Home»Food & Beverage» The pitfalls encountered in importing beer may outnumber the beers consumed
I. Import Qualifications: Did You Think a Business License Was Enough to Accept Orders?
Last year, a client wanted to import German craft beer with their newly registered trading company license, only to be stuck at customs registration for three months—Food Distribution License, Import Food Consignee Registration, Alcohol Business LicenseThese three basic qualifications are indispensable.
Common Misconceptions:
Confusing prepackaged food and alcohol licenses
Ignoring special registration requirements at port customs
Failing to renew licenses before expiration
II. Product Compliance: The Devil in Label Translation Details
A 40-foot high cube container can hold a maximum of 22 pallets of beer (including protective layers)
Temperature recorders must remain on throughout and data must be retained
Quality testing must be initiated if shipping delays exceed 15 days
Last year, a batch of Belgian white beer was left stranded at a high-temperature port for 28 days, causing secondary fermentation of yeast and excessive bottle pressure that led to bottle explosions.
V. Pitfall avoidance guide: 7 hard-learned lessons
Special recipe beers (e.g., those with added fruits/spices) require prior ingredient analysis
Wooden pallets must be fumigated and display IPPC marks
運輸保險要覆蓋”包裝破裂導(dǎo)致滲漏”情形
Canned beer requires testing for can coating acid resistance
Sample imports must not use commercial customs clearance channels
促銷贈品需單獨申報并標(biāo)注”非賣品”
Bonded warehouse storage requires monitoring of alcohol shelf life
To be frank: Rather than searching for fragmented information online, its better to directly requestGeneral Administration of Customs 2025 editionimport and exportAlcohol Inspection and Quarantine Supervision Manual. After all, in the beer import business, compliance savings may exceed profits.