In recent years, China’s coffee market has continued to expand. As the core hub of EU coffee trade, Germany—leveraging its mature roasting technology, rigorous quality control, and premium logistics nodes such as the ports of Hamburg and Bremen—has become a key source of China’s coffee imports. Customs data show that China–Germany coffee trade volume rose 18 % year-on-year in 2023. At the same time, the EU has tightened inspection and quarantine standards for agricultural exports (e.g., Regulation (EC) No 178/2002), while China Customs has raised the “double random” inspection rate for imported food to 25 %. Companies handling imports on their own now face multiple challenges: mismatched documentation, logistics delays, and compliance risks.foreign tradeBy integrating documentation, logistics, and compliance resources, the agent can compress customs-clearance lead time from the industry average of 10–15 days down to 7–10 days, significantly reducing a company’s operating costs.
Document compliance is coffeeImport Customs ClearanceThe "lifeline" of the operation, professional agents must maintain full control over eight categories of core documents throughout the entire process:
The professional value of the agent is demonstrated as follows: during pre-examination of documents, identifying “inconsistency risks” (e.g., the shipper’s name on the bill of lading not matching the seller on the contract) and guiding the company to make corrections; when drafting the customs declaration, accurately classifying the HS code (to avoid mis-declaring raw beans 0901.2100 as roasted beans and causing a tariff error); and coordinating with the German exporter to submit electronic data simultaneously, ensuring “consistency between documents and between documents and goods.”
German coffee imports are transported primarily by sea (accounting for over 80%). The main routes run from Hamburg/Bremerhaven to Shanghai/Qingdao/Tianjin, with a transit time of roughly 30–35 days. For urgent orders, air freight from Frankfurt to Shanghai is an option, taking 7–10 days but costing 3–5 times more. The agent’s logistics management capabilities are reflected in three aspects:
Customs compliance is the key to successful importation; the agent must focus on controlling three critical stages:
If re-export to Russia or joint procurement of German coffee with Russian companies is involved (e.g., via a Russian distributor), the agent’s VTB settlement service can markedly boost capital efficiency:
Special note: Our company does not provide product certification services, but we can assist with document preparation and offer consultation. Enterprises must independently complete the following certifications:
Our company offers a “9-Step Closed-Loop” agency service that spans the entire import lifecycle:
With professional document handling, precise logistics control, and in-depth compliance support, we are committed to becoming your “end-to-end steward” for importing German coffee—making cross-border trade simpler and more efficient.
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