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Christmas light decorations at a Yiwu holiday products stall

Yiwu Christmas & Holiday Products Sourcing Guide

Джастин Jun 30, 2026

Yiwu Christmas and holiday products sourcing is a season unto itself — the market is one of the largest sources of ornaments, lights, artificial trees, inflatables and party goods on earth. The opportunity is huge and the timing is brutal: holiday goods have to be ordered months ahead, and the one thing that sinks a Christmas order is starting it in September.

Key Takeaways

  • Yiwu is a top global source for ornaments, lights, trees, inflatables and party goods.
  • Holiday timing is critical — order Q4 stock by June or July.
  • Christmas lights and electricals need UL/CE-type certification.
  • Trees and decor face flammability and lead rules in many markets.
  • Minimums are low for stock ornaments, higher for custom and lights.
  • Chinese New Year closes the market for weeks — plan around it.
Christmas light decorations at a Yiwu holiday products stall

Seasonal goods are one of many categories — see the full Yiwu product categories guide, and for the full buying process start with our complete Yiwu sourcing guide.

Why Yiwu for Christmas and Holiday Products

Yiwu’s festive ranges are vast and cheap, spanning ornaments, garlands, lights, artificial trees, inflatables, stockings and full party kits. It suits seasonal retailers, party stores and online sellers who need variety and volume at a price that survives freight. The category’s strength is breadth; its discipline is timing, because a holiday product that arrives in December is worthless.

Christmas decor shop display in Yiwu

What Holiday Products You Can Source

  • Ornaments and decor: baubles, garlands, wreaths — low MOQ, watch breakage and lead.
  • Christmas lights: string and LED — the most regulated holiday item.
  • Artificial trees: flammability and lead rules apply.
  • Inflatables and yard decor: motors and lights add certification.
  • Party and festive supplies: tableware, banners, costumes — fast and cheap.
  • Holiday Timing and Lead Times

    Timing is the whole game. Plan backwards from your on-shelf date, and remember Yiwu effectively closes for one to three weeks around Chinese New Year (late January to February). Miss the window and you carry stock for a year.

    ПраздникPeak SeasonOrder ByTypical Lead Time
    РождествоQ4June-July60-90 days + freight
    ХэллоуинSept-OctApril-May45-75 days + freight
    Easter / SpringQ1-Q2October-November45-60 days + freight
    Year-round partyAlways8-10 weeks ahead30-45 days + freight

    Compliance: Lights, Flammability and Lead

    Holiday compliance varies by product and market, so confirm specifics with a testing lab. Christmas lights and any electrical decor generally need recognized safety certification — UL or ETL in the US, CE in the EU — and the wiring, plugs and transformers are exactly where cheap suppliers cut corners. Artificial trees and textiles face flammability standards, and painted or glazed decor can carry lead. Inflatables with motors and lights stack electrical rules on top of the decor rules.

    A pallet of uncertified Christmas lights is a customs seizure and a liability claim waiting to happen. Insist on a valid UL/ETL or CE certificate tied to the exact product, not a generic photo of one.

    Holiday Products at a Glance

    ProductCommon MaterialCompliance RiskTypical MOQKey QC Point
    OrnamentsGlass, plasticLead, breakage100-500 pcsDrop test + lead test
    Christmas lightsPVC wire, LEDElectrical (UL/CE)500-2,000 pcsCert + burn/voltage test
    Artificial treesPVC/PE, metalFlammability, lead100-500 pcsFlammability + branch count
    InflatablesPolyester, motorElectrical + seams200-1,000 pcsSeam + motor + light test

    What We Check on a Holiday Supplier

    • License name matching the invoice and bank account.
    • Valid electrical certification (UL/ETL/CE) tied to the exact light or inflatable.
    • Flammability documentation for trees and textiles.
    • Drop and lead testing on glass and painted ornaments.
    • An AQL inspection against the approved sample before the balance is paid.
    • MOQ and Pricing

      Stock ornaments and party goods start with low minimums, while lights, custom trees and branded sets push toward 500-2,000 units and longer lead times. Price moves on material, light count and certification — certified lights cost more than uncertified ones for a reason, and that reason is whether your container clears customs.

      Party and holiday supplies set from Yiwu

      Holiday electricals demand inspection — see our Yiwu quality inspection guide before you pay the balance.

      Sourcing Holiday Products From Yiwu?
      ChineseYiwu sources festive ranges across Yiwu since 2005. We verify electrical certification, test lights and ornaments, and consolidate your holiday order into one inspected container — in time for the season.

      Get a Free Quote →

      Building a Coordinated Holiday Collection

      Holiday sells on a coherent look, so a coordinated range outperforms a pile of unrelated items. Pick a theme and palette — say a single color story across ornaments, garlands and tableware — and sample the whole set together so finishes match across booths. Because Yiwu spreads festive goods across several halls, an agent who shops the theme in one trip keeps the collection consistent and fills a single container instead of mismatched goods arriving from five suppliers.

      Shipping and Storage for Seasonal Goods

      Seasonal goods have a hard deadline and a short sell-through window, so logistics is part of the buy. Plan to receive Christmas stock by early autumn, which means leaving the factory in summer; build in warehousing if you cannot take it all at once. The cost of arriving late is total, not partial — unsold holiday stock ties up cash for a full year, so pay for the faster, earlier shipment when the calendar is tight.

      Common Holiday Sourcing Mistakes

      • Starting Q4 orders in September instead of June-July.
      • Accepting uncertified lights or inflatables to save a few cents.
      • Forgetting the Chinese New Year shutdown when scheduling.
      • Skipping drop and lead tests on glass ornaments.
      • Buying unrelated items instead of a coordinated, themed range.

      How to Verify Holiday Electrical Safety

      Electrical holiday goods — string lights, light-up decor, inflatables with blowers — are where a cheap order turns into a seizure or a liability claim, so verification is not optional. Ask for the actual safety certificate (UL or ETL for the US, CE for the EU) and confirm it names the exact product and manufacturer, not a similar item; a certificate for a different model is worthless and surprisingly common. Check that the wiring gauge, plug and any transformer match the certified product, because suppliers sometimes certify a premium version and ship a cheaper build.

      Then test the sample as your customer would: run the lights continuously to check for heat and flicker, confirm the voltage and any transformer rating, and inspect the wiring and connections for safety. For inflatables, run the motor, check the seams under pressure, and test the lights together. Lock the approved, certified sample as your inspection standard, and inspect the bulk against it before the balance is paid — because the difference between certified and uncertified lights is whether your container clears customs and whether you sleep at night.

      • A valid UL/ETL or CE certificate naming the exact product.
      • Wiring, plug and transformer matching the certified build.
      • A continuous burn test for heat and flicker.
      • Seam and motor tests on inflatables.
      • The certified sample locked as the inspection standard.

      Example: Building a 15-SKU Christmas Range

      A seasonal retailer plans a 15-SKU Christmas range in May and places it by late June. They choose one color story, sample ornaments, garlands and tableware together so the finishes match, and insist on a UL certificate naming the exact string lights they are buying. Glass ornaments get a drop test and a lead screen; the lights get a burn test. Everything consolidates into one container that leaves China in summer and lands in early autumn, with warehousing booked for the overflow. By starting in spring, the buyer hits the shelves before the season and avoids carrying unsold holiday stock for a year.

      The retailer’s real advantage was the calendar: ordered in June, certified, themed and consolidated — not scrambling for uncertified lights in September.

      Заключение

      Yiwu Christmas and holiday products sourcing is a timing-and-compliance game. Order Q4 stock by mid-year, demand real certification on anything electrical, test the ornaments, and plan around Chinese New Year. Do that and Yiwu fills your season at trade prices; miss it and the goods arrive a year too late.

      Часто задаваемые вопросы

      When should I order Christmas products from Yiwu?

      Place Q4 orders by June or July. Holiday goods need 60-90 days plus freight, and Yiwu closes for one to three weeks around Chinese New Year, so early ordering is essential.

      Do Christmas lights from Yiwu need certification?

      Yes for most markets. Electrical decor generally needs UL or ETL certification in the US and CE in the EU, tied to the exact product. Insist on a valid certificate before ordering.

      What is the MOQ for Yiwu holiday products?

      Stock ornaments and party goods start low; lights, custom trees and branded sets often require 500-2,000 units and longer lead times.

      Are Yiwu artificial trees safe?

      They can be, but trees face flammability and sometimes lead rules. Ask for flammability documentation and test painted or flocked finishes before bulk ordering.

      About the author: Written by the ChineseYiwu Sourcing Team — based inside the Yiwu International Trade City since 2005, with 50+ sourcing specialists and QC inspectors serving importers in 100+ countries.

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