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Import Guide — Zimbabwe

Importing from China to Zimbabwe: The Practical 2026 Guide

How Zimbabwean businesses get goods from a factory in China to Harare or Bulawayo — the Beitbridge and Beira corridors, what ZIMRA charges at the border, conformity certification, and what a realistic landed cost looks like. Written by Gauteng-based import agents who run the China route every week.

Read time9 minutes UpdatedJuly 2026 ForZimbabwean businesses & cross-border traders
What's Covered
  1. The two corridors into Zimbabwe
  2. Route 1: Durban and the Beitbridge border
  3. Route 2: The Beira corridor
  4. Air freight to Zimbabwe
  5. ZIMRA: duty, surtax and import VAT
  6. Conformity certification (CBCA) before shipment
  7. Landed cost: what to budget
  8. Mistakes Zimbabwean importers make
  9. Frequently Asked Questions

The two corridors into Zimbabwe

Zimbabwe is landlocked, so Chinese cargo arrives through a neighbouring port and finishes by road or rail. Two corridors carry nearly all of it:

Unlike Namibia and Botswana, Zimbabwe is not a member of the Southern African Customs Union — so the customs story is entirely different, and it's where most of the surprises on this route live. We'll get to ZIMRA below.

The China side of the process — supplier vetting, samples, negotiation, payment — is the same as for any destination; our step-by-step import guide covers it in full.

01Route 1: Durban and the Beitbridge border

The default route for Zimbabwe-bound cargo. Goods sail from China to Durban (30–40 days, multiple weekly sailings), are cleared as goods in transit, and travel under bond by road through South Africa to Beitbridge — the busiest land border in Southern Africa — where ZIMRA assesses duty and VAT before the final leg to Harare or Bulawayo.

Two things decide whether this route runs smoothly:

Why importers still choose Durban: despite the longer distance, the sheer frequency of China–Durban sailings, the depth of consolidation services, and the option to group your cargo with other Zimbabwe-bound freight in Gauteng usually outweigh the shorter map distance of the alternative.

02Route 2: The Beira corridor

Beira is roughly 550 km from Harare — by far the shortest port-to-capital distance — and for full containers to Harare it can be the cheaper corridor. The trade-offs are fewer vessel calls (often via transhipment), more variable port performance, and thinner LCL/groupage options than Durban. In practice: FCL to Harare, get Beira quoted; LCL or Bulawayo-bound cargo, Durban usually wins. Quoting both costs nothing and the answer changes with the season.

03Air freight to Zimbabwe

For urgent, light or high-value cargo, air freight runs via Johannesburg (with bonded road onward) or direct into Harare where capacity allows. Realistic door-to-door time is 10–15 working days from factory collection to delivery, versus 55–70 working days by sea. Air is charged per chargeable kilogram, so it's the natural choice for spares, samples and dense high-value goods — the full decision logic is in our air vs sea freight guide.

04ZIMRA: duty, surtax and import VAT

Because Zimbabwe sits outside SACU, goods pay duty under Zimbabwe's own tariff, administered by the Zimbabwe Revenue Authority (ZIMRA). Depending on the product, the border charge can stack up to three components:

The single most important number on a Zimbabwe import is therefore the HS classification. Two similar-looking products can land 40% apart in cost purely on tariff lines. Confirm the classification — and whether surtax applies — with ZIMRA or a licensed clearing agent before you pay a factory deposit, not when the truck reaches Beitbridge.

One consistency on this route: the trade runs largely in US dollars, from the factory payment through most of the freight chain, which at least keeps the costing arithmetic in one currency. Standard Incoterms apply to the factory quote.

05Conformity certification (CBCA) before shipment

Zimbabwe operates a Consignment Based Conformity Assessment (CBCA) programme for a range of regulated product categories — the goods must be inspected and certified in the country of export before they ship. Cargo in an affected category arriving without a CBCA certificate faces penalties and clearance delays.

The practical rule: check whether your product category falls under CBCA while you're still negotiating with the factory, because the inspection has to be arranged in China before loading. It's a routine step when planned, and an expensive one when discovered at the border. We confirm CBCA applicability as part of quoting any Zimbabwe-bound shipment.

06Landed cost: what to budget

The realistic landed-cost picture for a typical general-cargo shipment from China to Harare, against the factory (FOB) price:

Cost lineTypical valueWho charges
Product cost (FOB China)100%Factory
Sea freight to Durban or Beira8–25%Freight forwarder
Customs duty (Zimbabwe tariff, by HS code)0–40%ZIMRA
Surtax (selected consumer goods only)0–25%ZIMRA
Import VAT (15%)~17%ZIMRA
Port, transit-bond & clearing fees3–6%Clearing agent
Road freight to final address4–10%Transport
Total landed cost~140–210%

The spread is wider than for SACU destinations: production machinery with 0% duty and no surtax can land around 1.4× the factory price, while surtaxed consumer goods can exceed . This is exactly why the HS classification check comes before the deposit. For the general logic behind each line, see China import costs explained; for why machinery does so well, see the machinery import guide.

Mistakes Zimbabwean importers make

  1. Ordering before classifying. Duty, surtax and CBCA all hang off the HS code. Confirm all three before paying the factory deposit.
  2. Discovering CBCA at the border. If your category is regulated, the inspection happens in China before loading. Missing it means penalties and delays.
  3. Treating the transit leg casually. In-bond movement through South Africa is paperwork-critical. Use a forwarder who runs this corridor weekly, not occasionally.
  4. Comparing the factory price to a delivered price. With duty potentially at 40% plus surtax, the FOB price tells you almost nothing about the landed cost.
  5. No border buffer. Beitbridge can add a day or a week. Never promise a customer a delivery date that assumes the best case.
  6. Inconsistent paperwork. Commercial invoice, packing list and payment records must tell the same story — value discrepancies are a standard inspection trigger.
China to Zimbabwe — Full Route Quote
Know your landed cost before you commit

Send us your product details and destination and we'll quote the full route — product cost, freight via Durban or Beira, clearance and delivery — including a check on duty, surtax and CBCA for your product category.

Request a Quote

Frequently Asked Questions

Two main corridors: the Durban route (sea to Durban, road through Beitbridge to Harare or Bulawayo) offers the most sailings and consolidation options; the Beira route through Mozambique is geographically shorter to Harare and can be cheaper for full containers, but sailings are fewer and port performance less consistent. Quote both and decide per shipment.
Zimbabwe is not a SACU member, so goods pay duty under Zimbabwe's own tariff, administered by ZIMRA. The landed charge can include customs duty (commonly 0–40% by HS code), a surtax on selected finished consumer goods, and import VAT at 15%. Machinery often attracts low or zero duty; finished consumer goods sit at the high end. Confirm your exact HS classification before ordering.
By sea via Durban, plan on roughly 55–70 working days door-to-door: 30–40 days sailing, port clearance, then the road leg and the Beitbridge crossing, which can add a day to a week. Air freight typically runs 10–15 working days door-to-door. Factory production time is on top of both.
Not if they move in bond. Zimbabwe-bound cargo is cleared at Durban as goods in transit and travels under bond to the border, where ZIMRA assesses Zimbabwean duty and VAT. The in-bond paperwork must be right — errors are the most common cause of trucks sitting at Beitbridge.
The Chinese factory is paid in US dollars, and most of the freight and clearing chain on this route also quotes in US dollars, which keeps the costing consistent. Duty and VAT are assessed by ZIMRA in line with current regulations. Keep invoices and payment records consistent — value discrepancies are a common inspection trigger.
For a range of regulated categories, yes — the CBCA programme requires affected goods to be inspected and certified before shipment from China. Arriving without the certificate causes penalties and delays. Check whether your product category is affected before the goods ship; we confirm this as part of quoting.

Disclaimer: This guide is general information for importers and not professional legal, tax, customs or financial advice. Figures such as freight rates, customs duty percentages, surtax, VAT rates, currency arrangements and timelines are indicative only and change frequently — Zimbabwean customs and currency regulations in particular are revised often. Confirm current rates, CBCA applicability and your specific tariff (HS) classification with ZIMRA or a licensed clearing agent before making decisions. For figures specific to your shipment, request a quote.