The complete 2025 buyer’s guide to avoiding bad factories before it’s too late.
A proper factory audit is the single most effective way to avoid quality disasters, delays, fraud, and hidden problems in China sourcing. Whether you’re ordering 500 units or 500,000, the cost of a bad supplier can destroy your margins — and your reputation.
Before you send that deposit, here is the ultimate 25-point audit checklist, covering capability, quality control, compliance, and red flags that tell you to walk away immediately.
Why Factory Audits Matter
Sourcing is not about finding the lowest price — it’s about finding a reliable production partner.
A factory audit helps you:
- Confirm the supplier is real, not a trading company pretending to be a factory.
- Verify production capacity matches your order.
- Prevent quality disasters before they happen.
- Identify hidden risks: subcontracting, poor processes, unsafe materials, etc.
Think of an audit as an X-ray: it reveals everything sellers hide behind glossy Alibaba photos.
25-Point Factory Audit Checklist
Below are the 25 essential checks every buyer — or your sourcing agent — must complete before placing an order.
1. Business License & Registration
Verify the official business license, legal representative, company type, and registered capital.
Red flag: fake addresses, “shell companies,” or companies founded very recently.
2. Factory Location & Real Site
Confirm the real production site.
Some suppliers show one location online but manufacture somewhere else.
Red flag: the person refuses to share their real address.
3. Factory Size (Square Meters)
A 300㎡ workshop can’t produce what a 3,000㎡ factory can.
Match real capacity with your order quantity.
4. Production Lines
Count the number of lines, layout, workflow, and whether they match the product category.
5. Daily / Monthly Capacity
Ask for capacity numbers and confirm through observation.
Red flag: capacity claims that are impossible relative to staff and machines.
6. Machine List
Check the machinery brand, age, maintenance records, and whether machines match the required process.
7. Tooling & Mold Ownership
Who owns the molds?
Can they take your mold and sell to other clients?
Red flag: shared molds, unclear ownership, or refusal to sign a mold agreement.
8. Raw Material Storage
Check material types, sourcing channels, and storage conditions.
Red flag: no labeling, expired materials, or mixed batches.
9. Incoming Quality Control (IQC)
Does the factory inspect incoming materials or just accept everything from suppliers?
10. In-Process Quality Control (IPQC)
Are there checkpoints during production?
Is quality controlled or only at the end (which is too late)?
11. Final Quality Control (FQC)
Check outgoing inspection procedures and whether they use standard AQL levels.
12. Sample Room
A real factory always has a sample room.
Red flag: only a few samples, inconsistent with production capability.
13. Packaging Area
Check packing workflow, workers, labeling, storage, and standard packaging materials.
14. Warehouse Conditions
Look for humidity, dust, stacking, and FIFO (first in, first out) system.
15. Employee Working Conditions
Evaluate environment, safety, ventilation, working hours, and whether there is excessive overtime or labor violations.
16. Worker Skill Levels
Are workers trained?
Can they explain their process?
Do they follow SOPs?
17. Factory Certificates
Look for ISO9001, ISO14001, BSCI, SEDEX, FSC, and industry-specific certifications.
Red flag: fake or expired certificates.
18. Product Certificates
If the product needs CE, FCC, RoHS, FDA, etc., verify original test reports.
Red flag: certificates belonging to another company.
19. R&D Capability
Check whether they have engineers, designers, or only assembly workers.
Red flag: “We can develop anything” without an engineering team.
20. Subcontracting Transparency
Factories sometimes outsource without telling you.
Red flag: empty production floor or machines not running during working hours.
21. Production Schedule Planning
Do they have a planning system?
Can they show real production timelines?
22. Quality Records
Request QC logs, inspection sheets, and previous defect rates.
23. Social Responsibility & Compliance
Check fire exits, safety training, emergency equipment, and environmental control.
24. Management Communication Quality
Is management responsive? Organized? Transparent?
This determines whether your future problems will be solved or ignored.
25. Overall Red Flags
Walk away if you see:
- Very few workers but “high capacity” claims
- No QC staff
- No certifications for regulated products
- Dirty workshops, poor lighting, or unsafe environment
- Managers refusing audits
- Inconsistent information between sales and factory floor
A good audit saves tens of thousands in potential losses. A bad supplier can ruin your entire year.
When to Reject a Factory
Reject the supplier immediately if:
- They refuse physical audit or video audit
- They hide workshops or storage rooms
- Certificates are obviously fake
- Factory size doesn’t match their claims
- They cannot explain production processes
- They push for fast deposit without transparency
Sometimes the smartest business decision is simply to walk away early.
Conclusion
A factory audit isn’t just a formality — it’s your only defense against unreliable suppliers.
Use this 25-point checklist before every new order, and you’ll avoid 90% of quality disasters that destroy new buyers.
If you can’t travel, hire a professional sourcing agent or auditing company.
Your future self — and your customers — will thank you.
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