Skipping the sample to save $40 is the single most expensive mistake new importers make. A sample order is how you turn a photo and a price into a physical product you can hold, test, and approve — before you commit thousands of dollars to a full container. This guide explains exactly how carpet and rug sampling from China works: what it costs, how long it takes, what to check, and how the sample fee is credited back to you.
Our Tianjin Wuqing factory ships samples to buyers worldwide every week. If you are still comparing suppliers, see our guides to Alibaba vs. a sourcing agent and carpet MOQ explained — sampling is the bridge between getting a quote and placing a bulk order.
Photos and spec sheets only tell you so much. A sample lets you verify the things that actually drive returns and complaints:
A sample costs more per piece than bulk because the factory sets up production for a single item. But the key fact most first-time buyers miss is that the sample fee is usually refundable:
| Sample type | Typical cost | Deductible from bulk? |
|---|---|---|
| Existing catalog design | Free–1× unit price | Usually yes |
| Standard sample (stock construction) | 2-3× unit price | Yes |
| Custom OEM (your design/logo/color) | Higher — custom setup | Often partially |
| Courier shipping | $30-60 | No |
The deduction rule: At reputable factories, whatever you pay for the sample is credited back against your bulk invoice once you order. So a $30 sample fee becomes $0 if you proceed — making the sample effectively free and the whole step low-risk. Always get the deduction policy in writing before paying.
Stock/catalog samples: ship in 2-5 days, then 3-7 days courier transit — roughly one week door to door.
Custom OEM samples: add 7-15 days for the factory to produce your specific design, color, or logo before it ships — roughly 2-3 weeks total.
Samples travel by international courier (DHL, FedEx, UPS), not sea freight, so they arrive fast. The buyer normally pays the courier fee, or provides their own DHL/FedEx account number to be billed directly. The factory declares a low sample value on the commercial invoice so customs clears quickly with minimal duty.
Don't just glance at the sample — test it systematically against your quote:
Keep the approved sample. It is your quality benchmark for the bulk order and your evidence if there is ever a dispute. For certification-sensitive markets, also request the OEKO-TEX and fire-test documents alongside the sample — see our guide to OEKO-TEX carpet importing.
Tip for serious buyers: request a mixed sample set across product types (for example a printed carpet, a shaggy carpet, and a faux fur rug). It lets you judge the factory's range and consistency at once, and splits the courier cost across several samples. Tell us your market and we'll recommend the most relevant samples.
It's still strongly recommended. Even for a stock design, a sample confirms the current production quality, the exact color batch, and the backing — all of which can vary over time. Catalog samples are cheaper (sometimes free apart from courier), so the cost of confirming is minimal compared with the risk of a full order that doesn't meet expectations.
For existing stock designs, factories will sometimes provide the sample free and only charge courier. For custom or higher-value items, a sample fee applies because of the setup cost — but it is normally deductible from your bulk order, so it isn't a permanent cost if you proceed. Be cautious of suppliers who refuse any sample at all; that's a red flag.
Small sample orders are usually paid by bank transfer (T/T), PayPal, or a credit-card link, since the amounts are low. Bulk orders then typically move to T/T with a 30% deposit and 70% balance, or a letter of credit for larger volumes. Paying the small sample fee by a buyer-protected method is fine; the bulk order terms are negotiated separately.
Reference the approved sample explicitly in your purchase order ("bulk to match approved sample dated …"), keep the physical sample, and arrange a pre-shipment inspection (in-house or a third party like SGS) that compares production against it. Our factory documents the approved sample and inspects bulk against that benchmark before shipment, which is the single best protection against quality drift.
Yes — for a meaningful order, sampling 2-3 shortlisted suppliers in parallel is worth the modest cost. It lets you compare real quality, responsiveness, and accuracy side by side rather than relying on quotes and photos. The supplier whose sample best matches its promises, communicates clearly, and hits the timeline is usually the one worth scaling with.