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5 Things Every Garage Door Remote Importer Should Verify Before Bulk Order

The trap most first-time importers fall into on quote 1

A B2B RF remote order at MOQ 500 is small enough to attract quoting from dozens of suppliers, and large enough that a wrong decision costs $5,000–$15,000 in landed inventory plus 90 days of airtime to recover. Most importers we onboard report that their first PO went to whichever supplier returned the lowest price-per-unit within 24 hours. Three months later, they switched.

This checklist is the five-point filter we walk new clients through before we issue a quote. None of the items are trade secrets — they are the same questions any reputable OEM should answer in writing within two business days.

1. Verify the supplier is the factory, not a trading company

Trading companies quote faster because they pool RFQs across three or four factories and rebadge the lowest bid. The unit price is lower; the trade-off is that:

  • Compliance certificates (RCM, FCC, CE-RED) belong to the original factory, not the trading company. If that factory goes silent for two months, your shipment has no documentary backing.
  • PCBA customization takes 30 days at the factory and 60 days at a trading company.
  • After-sales warranty claims route through an extra layer that does not own the production line.

Ask for: the supplier’s business license (verify factory address matches the license), the 出口经营权 filing with Customs, and a photo or video of the SMT line that will assemble your order.

2. Ask for a sample run with AQL sampling, not just a free unit

A free single-unit sample proves the remote pairs with your reference opener. It does not prove that 3% of an order of 500 will fail. The standard cross-border sampling protocol is AQL 5% under MIL-STD-105E or ISO 2859-1, meaning an inspector randomly pulls units from the finished batch and rejects the lot if defect count exceeds a threshold.

Ask for: a sampling report from the most recent PO the supplier shipped to a Western buyer (anonymized if necessary). If the supplier has never run AQL, that is data.

3. Match compliance marks to your target market

A 433 MHz remote sold into Australia without an RCM mark is seized by border inspectors and re-exported at the importer’s cost. Compliance is non-negotiable and the marks must be physically printed on the housing and in the user manual. The four marks B2B buyers most commonly require:

Mark Jurisdiction Typical cost to obtain
RCM Australia $1,200–$2,500 per SKU
FCC Part 15 United States $3,000–$5,000 per SKU
CE-RED European Union $2,000–$4,000 per SKU
RoHS EU + California $500–$1,500 per SKU

Ask for: scan of the actual compliance certificate, the certificate number, and the lab that issued it. Cross-check the certificate number in the regulator’s public database.

4. Confirm PCBA engineering control

Many trading companies and even some factories will quote on a remote built around a generic 433 MHz transmitter IC and a fixed code chip. The result is a remote that pairs with the customer’s opener today but fails the moment the opener’s rolling-code sequence advances.

Ask for: a block diagram of the remote’s PCBA showing the encoder IC (e.g., Holtek HT12E, Microchip HCS200/300, or compatible), the resonator frequency, and the button matrix. A factory that owns its PCBA design will produce this in 24 hours; a trading company will need a week to ask upstream.

5. Lock in after-sales terms before paying the deposit

A reliable OEM warrants the PCBA for 12–24 months and replaces defective units on the next consolidated shipment. A trading company typically offers 90 days or “exchange at customer’s shipping cost.” Both are common; the difference is whether the terms are written into the Proforma Invoice.

Ask for: warranty terms on the PI, defective-unit replacement procedure, and the contact details of an English-speaking account manager (not a generic sales email).

How to use this checklist

Send the five questions above as a single email to any supplier you are evaluating. A qualified OEM answers all five within 48 hours with documentation attached. A trading company answers the first three and stalls on the fourth. The pattern is reliable.

We publish the answers to all five questions on our Capabilities & Compliance page. If you are currently quoting an order and want a second reference point, request our 2026 B2B RF Remote Sourcing Guide (PDF, 24 pages) — it covers each of the five points in detail and includes a sample Proforma Invoice and AQL report from a real shipment.

Request the Sourcing Guide & Factory Price List

Quick comparison — OEM factory vs. trading company

Item OEM factory (e.g., Gemu RF) Trading company
MOQ flexibility 500 pcs typical, 100 pcs sample run 1,000 pcs typical
PCBA customization 15 days 30–60 days
Compliance ownership Factory-owned certificates Rented from upstream
Sampling protocol AQL 5% standard Inconsistent
After-sales warranty 12–24 months, written on PI 90 days, verbal
Account manager Direct line to factory engineer Sales rep, email only

Data shown reflects typical ranges in the residential garage door remote category; specific suppliers vary.

Next step

Request the 2026 Sourcing Guide (PDF) and a current factory price list. We respond to B2B inquiries within one business day with MOQ, lead time, and the four compliance marks relevant to your target market.

Request the Sourcing Guide & Factory Price List

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