Singapore occupies a unique position in the China sourcing ecosystem. As a regional trading hub with sophisticated logistics infrastructure, a strong base of sourcing and trading companies, and a business environment built on international trade, Singapore-based buyers have certain structural advantages when importing from China — and face a different set of considerations from buyers in larger markets.

Singapore's Trade Position with China

Singapore and China have a bilateral Free Trade Agreement (CSFTA, upgraded in 2018) that reduces tariffs on a wide range of goods. Under the CSFTA, many Chinese-manufactured goods enter Singapore at reduced or zero MFN rates. Before ordering, verify whether your specific HS code qualifies for preferential treatment — your freight forwarder or customs broker can confirm this quickly.

Singapore customs (Singapore Customs) handles import declarations through the TradeNet system. A Customs Import Permit is required for most goods. The system is efficient and well-automated; most shipments clear in hours rather than days.

GST on Imports

Singapore levies Goods and Services Tax (GST) on imported goods. As of 2024, the GST rate is 9%. For commercial importers registered for GST, the tax is claimable as input tax — it is a cash flow consideration, not a permanent cost. For non-GST-registered buyers (small businesses below the $1M annual turnover registration threshold), GST is a real cost.

Low-value goods (below $400 SGD) previously entered GST-free under the de minimis exemption. This exemption was removed in January 2023 — all imports are now subject to GST regardless of value.

Using Singapore as a Regional HubMany international buyers use Singapore-based trading companies or 3PLs to consolidate China-origin goods for redistribution across Southeast Asia. This approach leverages Singapore's logistics infrastructure, free trade agreements with ASEAN markets, and stable regulatory environment. If you're sourcing for multiple ASEAN markets, a Singapore hub strategy often reduces total landed cost compared to shipping direct to each market.

Prohibited and Controlled Goods

Singapore has a short list of prohibited imports (chewing gum, firecrackers, certain weapons) and a broader list of controlled goods requiring licences from specific agencies (health products via HSA, telecoms equipment via IMDA, food products via SFA). For most B2B manufactured goods, there are no restrictions beyond standard customs procedures.

Finding Chinese Suppliers from Singapore

Singapore-based buyers have several advantages when engaging Chinese factories: English is widely accepted in business correspondence, payment infrastructure (SWIFT, bank transfers) is well-developed, and many GBA factories have existing relationships with Singapore trading companies and buyers.

Consider hiring a sourcing agent based in the GBA rather than a Singapore-based intermediary — you get proximity to the factories without an additional layer of margin. Ensure any agent you engage is paid on a transparent fee basis rather than factory commission.

Shipping Options

Sea freight: Shenzhen/Guangzhou to Singapore approximately 4–7 days transit. LCL shipments are cost-effective for smaller volumes given the short distance — rates per CBM are competitive. FCL is worth considering for volumes above 10 CBM given the short sailing time reduces the cost advantage of consolidation.

Air freight: Guangzhou to Changi Airport 2–4 hours transit. Effective for time-sensitive goods or high-value, low-volume shipments. Many electronics and precision component buyers use air freight as standard for Singapore-bound goods given the value-to-weight ratio.


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