In China’s export system, there’s a practice you may have heard of—or even used—called Buy-on-Behalf Declaration.

It means: A seller without export rights borrows another company’s export license to declare the goods at customs.

On the surface, everything seems fine. But here’s the catch: you may have no idea who’s really filing your export.

🧱 Why was this method so common before?

This is not the standard, compliant way to export. It’s a “gray shortcut” that worked when oversight was loose—but those days are ending.

⚠️ Why you may already be at risk

If not, you may be operating inside a “risk corridor.”

🧨 Bigger risk: you’re not in control

The license provider might be under audit—your goods get frozen. You can’t track who really filed your declaration. If anything goes wrong, the paper trail is broken.

🚪 This “gray export channel” is closing

China is tightening digital oversight on export compliance:

Source: General Administration of Customs announcements (2023–2025)

✅ Compliance isn’t complicated—with the right partner

Vastlog does not offer buy-on-behalf services. But we do provide:

🤝 Want to check if your supply chain is secure?

📩 info@vastlog.com 📱 WhatsApp: +86 137 8068 5000 🌐 www.vastlog.com