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SOURCING & SUPPLY CHAIN

Vietnam vs China: 2026 Sourcing Framework

Logisource Insights · SOURCING & SUPPLY CHAIN · 7 min read

Five years ago, the question was simple: China was the default. Today, it isn't. Tariff escalations, supply chain shocks, and rising Chinese labor costs have pushed buyers across fashion, steel, and industrial goods to look at Vietnam as a serious alternative, not just a backup.

But Vietnam is not "China lite". Choosing the right country for a specific product, volume, and timeline requires understanding where each market actually wins. This article gives you a decision framework based on what we see daily across our sourcing operations in both markets.

The honest comparison: where each country wins

FactorChinaVietnam
Industrial ecosystem depthUnmatched — every component locally availableGrowing, but many inputs still imported from China
Production capacityMassive, handles any volumeSufficient for most SMEs, tight for very large orders
Labor cost (2026)Higher, ~$420–650/month in coastal areasLower, ~$250–380/month
Lead time (sample to shipment)Faster, mature logisticsSlightly longer, improving rapidly
Quality consistencyHigh in established factoriesHigh in top-tier, more variability in mid-tier
US tariff exposureHigh (Section 301 still applies to most categories)Lower for most goods, anti-dumping on specific items
English communicationImproving, often through agentsGenerally better in younger factories
Best suited forComplex products, electronics, large volumes, fast turnaroundsApparel, footwear, furniture, simpler metal goods, US-bound shipments

The cost reality is more nuanced than headlines suggest

A common assumption is that Vietnam is automatically cheaper. It isn't, once you account for the full picture.

  • Labor cost is lower in Vietnam, often by 30–40%.
  • Material cost can be higher in Vietnam, because many raw materials and components are imported from China, then marked up.
  • Overhead and tooling are sometimes more expensive in Vietnam — the supplier base is smaller and competition is thinner.
  • Tariff cost into the US is where Vietnam typically wins, sometimes by double digits.

The takeaway: don't compare ex-factory quotes only. Compare landed cost at destination, including duties, freight, and any rework risk.

Tariff exposure: the variable that changed everything

For US-bound goods, tariff exposure has become the single biggest financial factor in the China-vs-Vietnam decision. Section 301 tariffs on Chinese imports continue to apply across most categories, with rates from 7.5% to 25% depending on the HTS code. Vietnam-origin goods generally enter at standard MFN rates, often single-digit.

But Vietnam is not duty-free territory. Anti-dumping and countervailing duties apply to specific items, particularly some steel products, plywood, and certain textiles. Country-of-origin rules have also tightened: simple assembly in Vietnam of Chinese components may not qualify as Vietnamese origin under US customs rules.

The rule of thumb: if your product is genuinely manufactured in Vietnam, with substantial transformation, tariff savings are real. If it's a Chinese product passing through Vietnam, expect scrutiny.

A practical decision framework

Use these questions in order. The first one that gives you a clear answer is usually the right choice.

  1. Is your end market the US? If yes, and your product is on a Section 301 list with significant duty, Vietnam typically wins on landed cost.
  2. Is the product technically complex or component-heavy? If yes, China's ecosystem depth is hard to replicate. Vietnam will likely take longer and cost more.
  3. What is your order volume? Very large recurring orders favor China's capacity. Mid-sized orders fit Vietnam well.
  4. Is supply chain risk diversification a board-level concern? Vietnam as a second source alongside China is the modern playbook, not a full replacement.
  5. How sensitive is the product to lead time and last-minute changes? China still responds faster on average.

The dual-sourcing strategy most importers underestimate

The companies handling the current environment best are not picking one country. They are running parallel qualification programs in both, with primary and backup suppliers for each critical SKU. The cost is real — qualifying a second supplier is not free — but the resilience pays back the first time a tariff list updates or a port closes unexpectedly.

If your operation still depends on a single country for any critical input, that exposure is a strategic risk worth addressing this year, not next.

Need a structured second-source evaluation in Vietnam or China?
Logisource runs qualification programs across both countries, with documented audits, sample validation, and trial orders. Discuss your project →

Key takeaways

  • Vietnam is a serious alternative — not a downgrade — for the right product categories.
  • Compare landed cost, not factory quotes.
  • Tariff exposure into the US is often the decisive factor.
  • Dual-sourcing across both countries is the resilient strategy, not a fallback.
  • Country-of-origin rules are real — plan transformation properly to capture tariff benefits.

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