Orders move from Shopify into fulfillment
Use one connected workflow instead of copying order details into supplier chats, spreadsheets, and shipping forms.
Shopify Fulfillment
Shiplox helps Shopify sellers source products from China, check quality in the warehouse, pack orders, ship worldwide, and keep tracking visible. You can start with one product price request before committing to samples, stock, or full fulfillment.
The short answer
Shopify fulfillment from China means your store orders are handled near the supplier base instead of moving every product through several disconnected partners. A China-based fulfillment workflow can source or receive products, inspect them, store inventory, pack customer orders, arrange international shipping, and return tracking information to your store.
This model works best when your products are made in China, when you need samples before buying stock, or when you want faster order handling without managing suppliers every day. It can also help stores that need custom packaging, branded inserts, bundle assembly, or a clearer way to explain delivery times to customers.
Use one connected workflow instead of copying order details into supplier chats, spreadsheets, and shipping forms.
Store proven products in China so stock is ready for checking, packing, and international dispatch.
Catch wrong variants, visible defects, missing accessories, and packaging issues before the customer receives the parcel.
Ship orders with clear tracking so customers and support teams know where each parcel is moving.
Workflow
The highest-value Shopify fulfillment setup is not only a shipping label. It connects product sourcing, supplier checks, warehouse intake, order data, packing, shipping, and tracking into one repeatable operating flow.
Step 1
Send a product link, photo, or supplier option
Step 2
Shiplox checks supplier price, MOQ, sample cost, and shipping fit
Step 3
Approve the quote or order a sample before stocking inventory
Step 4
Inventory is stored, checked, packed, and prepared in China
Step 5
Shopify orders move into fulfillment with product and address details
Step 6
Tracking is returned after shipment so the customer can follow delivery
A useful fulfillment partner should explain exactly what happens before a parcel ships. Ask how product requests are reviewed, how samples are arranged, where inventory is stored, how orders are received from Shopify, what quality checks are included, and how tracking is sent back after shipment. The answer should not be vague. You need to know what the warehouse actually does for every order.
This setup is not right for every store. If your products are made locally, if your customers expect same-day domestic delivery, or if your products need strict local compliance handling, a local 3PL or specialized importer may be better. China fulfillment is strongest when the supplier base, packaging work, and international shipping process are already connected to China.
It is also important to avoid unrealistic delivery promises. A stable 7 to 12 day delivery range is better than a 5 day promise that fails often. Search traffic can bring customers to the page, but retention depends on the operational promise being true.
Cost and delivery planning
The biggest mistake sellers make is comparing fulfillment partners only by the first unit price. A real Shopify fulfillment quote should explain product cost, packed weight, shipping route, quality check work, packaging cost, and service work separately. Without that breakdown, it is difficult to set a profitable retail price or decide whether a product is worth scaling.
Delivery promises should also be based on the normal route, not the fastest parcel you have ever seen. If your store advertises a delivery range that the warehouse and carrier can meet consistently, customers are less likely to open disputes or send support tickets. A clear 7 to 12 day expectation can be stronger than a vague fast shipping claim.
Shiplox is most useful when a seller wants the fulfillment process reviewed before growth. That means checking the product, sample, warehouse flow, packaging rules, shipping country, and tracking experience before paid ads or influencer traffic create more orders than the supplier can handle cleanly.