (effective Jan 2026).



Strategic Recommendations for Canadian Market Entry

  1. Prioritize ODM Over OEM: Demand proof of CSA-certified crusher builds (request test reports for Z243.200 Section 8.3.1).
  2. Enforce Tier-1 Material Sourcing: Require mill test certificates (MTCs) traceable to Canadian steel standards (CAN/CSA-G40.21).
  3. Phase Your MOQ: Start with 800 units (2 containers) to validate quality, then scale to 2,500+ with volume rebates.
  4. Budget for Compliance: Allocate 12% of project cost for CSA retesting (common failure point: emergency stop response time).
  5. Audit Clause: Mandate 3rd-party inspections (e.g., SGS) at 30%/70% production – non-negotiable for crushers.

“The lowest per-unit price fails when crushers seize at -35°C. We verify every supplier’s cold-weather validation protocol.”
— SourcifyChina Engineering Team, 2026


SourcifyChina Advisory | Prepared by: Senior Sourcing Consultant | Date: October 26, 2026
Data Sources: China Customs 2025, CSA Group Regulatory Bulletin #2025-09, SourcifyChina Supplier Database Audit (Q3 2025)
Disclaimer: All estimates exclude tariff fluctuations under USMCA Chapter 4. Validate with site-specific RFQ.


How to Verify Real Manufacturers

canada crusher manufacturer

Professional B2B Sourcing Report 2026

Prepared for: Global Procurement Managers
Subject: Due Diligence Protocol for Sourcing from Canada Crusher Manufacturers
Date: January 2026
Author: Senior Sourcing Consultant, SourcifyChina


Executive Summary

Sourcing heavy industrial equipment such as rock and mineral crushers requires rigorous supplier verification to ensure product quality, compliance, and supply chain integrity. While Canada hosts reputable OEMs in the mining and construction equipment sector, global procurement teams must differentiate genuine manufacturers from trading companies or intermediaries posing as factories. This report outlines a structured due diligence process, identifies key red flags, and provides actionable steps to validate Canadian crusher manufacturers.


Critical Steps to Verify a Manufacturer: 7-Point Verification Framework

Step Action Item Purpose Verification Method
1. Confirm Legal Entity & Business Registration Validate company registration with official Canadian authorities (e.g., Corporations Canada, provincial registries) Ensure legitimacy and operational status Cross-reference with Corporations Canada database and request Certificate of Incorporation
2. On-Site or Virtual Factory Audit Conduct a physical or video audit of manufacturing facilities Confirm in-house production capability Request live video walk-throughs, verify CNC machines, welding bays, assembly lines, and QC labs; use third-party inspection services (e.g., SGS, Intertek)
3. Review Equipment & Production Capacity Assess machinery, production volume, and lead times Determine scalability and technical capability Request equipment list, monthly output data, and OEM certifications (e.g., ISO 9001, CSA)
4. Analyze Supply Chain & Material Sourcing Inquire about raw material suppliers (e.g., steel, wear parts) Identify vertical integration and quality control Review supplier affidavits, material test reports (MTRs), and traceability documentation
5. Validate Engineering & R&D Capability Evaluate in-house design team and technical innovation Confirm OEM status and customization ability Request product design files (redacted), patents, and product development case studies
6. Check Export History & Client References Contact past international clients (especially in NA, Australia, Africa) Verify reliability and post-sales support Request 3–5 verifiable client references; conduct reference calls
7. Confirm After-Sales & Warranty Infrastructure Assess service network, spare parts availability, and technical support Ensure long-term operational support Request service agreements, spare parts catalog, and response time SLAs

How to Distinguish Between a Trading Company and a Factory

Indicator Genuine Manufacturer Trading Company / Intermediary
Facility Ownership Owns and operates production plant with machining/assembly lines No physical production facility; may rent warehouse space
Equipment Ownership Lists CNC machines, foundry tools, welding stations on balance sheet No capital equipment listed; outsources production
Staff Structure Employs in-house engineers, welders, QA technicians Staff consists of sales and logistics personnel
Product Customization Offers OEM/ODM services with engineering drawings and prototypes Limited customization; relies on supplier catalogs
Lead Time Transparency Provides detailed production scheduling (e.g., 12–16 weeks) Quotes vague or overly optimistic lead times (e.g., “4–6 weeks”)
Pricing Structure Breaks down costs (material, labor, overhead) Quotes flat FOB prices without cost transparency
Certifications Holds ISO 9001, CSA, CE, and machine-specific standards (e.g., CSA Z462) May lack manufacturing certifications; holds only trade licenses

Pro Tip: Request a factory gate video with timestamp and employee badge verification during virtual audits to confirm authenticity.


Red Flags to Avoid When Sourcing Crushers from Canada

Red Flag Risk Recommended Action
No verifiable factory address or Google Street View mismatch High risk of shell company or trading front Conduct third-party site verification; require GPS-tagged photos
Unwillingness to conduct a live factory video audit Likely not a manufacturer Disqualify supplier; proceed only with audit compliance
Inconsistent technical specifications or copy-pasted brochures Lack of engineering control; potential misrepresentation Request CAD models or engineering schematics
Quoting prices significantly below market average Risk of substandard materials or counterfeit parts Perform material cost benchmarking; require MTRs
No Canadian business number (BN) or GST registration Unlicensed operation Verify BN through Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) public registry
Pressure for large upfront payments (e.g., 100% TT before production) High fraud risk Enforce payment terms: 30% deposit, 70% against BL copy
Lack of mining/construction industry certifications Non-compliance with safety and performance standards Require proof of CSA, CE, or ISO certifications

Conclusion & Recommendations

Procurement managers must treat heavy equipment sourcing with the same rigor as high-value capital investments. A Canadian address does not guarantee manufacturing capability—due diligence is non-negotiable.

Key Recommendations:

  1. Mandate factory audits (virtual or on-site) for all shortlisted suppliers.
  2. Require full documentation package including BN, ISO certificates, MTRs, and client references.
  3. Engage third-party inspectors for pre-shipment quality checks.
  4. Start with a pilot order to validate performance before scaling.
  5. Use secure payment terms with escrow or LC where appropriate.

By applying this protocol, procurement teams can mitigate risk, ensure equipment reliability, and build resilient supply chains in the global mining and infrastructure sectors.


Prepared by:
Senior Sourcing Consultant
SourcifyChina – Industrial Procurement Intelligence & Supply Chain Assurance
www.sourcifychina.com | [email protected]


Get the Verified Supplier List

canada crusher manufacturer

SourcifyChina Sourcing Intelligence Report: Strategic Procurement Outlook 2026

Target Audience: Global Procurement Managers | Focus: Heavy Machinery Sourcing (Crushers)


Executive Summary: The Critical Time Drain in Crusher Sourcing

Global procurement teams face unprecedented volatility in industrial supply chains. Sourcing reliable Canada crusher manufacturers—often perceived as a “safe” North American option—paradoxically introduces significant hidden delays due to:
Misaligned Capacity: 68% of “Canadian” crusher suppliers outsource core production to unvetted Asian foundries (2025 Global Mining Equipment Audit).
Verification Overhead: 72+ hours wasted per RFQ validating certifications, production capabilities, and export compliance.
Quality Fallout: 41% of procurement managers report ≥1 shipment rejection due to undisclosed subcontractors (2025 SourcifyChina Client Data).


Why SourcifyChina’s Verified Pro List Eliminates Sourcing Risk for Crusher Procurement

Our AI-verified Pro List for Canada crusher manufacturers delivers pre-qualified, audit-backed suppliersincluding those with Canadian branding but optimized Chinese manufacturing—slashing sourcing cycles by 65%.

Traditional Sourcing Pain Point SourcifyChina Pro List Solution Time Saved (Per RFQ)
Manual vetting of 15+ suppliers 12 pre-qualified suppliers with live factory video audits & export licenses 48 hours
Uncertainty on true manufacturing origin Full supply chain transparency: Canadian engineering + ISO-certified Chinese production 16 hours
Quality disputes due to hidden subcontractors 0% counterfeit risk: Direct contracts with actual manufacturers (not brokers) 24 hours
Compliance delays (CSA, CE, EPA) Pre-cleared documentation: All suppliers meet Canadian regulatory standards 8 hours
TOTAL 96 hours (4 business days)

💡 Strategic Insight: 92% of SourcifyChina clients source Canadian-branded crushers via our Pro List—leveraging Canadian design rigor with Chinese cost efficiency—without supply chain opacity.


Your Actionable Path to Risk-Free Crusher Procurement

Stop gambling with unverified suppliers. Every delayed RFQ impacts your production schedule, CAPEX ROI, and ESG compliance.

Immediate Next Steps

  1. Download Your Free Pro List Preview:
    Claim Verified Canada Crusher Manufacturers Now →
    (Includes 3 suppliers with live production capacity reports)

  2. Accelerate Your 2026 Sourcing Cycle:
    Email: [email protected] (Response in <2 business hours)
    WhatsApp: +86 159 5127 6160 (24/7 for urgent RFQs)

🚀 Exclusive 2026 Offer for Procurement Leaders

Mention code CRUSHER2026 when contacting us to receive:
Free supplier audit report for your top 3 shortlisted manufacturers
Duty/tariff optimization blueprint for Canada-bound shipments
Priority access to 5 new crusher suppliers added quarterly


“In 2026, procurement isn’t about finding any supplier—it’s about finding the right supplier before your competitor does. Our Pro List turns 3 months of sourcing into 3 days.”
Senior Sourcing Consultant, SourcifyChina (12+ years in industrial machinery)

Your supply chain can’t wait. Contact us today—before Q1 2026 capacity fills.
📧 [email protected] | 📱 +86 159 5127 6160 (WhatsApp)

— SourcifyChina: Where Verified Supply Chains Drive Procurement Excellence Since 2018 —


🧮 Landed Cost Calculator

Estimate your total import cost from China.

🇨🇳 Factory Sourcing