
2026-03-27 00:00:00
When you source battery-powered products from a Chinese factory — whether it is a smart pet feeder, a wireless security camera, a portable power bank, or an e-scooter — the trade term you agree on with your supplier shapes everything that follows: who handles export clearance, who manages freight, who bears the risk if cargo is damaged or delayed, and who pays duties at the destination port.
Most importers pick a trade term based on habit or supplier preference, not on an informed understanding of the cost and risk each term carries. That decision becomes far more consequential when the cargo contains lithium batteries or built-in rechargeable cells, because those goods face mandatory dangerous goods compliance, special packaging requirements, and carrier restrictions that create new responsibilities along the freight chain.
This guide explains EXW, FOB, and DDP in practical terms for cross-border sellers and B2B buyers shipping battery-powered products from China to the United States or Canada, so you can make a deliberate choice rather than accept a default that costs you more later. When your cargo is ready to move, our Ocean Freight Shipping and Air Freight Solutions teams can align the freight plan with your trade term from day one.
Standard general cargo has straightforward responsibility handoffs. Goods are packaged, loaded, shipped, cleared, and delivered. The only question is who manages which phase.
Battery-containing products add layers of complexity:
Understanding who is responsible at each point — based on the trade term — tells you who needs to manage each one of these requirements.
EXW means the supplier's obligation ends at the factory gate. The buyer takes responsibility for everything from that point: export trucking, export customs clearance and documentation in China, origin port handling, freight, marine insurance, destination customs entry, import duties, and final delivery.
Under EXW, the buyer is responsible for export customs clearance in China. For battery-containing products, this means ensuring:
If your supplier has no export experience with classified goods and you are operating under EXW, there is a real risk of a mismatch between what the factory hands over and what your freight forwarder needs to complete a compliant export. The factory finishes its obligation when the cargo is available; the burden of compliance falls entirely on you from that moment.
Under EXW from a factory in, say, Guangdong to a US warehouse:
All of these are your cost and responsibility under EXW. The advantage is transparency; the disadvantage is coordination complexity, especially for battery cargo requiring multi-party compliance.
FOB means the supplier delivers the cargo to the named port of shipment and completes export clearance. Once the goods are on board the vessel (or cleared for air in common practice), risk and cost transfer to the buyer.
FOB is the most widely used trade term for China-to-North America shipments because it gives the importer control over the main freight leg while shifting export-side responsibility back to the supplier.
Under FOB, the supplier handles export customs in China, including classification, MSDS submission, and dangerous goods declaration for battery-containing products. This is important because reputable manufacturers of lithium battery products typically have done this before and already have UN 38.3 test reports on file.
However, FOB does not mean the importer is free from compliance responsibility. The buyer still needs to ensure:
According to IATA's lithium battery guidance, the shipper — typically the exporter or the freight forwarder acting on their behalf — is responsible for ensuring goods meet packaging and labelling requirements. Under FOB, this falls on the China-side logistics chain; under EXW, it falls entirely on your freight agent.
DDP means the supplier or their logistics partner delivers goods to the named destination, import duties paid, customs cleared. The buyer's only responsibility is unloading.
For Amazon FBA sellers, DDP to a US fulfillment center sounds attractive. You pay one price, and the goods arrive in the warehouse ready to check in. In practice, DDP from China comes with meaningful caveats.
The supplier is the importer of record under DDP, which means the supplier bears liability for import compliance at the US or Canadian port of entry. Most Chinese factories are not registered as US importers, do not have a US EIN or customs bond, and are not equipped to handle Section 301 duty management, HTS classification disputes, or CBP entry filings.
In practice, many "DDP" shipments from China are handled by third-party logistics providers acting as the importer of record on the supplier's behalf. This can create:
For battery products specifically, if the DDP provider mishandles IATA DGR compliance or uses a non-compliant packaging provider, the shipper-of-record may face rejection by the airline or additional customs holds at the US border.
For larger, recurring battery product shipments, most experienced importers prefer FOB or EXW with their own customs broker managing entry precisely.
Here is a practical decision tree for battery-product importers shipping from China to North America:
You can review the official ICC Incoterms 2020 rules at iccwbo.org for authoritative definitions of each term.
Forestleopard specializes in shipping battery-containing products from China to North America, handling compliance at every stage so your supply chain does not stall at a documentation checkpoint.
Our services cover:
Whether you are moving 50 units of a new smart pet product on air express or 20 pallets of consumer electronics in an LCL container, we align the freight plan with the trade term and the compliance requirements of the cargo.
EXW, FOB, and DDP each represent a different allocation of cost, risk, and control. For battery-powered products shipping from China to North America, the stakes of choosing incorrectly are higher than for standard general cargo: compliance errors at export or import can result in cargo holds, airline rejection, or CBP delays that cost more than the entire freight bill.
The right choice depends on your supplier's capability, your freight infrastructure, and how much visibility and control you want over the end-to-end process. Most experienced importers of battery products use FOB with a trusted freight forwarder handling both China-side DG compliance and US customs entry.
If you are unsure which trade term fits your next shipment or need a compliance review before placing a purchase order, reach out to Forestleopard. We will assess your cargo profile, supplier situation, and destination requirements and give you a clear recommendation. Get a Free Quote from Forestleopard


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