Introduction: Why China Is the World’s Billiard Slate Capital
If you’re in the market for snooker slate or pool table slate, you’ve likely encountered suppliers from China. Today, China has become the world’s largest production base for billiard table slate. Jiangxi province’s Yushan county — known as the “billiards hub” — produces 250,000 billiard slabs and 50,000 complete tables annually, generating over 1.5 billion yuan (approx. $206 million) in output value. Yushan bluestone is prized for its elasticity, water absorption, durability and anti-static properties, and products are exported to over 70 countries and regions, including the UK and Italy.
However, importing heavy, high-value natural stone from overseas comes with risks — misaligned bolt holes, hidden fissures, poor packaging, unexpected duties, and damaged cargo. This guide walks you through how to import snooker slate from China successfully, avoiding costly mistakes.
💡 Key insight: China’s vertical integration — from quarry to CNC grinding to container loading — offers the best value, but only if you verify quality and packaging standards before shipment.
📖 Related: Snooker Slate Quality Inspection Checklist →
Part 1: Find and Vet Suppliers — Beyond the Price Quote
Where to Start
Most international buyers begin on B2B platforms like Alibaba. However, don’t rely on product pages alone. China’s billiard slate production is concentrated in specific industrial clusters. The most prominent manufacturing regions include: Jiangxi Province (home to Yushan, the world’s largest slate production base), Guangdong Province (advanced CNC machining facilities), Zhejiang Province (strong export infrastructure), and Tianjin (strategic port access for North American and European buyers). Ask suppliers for their factory location — it tells you a lot about their supply chain maturity.
Supplier Evaluation Checklist
| Criteria | What to Ask | Red Flag |
|---|---|---|
| Factory tour / video | Can you provide a live video of your CNC grinding line? | “No videos, just photos” |
| Test reports | Density (>2.7 g/cm³), water absorption (<0.4%), flatness certificate (≤0.3 mm/m) | “Our stone is very high quality” (no data) |
| Export experience | How many containers to my country? Can you share Bill of Lading copies? | “We ship everywhere” (vague) |
| Third-party inspection | Do you accept SGS or Bureau Veritas inspection before shipment? | “Not necessary — trust us” |
| References | Can you provide 2–3 buyers in my region? | “Confidential” (won’t share any) |
💡 Pro Tip: Request a sample piece (e.g., 100 × 100 mm) to test density and water absorption yourself. Some suppliers offer sample inspection at the factory; for large orders, hire a third-party inspection company (SGS, Bureau Veritas) to verify flatness, bolt holes, and packaging before shipment.
📖 Related: Common Mistakes When Choosing a Snooker Slate Supplier →
Part 2: Confirm Specifications — Put Everything in Writing
Critical Specifications to Define
Before placing an order, you and your supplier must agree on every detail in a written contract.
| Parameter | Standard | Tolerance |
|---|---|---|
| Thickness | 45 mm (12ft tournament), 30 mm (club/home) | ±0.5 mm |
| Flatness | ≤0.3 mm over 1 m (tournament), ≤0.5 mm (club) | — |
| Density | >2.7 g/cm³ (premium), >2.6 g/cm³ (acceptable) | — |
| Water absorption | <0.4% | — |
| Piece count | 5-piece (45mm), 3-piece (30mm) | — |
| Sealing | 6-side pre-sealed (recommended) | — |
| Bolt holes | CNC drilled to your frame drawing | ±1.0 mm |
| Packaging | 15 mm plywood, steel bands, 20 mm foam, steel corners | — |
| ISPM-15 | Wood packaging certified (IPPC stamp) | Mandatory |
What Is “Grade A” Chinese Slate?
Chinese slate quality varies significantly. Grade A (block-selected, fissure-free) from Jiangxi/Yushan rivals Brazilian and Italian slate in performance — at a lower price. Grade B or lower has density below 2.6 g/cm³, visible fissures, and high warp risk. Always specify “Grade A” and ask for density test reports. As the article from a leading Chinese slate processor notes, a “professional standard” slate must be ground to ≤0.3 mm flatness, and Yushan bluestone is one of the most suitable stones for billiard tables.
⚠️ Warning: A supplier who cannot provide thickness verification and flatness data is likely selling inferior material. Walk away.
📖 Related: What Determines Slate Quality? Buyer’s Guide →
Part 3: Calculate Costs — Landed Price vs. Ex-Works
Components of Landed Cost
Many buyers focus only on ex-works price (cost at the factory). But your true cost is landed cost — ex-works + packaging + inland freight + ocean freight + insurance + customs duties + tariffs + local delivery.
Sample Cost Breakdown (12ft 45mm 5-piece Chinese Grade A Slate)
| Cost Component | Estimated Range (per set) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ex-works price | $1,500–1,900 | Grade A, CNC ground, 6-side sealed |
| Packaging (premium) | +$50–80 per set | 15 mm plywood, steel bands, foam |
| Inland to port | +$20–50 per set | Factory to Shanghai/Ningbo |
| Ocean freight (per set, LCL) | +$150–250 | China to USA/EU (LCL) |
| Container (40ft, 12–14 sets) | +$100–150 per set | Most cost-effective |
| Insurance (0.5–1%) | +$10–20 per set | Recommended |
| Customs duties (HTS 6803) | 3–6% (MFN) + Section 301 (China) | USA only: +10–15% |
| ISF filing fee (USA) | +$50–100 per shipment | One-time per container |
| Total landed (single set, LCL) | $1,900–2,400 | |
| Total landed (container, 12 sets) | $1,600–2,000 per set | ~15–20% savings |
Tariff Alert: USA Section 301
For buyers importing natural stone products from China into the United States, Section 301 tariffs may apply in addition to normal MFN duties. Many building materials sourced from China remain subject to Section 301 tariffs, ranging from 7.5% to 25% on top of normal duty. Section 301 tariffs have been imposed on a wide range of goods from China, including certain critical minerals and manufactured stone products. The de minimis exemption (shipments under $800) was eliminated effective May 2, 2025 for Chinese-origin merchandise — all shipments are now subject to applicable duties and entry requirements. Always work with a customs broker to determine your exact landed cost.
💡 Pro Tip: For maximum value, consolidate smaller orders into a full 40ft container. The per-set shipping cost drops significantly, and you have more control over loading quality.
📖 Related: Snooker Slate Pricing Factors: What Affects Cost? →
Part 4: Arrange Shipping — Packaging and Container Loading
Export Packaging Standards
Your slate will travel thousands of miles by truck, ship, and rail. Inadequate packaging is the #1 cause of damage.
| Packaging Element | Minimum Standard for 45mm Slate |
|---|---|
| Crate material | 15 mm plywood (not 9–10 mm) |
| Internal padding | 20 mm EPE foam or rubber mats (all 6 sides) |
| Strapping | Steel bands (4–6 per crate), not plastic |
| Corner protection | Steel or heavy plastic corners |
| Slates per crate | Maximum 2 pieces |
| Base runners | 100 × 100 mm hardwood (forklift access) |
| Labels | “FRAGILE”, “THIS SIDE UP”, “HEAVY”, “DO NOT STACK” |
| ISPM-15 stamp | Required on all wood packaging |
Container Loading Best Practices
| Rule | Why |
|---|---|
| Floor-load only — never stack 45 mm crates | Prevents crushing bottom crates |
| Use air bags between crates | Prevents shifting during transit |
| Use wooden blocking against walls | Prevents lateral movement |
| Photograph loaded container | Evidence for insurance claims |
| Max 2 slates per crate | Weight limit |
How Many Sets Fit in a Container?
| Slate Type | 20ft Container | 40ft Container |
|---|---|---|
| 45 mm 12ft (5-piece) | 5–6 sets | 12–14 sets |
| 30 mm 12ft (5-piece) | 8–10 sets | 18–22 sets |
| 25 mm 9ft pool (3-piece) | 12–15 sets | 28–32 sets |
💡 Pro Tip: Never stack 45 mm crates. Each crate weighs ~700–800 kg; stacking doubles the load on bottom crates — risk of collapse.
📖 Related: Snooker Slate Weight & Container Loading Guide →
Part 5: Handle Customs Clearance — Get the Documents Right
Required Export Documents
| Document | Provided By | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial Invoice | Supplier | Value, quantity, HS code |
| Packing List | Supplier | Crate dimensions, weight per crate |
| Bill of Lading (B/L) | Freight forwarder | Title to cargo |
| Certificate of Origin | Chamber of commerce (China) | For tariff preferences (if any) |
| ISPM-15 stamp | On crates | Proof of wood treatment |
| Flatness certificate | Supplier | Quality verification (not customs, but good to have) |
Correct HS Code — Critical!
For worked snooker and pool slate (CNC ground, drilled, sealed), use HS Code 6803 (Worked slate and articles of slate). This is the correct classification for finished billiard slate.
6803 → Worked slate and articles of slate — CORRECT for finished snooker/pool slate
9504 → Billiard articles and accessories — for complete tables, not slate alone
2514 → Rough or merely cut slate — for unprocessed stone only
Using the wrong HS code can trigger customs reclassification, penalties, and delays. Work with a licensed customs broker to ensure correct classification.
ISF Filing (USA Only)
For shipments to the United States, the Importer Security Filing (ISF) must be filed at least 24 hours before cargo is loaded onto the vessel. This is typically handled by your customs broker.
📖 Related: Snooker Slate HS Code & Export Guide →
Part 6: Manage Risks — Inspection, Insurance, and Claims
Pre-Shipment Inspection (PSI)
For container-sized orders, budget for third-party inspection (SGS, Bureau Veritas). The inspector will visit the factory, randomly select samples, and verify:
Flatness — straightedge + feeler gauge (≤0.3 mm)
Thickness — caliper at 5+ points
Bolt holes — test with bolts
Sealing — water bead test
Packaging — crate specifications, foam placement, steel bands
Cost: $500–1,500 per inspection — cheap insurance against a $20,000+ bad batch.
Insurance
Your supplier’s ex-works price typically does not include insurance. You need to arrange:
| Coverage Type | What It Covers |
|---|---|
| Ocean freight insurance | Total loss, major damage (often high deductible) |
| All-risk coverage | Minor cracks, concealed damage — recommended |
| Concealed damage clause | Extends inspection window beyond 7 days |
Damage Claims
If slate arrives damaged:
| Step | Time Limit |
|---|---|
| Note damage on delivery receipt | At delivery |
| Take photos (close-up + full crate) | Immediately |
| Save all packaging | Until claim resolved |
| Notify supplier and freight forwarder | Within 24–48 hours |
| File claim | Within 7–14 days |
⚠️ Warning: If you sign a clean delivery receipt without noting damage, you may lose the right to file claims.
📖 Related: Snooker Slate Packaging Standards for Export →
Part 7: After the Shipment Arrives — Inspection and Installation
Upon Receipt Checklist
| Check | Tool | Pass / Fail |
|---|---|---|
| Crate exterior damage | Visual | ☐ |
| Steel bands intact | Visual | ☐ |
| Foam padding intact | Visual (open one crate) | ☐ |
| Flatness (random sample) | 2 m straightedge + feeler gauge | ≤0.3 mm |
| Thickness (random sample) | Caliper | ±0.5 mm |
| Bolt holes (random sample) | Bolt drop test | Drops freely |
| Cracks or fissures | Visual + backlight | None |
If You Find Problems
Minor issues (small chips, slight scratches) — document, request partial credit
Major issues (warping >1.0 mm, cracked bolt holes, open fissures) — stop installation, contact supplier immediately, file claim
Don’t install defective slate — once installed, your claim may be denied
💡 Pro Tip: Test every seam of multi-piece slate (5-piece or 3-piece) with the fingernail test. A perfect seam should be undetectable.
📖 Related: How to Test Slate Quality Before Buying →
Part 8: Building a Long-Term Supplier Relationship
The best import strategy is not finding the cheapest one-time supplier — it’s building a reliable long-term partnership.
What to Look for in a Long-Term Partner
| Quality | Why |
|---|---|
| Consistent quality | Test reports on every batch |
| Transparent communication | WhatsApp / WeChat, fast responses |
| Willingness to accommodate custom specifications | Frame drawings, bolt hole patterns |
| After-sales support | Installation guides, claims process |
| Export experience to your region | Smooth customs clearance |
Red Flags That Signal “Find Another Supplier”
🚩 Can’t provide flatness certificate with actual numbers
🚩 Recommends stacking 45 mm crates
🚩 No ISPM-15 stamp on wood packaging
🚩 Refuses third-party inspection
🚩 No written warranty (or <30 days)
📖 Related: Common Mistakes When Choosing a Snooker Slate Supplier →
Final Word: Import Smart, Not Hard
How to import snooker slate from China — in summary:
✅ Find and vet suppliers — beyond price, look for test reports, references, and third-party inspection acceptance
✅ Confirm every specification — thickness, flatness, density, sealing, bolt holes (put it in writing)
✅ Calculate landed cost — ex-works + shipping + duties + tariffs (including Section 301 for USA)
✅ Demand export-grade packaging — 15 mm plywood, steel bands, 20 mm foam, steel corners, ISPM-15
✅ Use third-party inspection for container orders — SGS or Bureau Veritas
✅ Get insurance — all-risk coverage with concealed damage clause
✅ Inspect upon receipt — before installation
The cheapest slate is not the most cost-effective. The right slate — properly specified, packaged, and shipped — saves you thousands in replacements and lost reputation.
At Slate of China , we simplify importing for our global customers:
🪨 Grade A Chinese slate from Yushan — the world’s billiard slate capital
📏 CNC ground to ≤0.3 mm flatness — flatness certificate provided
🔩 Precision bolt holes CNC drilled to your frame drawing
🧴 6-side pre-sealed — ready for installation
📦 Export packaging — 15 mm plywood, steel bands, 20 mm foam, steel corners, ISPM-15
📸 Pre-shipment photos — every crate photographed before sealing
🌍 Shipped to 30+ countries — USA, Canada, EU, UK, Australia, Middle East
Ready to import slate with confidence?
👉 Contact us for a quote — and ask for our free import checklist and sample test reports.
Popular Tags / Hashtags
#ImportSnookerSlate #ChinaBilliardSlate #YushanSlate #Section301Tariffs #ContainerLoading #ISPM15 #BilliardImport #WholesaleBilliards #SlateExport #TableInstallation #CustomsClearance
Related Resources
📥 Download: Snooker Slate Import Checklist (PDF)
📖 Read: Snooker Slate Quality Inspection Checklist (50 points)
📖 Read: What Determines Slate Quality? Buyer’s Guide
📖 Read: Snooker Slate Pricing Factors: What Affects Cost?
📖 Read: Snooker Slate HS Code & Export Guide
📖 Read: Snooker Slate Packaging Standards for Export
📖 Read: Common Mistakes When Choosing a Snooker Slate Supplier
