The seller is responsible for the exporting Inspection and Quarantine in China. The Phytosanitary Certificate issued by China shall be regarded as evidence of the Sellers' delivery and custom clearing at the starting port. The buyer should be responsible for the importing inspection and quarantine at the destination port.
The seller offers FOB(FCA) price, which doesn't include shipping cost. It is better for the buyer to handle physical shipping. If the seller arranges shipping and actual costs exceed estimates, the buyer pays the difference before confirmed shipment.
Requirement: Please provide full correct consignee information (personal or company, address, cell phone, email, registered number or Passport ID). Any second document application due to errors will incur an extra cost of 300USD.
Confirm all document requirements before application. Additional declarations must be provided in correct terminology. Corrections after submission cost 300 USD.
Note: Live plants involve high survival risks due to soil washing, quarantine treatments, and long-distance transport.
Special Business Nature: No refunds or order cancellations are accepted once the order is confirmed and payment is made.
Please ensure you are a qualified importer according to your country's specific policies and regulations for international live plant trade.
Who is responsible for the Phytosanitary Certificate?
The seller handles the export Inspection and Quarantine in China and provides the official Phytosanitary Certificate as proof of delivery.
Does the price include international shipping?
No, the quoted price is FOB/FCA basis. Shipping costs are extra and should ideally be managed by the buyer.
What information is needed for the shipping documents?
Complete consignee details including name/company, address, phone, email, and tax ID or passport number are required.
Can I cancel my order after payment?
Due to the special nature of live plant exporting, orders cannot be cancelled or refunded once confirmed and paid.
Are there risks involved in shipping live plants?
Yes, live plants face survival risks due to required quarantine treatments (soil washing) and the duration of international transit.
What happens if customs clearance fails at the destination?
The buyer is responsible for destination quarantine and customs. If clearance fails, plants cannot be returned to the origin country.