Cosmetics Compliance May 2026

How to Sell Cosmetics in China: NMPA Registration vs. CBEC Exemption in 2026

A complete breakdown of the two regulatory paths for foreign cosmetics brands, with cost comparisons, timeline estimates, and decision criteria.

The Two Doors into China's Cosmetics Market

Foreign cosmetics brands entering China face a fundamental choice: register your products through the National Medical Products Administration (NMPA) for general trade, or sell through Cross-Border E-Commerce (CBEC) platforms under an exemption framework. Each path has different costs, timelines, and strategic implications.

Key insight: Most foreign brands start with CBEC to test the market, then transition to NMPA registration once demand is proven. But this isn't always the right sequence — and choosing wrong can cost you 6 months and $20K+.
Market Size
$78B
China's cosmetics market reached approximately $78 billion in 2025, making it the world's second-largest after the United States.

Path 1: NMPA Registration (General Trade)

NMPA registration is the traditional route for selling cosmetics in China through offline retail channels (department stores, specialty shops, supermarkets) and domestic e-commerce platforms like Tmall, JD.com, and Douyin.

What You Need to Register

Under the Cosmetics Supervision and Administration Regulation (CSAR) effective since January 2022, all cosmetics sold through general trade must be registered or filed with the NMPA. The requirements differ by product category:

Since January 2022, China no longer requires animal testing for ordinary cosmetics — a major change that has opened the door for cruelty-free brands. However, special cosmetics and products making certain functional claims still require animal testing data. Source: NMPA Order No. 35, 2021
NMPA Registration Cost
$8K – $25K
Per product. Includes testing fees (safety, stability, microbiology), agent fees, and documentation costs. Special cosmetics cost significantly more than ordinary cosmetics.

Path 2: CBEC Exemption (Cross-Border E-Commerce)

Cross-border e-commerce platforms — Tmall Global, JD Worldwide, Douyin Global — allow foreign brands to sell directly to Chinese consumers without NMPA registration, under a regulatory exemption framework established in 2016 and expanded since.

How CBEC Works

Products are stored in bonded warehouses in China's free trade zones (or shipped directly from overseas). When a Chinese consumer places an order, the product clears customs as a personal import — exempt from NMPA registration requirements, but subject to cross-border e-commerce taxes.

CBEC Tax Rates
9.1% – 23.1%
Combined customs duty (0%) + VAT (9.1% on transactions under ¥5,000) + consumption tax (varies by category). Transactions above ¥5,000 single-item or ¥26,000 annual per-person limit are taxed as general trade.

Side-by-Side Comparison

Factor NMPA Registration CBEC Exemption
Initial Cost $8K–$25K per product $0 registration cost
Timeline to Launch 3–12 months 4–8 weeks
Sales Channels Offline + all e-commerce CBEC platforms only
Product Claims Flexible (with substantiation) Restricted
Ingredient Freedom Must use NMPA-approved ingredients Broader (home-country standards)
Scale Potential Unlimited Limited by personal import quotas
Consumer Trust Higher (locally regulated) Moderate
Ongoing Compliance Annual reporting, renewal Platform rules compliance
The real tradeoff: CBEC gets you to market faster and cheaper, but caps your growth at approximately ¥26,000 per consumer per year and limits you to online channels. NMPA registration is expensive and slow, but unlocks the full China market — including the 72% of premium skincare still sold through offline channels.

Our Decision Framework

Based on our analysis of 50+ foreign cosmetics brands entering China, we've developed a simple decision framework:

Start with CBEC if:

Go straight to NMPA if:

The Hybrid Path (Recommended for Most Brands)

Start with CBEC on Tmall Global or Douyin Global. Use the first 6–12 months to validate demand, understand Chinese consumer preferences, and build initial sales history. Once you've hit $200K+ in annual CBEC sales, begin NMPA registration for your top 3–5 SKUs.

According to Tmall Global's 2024 merchant report, brands that started with CBEC and then expanded to general trade saw 3.2x higher year-2 revenue compared to brands that went straight to NMPA registration — because they had real Chinese consumer data to inform their localization strategy. Source: Tmall Global Merchant Insights, 2024

What This Means for Your Brand

Every cosmetics brand's China entry strategy is different. Your regulatory path depends on your product category, ingredient list, revenue targets, distribution strategy, and risk tolerance.

If you're evaluating China market entry for your cosmetics brand, we can help you build a specific, data-driven assessment — including competitor analysis, regulatory pathway recommendation, and cost projections tailored to your products.

Need a custom assessment for your brand?

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