Chinese Suppliers and NDAs: What Every Brand Needs to Know Before Manufacturing Abroad

CENTURI DESIGNS
Brand protection guide for working with Chinese manufacturing suppliers

Working with Chinese suppliers can be a smart move for scaling your brand. But without the right legal protections in place, your designs, formulas, and intellectual property are exposed. Here is what you need to know before you sign anything.

The Reality of Manufacturing in China

China remains the world's manufacturing hub. From beauty products and hair extensions to fashion and packaging, thousands of brands source their goods from Chinese factories every year. The pricing is competitive, the capacity is vast, and turnaround times have improved dramatically over the past decade.

But the same openness that makes China attractive for production also creates real risks for brand owners. Intellectual property theft, copycat products, and unauthorised use of your designs are not rare occurrences. They happen regularly, and often to brands who assumed a verbal agreement or a basic purchase order was enough.

It is not.

Why NDAs Matter More Than You Think

A Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA), also called a confidentiality agreement, is a legal contract between you and your supplier. It legally binds them from sharing, reproducing, or profiting from your proprietary information without your consent.

When you share your product formulas, custom packaging designs, branding guidelines, or manufacturing specifications with a supplier, you are giving them something valuable. Without an NDA, there is nothing stopping them from producing the same product under a different label, sharing your specs with competitors, or selling your design to the highest bidder.

An NDA creates a legal paper trail. If your intellectual property is misused, you have grounds to pursue action. Without one, you are left with very little recourse.

Registering Your IP in China Directly

An NDA is one layer of protection. But for brands serious about safeguarding their intellectual property in the Chinese market, registering your trademarks, designs, and patents directly in China is equally important.

China operates on a first-to-file system. This means that if someone else registers your brand name or logo in China before you do, they can legally claim ownership of it within that territory. This has happened to major global brands, and it has happened to small independent labels too.

Registering with the China National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA) gives you enforceable rights in China specifically, independent of your UK or international registrations. If you plan to manufacture or sell in China at any scale, this step is not optional.

Red Flags When Vetting Chinese Suppliers

Before you even get to the NDA stage, knowing how to vet a supplier properly reduces your risk significantly. Watch out for these warning signs:

  • Suppliers who refuse to sign any form of confidentiality agreement
  • Factories with no verifiable business registration or audit history
  • Unusually low minimum order quantities with no clear explanation
  • Requests to communicate outside of formal channels only
  • Reluctance to provide samples before bulk production
  • No clear process for handling quality disputes

A reputable manufacturer will not resist reasonable legal protections. If a supplier pushes back hard on signing an NDA, that itself is a signal worth taking seriously.

Work With a Lawyer or Paralegal Who Understands Cross-Border IP

This is not an area to cut corners on. A solicitor or IP lawyer with experience in cross-border manufacturing and Chinese commercial law can draft or review your NDA to ensure it is actually enforceable. What works in a UK courtroom does not automatically translate to Chinese jurisdiction.

The cost of proper legal advice upfront is significantly less than the cost of recovering your brand after a breach.

Protecting Your Brand Starts Before Production Begins

At CENTURI DESIGNS, brand protection is not an afterthought. It is built into how we approach identity from the very start. Whether you are launching a new product line, scaling into manufacturing, or working with overseas suppliers for the first time, the legal foundations of your brand matter as much as the visual ones.

Your brand is an asset. Protect it like one.

If you have questions about brand protection strategy or want to understand how to build a legally resilient brand identity, visit our Brand Protection Centre or get in touch at hello@centuridesigns.com.