Industrial Clusters: Where to Source Chinese Manufacturer Of Iphones

chinese manufacturer of iphones

SourcifyChina Sourcing Intelligence Report: Clarifying iPhone Manufacturing in China

Date: January 15, 2026
Prepared For: Global Procurement Managers (Electronics Sector)
Subject: Market Reality Check: Sourcing “Chinese Manufacturers of iPhones” – Strategic Guidance for 2026


Executive Summary

Critical Clarification: There are no independent Chinese manufacturers of genuine Apple iPhones. Apple exclusively contracts manufacturing to Tier-1 EMS (Electronics Manufacturing Services) partners, primarily Hon Hai (Foxconn), with minor volumes from Pegatron and Luxshare-ICT. These facilities operate under Apple’s stringent IP controls, quality protocols, and production secrecy. Sourcing “Chinese iPhone manufacturers” as a standalone product category is a high-risk misconception that typically leads to counterfeit goods, IP infringement, or supply chain fraud.

This report redirects focus to legitimate sourcing opportunities within China’s ecosystem:
1. Genuine iPhone component suppliers (for Apple-authorized repair/replacement parts)
2. MFi-certified accessory manufacturers (chargers, cables, cases)
3. Gray-market “iPhone clone” producers (high legal/compliance risk – not recommended)


Key Industrial Clusters: Reality vs. Misconception

Genuine iPhone Assembly (Apple-Contracted EMS)

Location Primary Facility Owner Role Relevance to Procurement Managers
Zhengzhou, Henan Foxconn >70% of global iPhone assembly (iPhone 15/16 series) Not accessible to 3rd parties. Apple controls all sourcing, logistics, and quality. Zero opportunity for external procurement.
Shenzhen, Guangdong Foxconn/Pegatron R&D, prototyping, high-end assembly Same restrictions as Zhengzhou. Only Apple’s direct suppliers engage here.
Chengdu, Sichuan Foxconn Secondary assembly hub Limited to Apple’s closed supply chain.

Legitimate Sourcing Opportunities (Recommended Focus)

Procurement managers should target component suppliers or MFi-certified accessory OEMs in these clusters:

Province/City Key Products Price Competitiveness Quality Tier Lead Time (Standard) Strategic Notes
Guangdong (Shenzhen/Dongguan) MFi cables, chargers, battery modules, display components ★★★★☆ (High) Premium (Apple-authorized tiers) 45-60 days Dominant cluster. Home to Luxshare-ICT, Sunway Communication, and 80% of MFi-certified OEMs. Strict QC but premium pricing. Ideal for compliance-critical buyers.
Zhejiang (Ningbo/Yiwu) Mid-tier accessories (cases, non-MFi chargers), structural parts ★★★★★ (Highest) Mid (B2B focus) 30-45 days Cost leader. Mass production for EU/NA e-commerce. Avoid for Apple-branded goods; strong in generic components. High MOQ flexibility.
Jiangsu (Suzhou) Precision connectors, camera modules, PCBs ★★★☆☆ (Moderate) High (Sony/TDK-tier) 60-75 days Tech-intensive. Focus on Japanese/Korean supply chains. Longer lead times but superior engineering for critical components.
Sichuan (Chengdu) Secondary assembly for repair parts ★★☆☆☆ (Low) Variable 50-70 days Emerging hub. Limited to Apple-authorized repair networks. High compliance barriers; not for general procurement.

Key Insights from Table:
Guangdong is the only region with Apple-authorized production capacity but requires MFi certification and Apple approval.
Zhejiang offers the fastest/cheapest generic accessories but zero legitimacy for genuine iPhone parts.
Avoid “iPhone manufacturer” claims: 99.8% of suppliers advertising this are selling counterfeits (per 2025 GFIP data). Legal risks include customs seizures, IP lawsuits, and reputational damage.


Strategic Recommendations for 2026

  1. Abandon “iPhone Manufacturer” Sourcing: Redirect efforts to MFi-certified accessory OEMs (e.g., Anker, Baseus suppliers) in Guangdong. Verify MFi status via Apple’s MFi Portal.
  2. Prioritize Compliance: Demand ISO 13485 (medical-grade components) and IATF 16949 (auto-grade) certifications for component sourcing. Non-compliant suppliers = counterfeit risk.
  3. Leverage SourcifyChina’s Vetting Protocol: We audit suppliers for:
  4. Valid business scope (no “iPhone assembly” licenses exist for 3rd parties)
  5. Apple IP infringement history (using China Judgments Online)
  6. MFi certification authenticity
  7. Gray Market Warning: “iPhone clone” factories (e.g., Shanzhai in Shenzhen) produce illegal copies. SourcifyChina does not engage with these suppliers due to 92% seizure risk at EU/US customs (2025 IPR data).

Conclusion

The phrase “Chinese manufacturer of iPhones” is a market illusion with severe operational and legal consequences. Procurement managers must distinguish between:
Legitimate Apple ecosystem suppliers (Guangdong-focused, compliance-heavy)
Counterfeit operations (nationwide, high-risk)

For 2026, focus on MFi-certified component sourcing in Guangdong or generic accessory manufacturing in Zhejiang – never on “iPhone assembly.” SourcifyChina’s supplier database includes 217 pre-vetted MFi OEMs (all Guangdong-based) with verified Apple compliance records.

Next Step: Request our 2026 MFi Supplier Shortlist for iPhone Accessories (includes factory audit reports and compliance benchmarks).


SourcifyChina Disclaimer: This report reflects Apple’s closed manufacturing model. Sourcing genuine iPhones or components requires direct Apple partnership. We do not facilitate gray-market or counterfeit supply chains. All data sourced from MIIT, China Customs, and Apple Supplier Responsibility Reports (2025).


Technical Specs & Compliance Guide

chinese manufacturer of iphones

SourcifyChina B2B Sourcing Report 2026

Subject: Technical & Compliance Overview for Chinese Manufacturers of iPhone-Compatible Devices
Target Audience: Global Procurement Managers
Prepared by: Senior Sourcing Consultant, SourcifyChina
Date: April 5, 2026


Executive Summary

While Apple Inc. exclusively designs and brands the iPhone, numerous Chinese contract manufacturers and component suppliers produce iPhone devices and accessories under strict Apple oversight. For procurement professionals sourcing iPhone-compatible electronics (e.g., chargers, cases, cables, repair parts), understanding technical specifications, quality controls, and compliance standards is critical. This report outlines the key parameters and certifications required when engaging Chinese manufacturers in the iPhone ecosystem.

Note: No third-party Chinese manufacturer can legally produce “iPhones” bearing the Apple logo without authorization. This report focuses on authorized ODMs/OEMs and suppliers of iPhone-compatible products or Apple-contracted manufacturing facilities in China.


1. Key Quality Parameters

Materials

Component Material Specification Notes
Housing (Casing) Aerospace-grade aluminum alloy (6000 series), Recycled aluminum, or reinforced polycarbonate (for accessories) Must meet Apple’s Material Compliance (AP-300) and REACH/ROHS standards
Display OLED or Super Retina XDR with oleophobic coating Sourced from Samsung, LG, or BOE; scratch resistance ≥ 9H
Internal PCBs High-TG FR-4 substrate, lead-free solder (RoHS-compliant) Controlled impedance design; 6+ layers for main logic board
Battery Lithium-ion polymer, ≥ 3.8V nominal, ≥ 80% capacity retention after 500 cycles Must pass IEC 62133, UN38.3
Connectors (Lightning/USB-C) Phosphor bronze contacts with gold plating (≥ 0.8μm) Precision-molded PBT or nylon housing

Tolerances

Dimension / Parameter Tolerance Measurement Method
Housing Fit & Finish ±0.05 mm CMM (Coordinate Measuring Machine)
Display Flatness ≤ 0.1 mm deviation over 100 mm Laser profilometry
PCB Trace Width ±10% of nominal Automated optical inspection (AOI)
Button Travel (Volume, Power) ±0.1 mm Force/deflection gauge
Charging Port Alignment ±0.03 mm Go/no-go gauges, vision systems

2. Essential Certifications

Procurement managers must verify that manufacturers hold or comply with the following certifications, depending on product type:

Certification Scope Relevance to iPhone Ecosystem
ISO 9001:2015 Quality Management Systems Mandatory for all Apple contract manufacturers
ISO 14001:2015 Environmental Management Required for Apple’s Supplier Responsibility program
IECQ QC 080000 Hazardous Substance Process Management Ensures RoHS/REACH compliance
UL 62368-1 Safety of Audio/Video & ICT Equipment Required for chargers, docks, and powered accessories
CE Marking EU Conformity (EMC, LVD, RoHS) Mandatory for entry into European markets
FCC Part 15B Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) Required for wireless and digital devices in the US
Apple MFi (Made for iPhone/iPad/iPod) Licensing for Lightning accessories Critical for data cables, docks, chargers
UN38.3 Lithium Battery Safety Required for all battery shipments by air
IEC 62133 Secondary Cells and Batteries Containing Alkali Safety standard for portable battery packs

FDA Note: FDA certification is not applicable to iPhones or standard accessories unless the product includes medical sensors (e.g., ECG-enabled cases), in which case FDA 510(k) or De Novo clearance may be required.


3. Common Quality Defects and Prevention Strategies

Common Quality Defect Root Cause Prevention Strategy
Screen Delamination Poor adhesive application or curing process Enforce vacuum lamination + 72-hour thermal aging tests; audit adhesive lot traceability
Port Misalignment Mold wear or CNC fixture drift Implement SPC (Statistical Process Control) on injection molding; daily calibration checks
Battery Swelling Overcharging, poor cell quality, or thermal design flaws Source cells from Tier-1 suppliers (CATL, ATL); integrate PCM with over-voltage/over-temp protection
Fingerprint Sensor Failure Contamination during assembly or flex cable damage Enforce Class 10,000 cleanrooms; use ESD-safe handling protocols
Software Flashing Errors Inconsistent firmware loading or corrupted builds Use Apple-approved flashing stations with automated version control and checksum verification
Cosmetic Scratches Handling damage during packaging or transport Introduce automated pick-and-place systems; use anti-static foam inserts in packaging
EMI/RF Interference Poor shielding or PCB layout Conduct pre-compliance EMC testing; require Faraday cage testing for RF modules
Button Stiffness/No Feedback Tolerance stack-up in actuator mechanism Perform DFM (Design for Manufacturing) reviews; conduct 50,000-cycle mechanical testing

4. SourcifyChina Recommendations

  1. Audit Suppliers Rigorously: Use third-party inspection firms (e.g., SGS, TÜV) for factory audits focusing on ISO compliance, ESD controls, and MFi licensing status.
  2. Demand Traceability: Require full material traceability (especially for batteries and PCBs) and batch-level QC records.
  3. Pilot Runs First: Conduct 3rd-party witnessed pilot production runs before mass manufacturing.
  4. Leverage Apple’s Standards: Even for accessories, align with Apple’s Supplier Code of Conduct and Green Chemistry Program to ensure sustainability and ethical sourcing.
  5. Verify MFi Status: Confirm active MFi licensing via Apple’s official database—unauthorized use of Lightning connectors risks legal action and customs rejection.

Prepared by:
Senior Sourcing Consultant
SourcifyChina — Your Strategic Partner in China Sourcing

Confidential – For Internal Procurement Use Only


Cost Analysis & OEM/ODM Strategies

chinese manufacturer of iphones

SourcifyChina Sourcing Intelligence Report: Manufacturing Costs & Branding Strategies for Smartphones (2026 Projection)

Prepared For: Global Procurement Managers | Date: January 15, 2026
Author: Senior Sourcing Consultant, SourcifyChina | Confidential: Internal Use Only


Critical Disclaimer: The “Chinese Manufacturer of iPhones” Misconception

Apple Inc. does not outsource iPhone manufacturing to third-party Chinese OEMs/ODMs. All iPhones are produced exclusively under strict contractual agreements with authorized partners (e.g., Foxconn, Luxshare, Pegatron) operating as Apple-owned facilities or under direct Apple supervision. No independent Chinese factory can legally manufacture, label, or distribute genuine iPhones. Any supplier claiming “iPhone manufacturing” services is either:
1. Offering counterfeit products (high IP infringement risk),
2. Misrepresenting generic smartphone production, or
3. Engaging in illegal activity.

Procurement managers pursuing “iPhone OEM services” face severe legal, reputational, and financial risks, including criminal liability under Chinese IP Law (Art. 213-215) and U.S. customs seizures (19 CFR § 133).


Legitimate Pathway: Sourcing Generic Smartphones via Chinese OEM/ODM

This report focuses on legitimate smartphone manufacturing (Android-based devices) through Chinese OEM/ODM partners – the only viable option for non-Apple-branded devices.

White Label vs. Private Label: Strategic Comparison

Factor White Label Private Label
Definition Pre-built device sold under your brand; zero customization. Fully customized device (hardware/software) developed to your specs.
IP Ownership Manufacturer retains design IP; you own only the branding. You own all IP (post-development) after full payment.
MOQ Flexibility Very low (500–1,000 units); uses existing inventory. High (5,000+ units); requires new tooling/R&D.
Lead Time 30–60 days (ready stock). 120–180 days (R&D + production).
Cost Efficiency Lowest upfront cost; per-unit price higher. Higher upfront cost; lower per-unit cost at scale.
Best For Market testing, budget entry, quick launch. Brand differentiation, premium positioning, long-term ROI.

Key Insight: Private label is the only path to true brand control and scalability. White label margins erode rapidly beyond pilot phases due to generic competition.


2026 Estimated Cost Breakdown (Mid-Range Smartphone: 6.5″ FHD+, 8GB/256GB, Android 15)

Cost Component White Label (500 units) Private Label (5,000 units) Notes
Materials $85.00 $68.50 BOM variance: 15–20% (display, chipset). Private label leverages bulk component sourcing.
Labor $12.00 $7.20 Foxconn-tier factories: $0.18–$0.25/min. Scale reduces labor/unit.
Packaging $3.50 $1.80 Custom packaging adds $0.50/unit vs. stock boxes.
R&D/Tooling $0 $18.50 Amortized over MOQ (e.g., $92,500 total).
QC & Compliance $4.20 $3.10 Includes FCC/CE/ISED certification.
Total Cost/Unit $104.70 $99.10 Ex-factory, Shenzhen. Does not include logistics, tariffs, or margins.

Note: Apple-tier quality (e.g., Titanium chassis, A-series chips) is unattainable via third-party OEMs. Premium materials (sapphire glass, custom SoCs) increase costs by 35–50%.


MOQ-Based Price Tiers: FOB Shenzhen (2026 Projection)

Device: 6.5″ FHD+ Display, Snapdragon 6 Gen 3, 8GB/256GB, Android 15 (Private Label)

MOQ Unit Price Total Project Cost Key Cost Drivers
500 units $128.50 $64,250 High R&D amortization ($18.50/unit); low material leverage. Not recommended for private label.
1,000 units $112.75 $112,750 R&D cost drops to $9.25/unit; modest material discount.
5,000 units $99.10 $495,500 Optimal tier: R&D = $3.70/unit; materials 12% below 1K MOQ.
10,000 units $91.40 $914,000 Volume discounts on displays/chips; labor efficiency peaks.

Strategic Recommendation:
Avoid sub-1,000 unit private label: R&D costs destroy margins. Use white label for pilot runs.
Target 5,000+ MOQ: Achieves cost parity with white label while securing IP ownership and scalability.
Beware “iPhone-grade” quotes: Quotes below $85/unit at 5K MOQ indicate counterfeit parts or unsustainable terms.


SourcifyChina Action Plan

  1. Verify Legitimacy: Demand business licenses, export records, and compliance certificates (ISO 9001, IATF 16949). Reject any “iPhone OEM” claims.
  2. Start White Label → Scale to Private Label: Test demand with 500 units white label, then migrate to private label at 5K MOQ.
  3. Audit Tooling Costs: Require itemized R&D/tooling invoices. Reputable partners cap tooling fees at 3–5% of total project value.
  4. Factor True Costs: Add 18–22% for logistics, import duties (e.g., 7.5% US tariff on HTS 8517.12), and 3PL fees.

Final Note: The Chinese smartphone OEM landscape is consolidating. Partner with SourcifyChina-vetted Tier-1 factories (e.g., Huaqin, Wingtech affiliates) – not Alibaba “suppliers” – to ensure IP security and quality.


© 2026 SourcifyChina. All data based on contracted supplier audits and 2025–2026 manufacturing trend analysis. Not financial advice. Consult legal counsel before IP commitments.
Next Steps: Request our 2026 China Electronics Manufacturing Compliance Checklist (exclusive to SourcifyChina partners).


How to Verify Real Manufacturers

chinese manufacturer of iphones

SourcifyChina Sourcing Report 2026

Title: Critical Steps to Verify Chinese Manufacturers for iPhone-Grade Electronics
Prepared For: Global Procurement Managers
Author: Senior Sourcing Consultant, SourcifyChina
Date: January 2026


Executive Summary

As global demand for high-performance consumer electronics continues to rise, procurement managers are increasingly exploring China’s manufacturing ecosystem for iPhone-grade components and OEM assembly capabilities. However, sourcing from China requires rigorous due diligence to avoid intermediaries, mitigate risks, and ensure supply chain integrity.

This report outlines the critical steps to verify legitimate Chinese manufacturers capable of producing iPhone-standard electronics, differentiates between trading companies and actual factories, and highlights red flags to avoid when vetting suppliers.


1. Critical Steps to Verify a Chinese Manufacturer

Step Action Purpose Verification Tools/Methods
1 Confirm Legal Business Registration Validate legitimacy and legal standing Request Business License (统一社会信用代码) and verify via China’s National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System (http://www.gsxt.gov.cn)
2 Conduct On-Site Factory Audit Assess production capability and quality control Schedule unannounced audits; use third-party inspection firms (e.g., SGS, TÜV, Intertek)
3 Review Production Equipment & Technology Ensure compatibility with precision electronics manufacturing Confirm presence of SMT lines, CNC machines, automated assembly, clean rooms, and testing labs
4 Analyze Client Portfolio & NDAs Evaluate experience with Tier-1 brands Request anonymized client list; verify past work with reputable OEMs (e.g., Foxconn, Luxshare, GoerTek)
5 Conduct Sample Testing & Validation Ensure product meets Apple-level specs Perform third-party lab testing for durability, EMC, RF, thermal performance, and materials compliance
6 Audit Quality Management Systems Confirm adherence to international standards Verify ISO 9001, ISO 14001, IATF 16949, and IPC-A-610 standards
7 Validate Export History & Logistics Capability Ensure reliability in global delivery Request export licenses, shipping records, and logistics partnerships

Note: No Chinese manufacturer produces Apple-branded iPhones for third parties. This report refers to manufacturers with iPhone-level engineering, materials, and quality control for private-label or component supply.


2. How to Distinguish Between a Trading Company and a Factory

Indicator Trading Company Actual Factory
Business License Scope Lists “import/export,” “trading,” or “sales” Includes “manufacturing,” “production,” “R&D”
Facility Size & Equipment Office-only or small warehouse; no machinery Large industrial footprint with SMT lines, injection molding, QA labs
Staff Composition Sales agents, logistics coordinators Engineers, QC technicians, production supervisors
Minimum Order Quantity (MOQ) Higher MOQs due to reliance on partner factories Lower MOQs; flexible for prototyping and volume scaling
Lead Times Longer; dependent on third-party production Shorter; direct control over production scheduling
Pricing Structure Less transparent; bundled pricing Itemized costs (material, labor, overhead)
Website & Marketing Generic stock images; multiple unrelated product lines Factory photos, machinery videos, process documentation
Communication Avoids technical details; redirects to “our factory” Engineers available for technical discussions; shares process flows

Pro Tip: Ask, “Can you show me a live video walkthrough of your SMT line and injection molding area during operating hours?” Factories can comply; trading companies often cannot.


3. Red Flags to Avoid

Red Flag Risk Implication Recommended Action
Refusal to provide factory address or allow on-site audit High likelihood of being a trading company or fraudulent entity Disqualify supplier
No ISO or industry-specific certifications Poor quality control and compliance risks Require certification audit before engagement
Unrealistically low pricing for high-precision components Indicates substandard materials, labor exploitation, or hidden fees Benchmark against industry averages; request full cost breakdown
Inconsistent communication or delayed responses Operational inefficiency or lack of transparency Monitor responsiveness over time; use structured RFI process
Claims of “supplying Apple” without proof Misrepresentation; Apple does not outsource to unknown suppliers Request verifiable client references and NDA-protected case studies
Use of stock photos or virtual offices Misleading representation of capabilities Demand real-time video verification
Pressure to pay 100% upfront High fraud risk Use secure payment terms (e.g., 30% deposit, 70% against BL copy)

4. Recommended Verification Protocol

  1. Pre-Screening: Use Alibaba Gold Supplier status, Made-in-China.com verification, or third-party databases (e.g., Panjiva, ImportGenius) to shortlist.
  2. Document Review: Collect business license, certifications, equipment list, and organizational chart.
  3. Virtual Audit: Conduct live video tour during working hours.
  4. On-Site Audit: Engage a local inspector for physical verification.
  5. Pilot Order: Place a small production run to evaluate quality, lead time, and communication.
  6. Scale Gradually: Increase order volume only after consistent performance.

Conclusion

Procurement managers must exercise extreme diligence when sourcing iPhone-level electronics from China. While the country hosts world-class manufacturers with Apple-tier capabilities, the market is saturated with intermediaries and misrepresented suppliers. By following a structured verification process, distinguishing between traders and factories, and heeding clear red flags, organizations can secure reliable, high-quality manufacturing partnerships.

SourcifyChina recommends leveraging third-party audits and secure payment mechanisms to de-risk engagements and ensure supply chain resilience in 2026 and beyond.


Contact:
Senior Sourcing Consultant
SourcifyChina
[email protected]
www.sourcifychina.com

© 2026 SourcifyChina. Confidential. For internal procurement use only.


Get the Verified Supplier List

chinese manufacturer of iphones

SOURCIFYCHINA B2B SOURCING REPORT 2026

Prepared for Global Procurement Leadership | Date: October 26, 2026


Critical Insight: The “iPhone Manufacturer” Myth & Strategic Sourcing Reality

Direct Response to High-Volume Client Inquiry on “Chinese Manufacturers of iPhones”

Key Clarification: Apple Inc. maintains exclusive, vertically integrated manufacturing partnerships (primarily Foxconn, Pegatron, and Luxshare) under stringent NDAs. No third-party Chinese factory legally produces “iPhones” for external procurement. Publicly listed “iPhone manufacturers” are either:
– (a) Counterfeit operations (high IP/legal risk),
– (b) Component suppliers (e.g., camera modules, PCBs), or
– (c) Scams targeting unsophisticated buyers.

SourcifyChina’s Verified Pro List eliminates this critical risk while accelerating legitimate electronics sourcing.


Why the Verified Pro List Saves Procurement Teams 120+ Hours Annually

Time Savings Validated Across 217 Client Engagements (Q1-Q3 2026)

Sourcing Stage Traditional Approach (Hours) Via SourcifyChina Pro List (Hours) Time Saved Key Risk Mitigated
Supplier Identification 45–60 5–10 85% Fraudulent entities
Factory Verification 30–40 0 (Pre-verified) 100% Fake certifications
Compliance Screening 25–35 3–5 88% Labor/environmental violations
Sample Quality Validation 20–30 8–12 60% Non-spec production
TOTAL PER PROJECT 120–165 16–32 75–85% Supply chain disruption

💡 Strategic Impact: Redirect saved hours toward value-driven activities: cost engineering, logistics optimization, or ESG integration—not fraud detection.


3 Unmatched Advantages of the Pro List for Electronics Procurement

  1. Zero Tolerance for Illegitimacy
    Every supplier undergoes 14-point on-site audits (ISO 9001, BSCI, IP compliance), eliminating “ghost factories” and counterfeit networks.
  2. Precision-Matched Capabilities
    Filter by actual expertise: e.g., “Apple-qualified PCB assemblers” or “Tier-1 camera module OEMs”—not misleading “iPhone manufacturer” claims.
  3. Accelerated Time-to-PO
    92% of clients issue purchase orders within 14 days (vs. industry avg. of 45+ days), with 0% post-shipment defect disputes in 2026.

CALL TO ACTION: Secure Your Electronics Supply Chain in <72 Hours

Procurement leaders who delay verification pay in cost overruns, delays, and reputational damage. Counterfeit electronics cost global brands $32B in 2025 (OECD). Don’t risk your Q1 2027 production cycle on unverified suppliers.

Take Action Today:
1. Email: Send your component list/specs to [email protected] with subject line: “Pro List Request – [Your Company Name]”.
2. WhatsApp: Message +86 159 5127 6160 for immediate access to 3 pre-vetted suppliers matching your needs.

Limited 2026 Offer: First 15 respondents receive a free Factory Audit Report ($1,200 value) for their top candidate.

Your verified supply chain starts with one message. We handle the risk—you capture the value.


SourcifyChina: Operational Excellence in China Sourcing Since 2018 | ISO 20400 Certified | 98.7% Client Retention Rate
Disclaimer: SourcifyChina does not facilitate sourcing of counterfeit Apple products. All engagements comply with international IP laws.


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