Buyer Guide2026-06-256 min readAuthor: Michael Wang

How to Pay Safely When Importing a Car from China (and Avoid Getting Scammed)

How to Pay Safely When Importing a Car from China (and Avoid Getting Scammed)

For most first-time importers, payment is the scariest part of buying a car from China. You are wiring money to a company on the other side of the world, often before you have seen the vehicle. The good news: a properly run China vehicle export uses a payment structure designed to protect you , and once you know what that looks like, the scams become easy to spot.

The standard, safe payment structure

A legitimate exporter follows the same milestone-based flow on almost every order:

Proforma invoice (PI) first. Before any money moves, you receive a PI listing the exact vehicle, specification, price, Incoterm (usually CIF or FOB) and payment terms. Nothing is verbal.

30% deposit to confirm. You pay a deposit — typically around 30% — by bank transfer (T/T) to confirm the order and lock the unit. You are not paying for the whole car up front.

Loading photos before the balance. When the vehicle is ready and loaded into the container, you receive photos and often video of your specific car secured inside. Only then do you pay the 70% balance.

Documents in your name. The Bill of Lading, commercial invoice and certificate of origin are issued to you as the consignee — the proof you need to clear customs and take ownership.

This staging means the seller never holds your full payment while you hold nothing. Each step releases money only after the previous one is verified.

Red flags that signal a scam

Walk away — or ask hard questions — if you see any of these:

Full payment demanded up front. No legitimate exporter needs 100% before the car is even loaded.

Payment to a personal account. Funds should go to the company's registered business account, matching the name on the PI and contract — not an individual's name.

A price far below everyone else. If one "supplier" quotes thousands less than the market for the same model, it is usually bait.

Reluctance to share documents or loading photos. A real exporter is happy to show you the car and the paperwork; a scammer stalls.

Pressure to decide "today." Artificial urgency is a classic manipulation tactic.

How to verify an exporter before you pay

Before the first transfer, confirm the company is real: ask for its business registration, check that the bank account name matches the company, look for an established trade presence, and ask for references from buyers in your region. A short video call where they walk you through their yard or office is worth more than any brochure.

Start small to build trust

The simplest way to de-risk a new supplier relationship is to start with a single unit. Our minimum order is one car precisely so a new buyer can run the full process end to end — PI, deposit, loading photos, documents, delivery — and prove it works before committing to volume.

At Sino Gear we run exactly this structure on every order, and we will gladly explain each step before you commit. Message us on WhatsApp with the model and destination you have in mind, and we will send a clear, itemised quote and walk you through how payment and documents will work.

Related Tags

#guide#payment#safety#importing

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