How Chinese tea reaches the world — and why the pathways matter
The geography of Chinese tea exports is a palimpsest of ancient caravan trails and modern container-ship lanes. Long before the term ‘supply chain’ entered the lexicon, tea leaves from the Wuyi Mountains were pressed into cakes and carried to Russia on the ‘Great Tea Road’ — a route that foreshadowed today’s preference for China’s dark teas and fermented pu-erh in Moscow and St. Petersburg. That historic corridor is now examined in our dedicated analysis, China tea exports to Russia — 2026 trade-data analysis.
In 2023, China’s General Administration of Customs reported that tea exports to Russia alone exceeded 15,000 metric tons, a figure that underscores the commercial might of cross-border relationships. Yet the route is far from static. Amgalan Chin, cross-regional tea expert at Teamotea, observes: ‘The Russian market’s appetite for sheng pu-erh has grown by double digits annually — reshaping supply chains from Menghai to Moscow and prompting mid-tier producers to age tea in Guangdong warehouses before shipping.’ Such dynamics are also explored in the report Pu’er cross-border flow — Hong Kong to mainland and back, which highlights the capital and storage loops that blur the line between export and domestic circulation.
While Russia absorbs large volumes of compressed tea, the European Union presents a contrasting landscape of regulatory hurdles and specialty niches. The EU’s stringent maximum residue limits for pesticides — enforced at levels often lower than China’s domestic standards — have redirected exporter attention toward organic-certified green teas from Zhejiang and Fujian. Our China tea exports to the EU — 2026 customs-code breakdown dissects the harmonised system codes to reveal that jasmine-scented green tea (mòlì huāchá — 茉莉花茶) under HS 0902.10 remains the highest-volume line, but that the fastest growth is in premium white tea (Bái Háo Yín Zhēn — 白毫银针) imported by German health-conscious buyers. The sensory imprint of these shipments is distinct: dry warehouse aromas of hay and honey mingle with the metallic tang of steel shipping containers as Fuding’s silver needles travel from Fuding to Hamburg.
Across the Atlantic, the US market is shaped by tariffs, health trends, and a growing interest in ready-to-drink tea bases. Our report China tea exports to the United States — 2026 HS-code analysis shows that black tea imports, though dominant by volume, are losing share to green tea extracts used in bottled beverages — a shift that benefits large-scale processors in Hunan and Hubei. Meanwhile, the Middle East and North Africa remain voracious consumers of Chinese gunpowder green tea, the backbone of Morocco’s l-maghribiyya tea ritual. Our Chinese tea exports to MENA — 2026 destination breakdown maps how Chinese exporters are adapting packaging and blend profiles to suit local palates, including a resurgence of heavy-fired oolong from Anxi as a cost-effective alternative to Taiwanese high-mountain tea.
Beyond the traditional powerhouses, Southeast Asia’s own export flows are evolving. The ASEAN tea export shift — Vietnam, Thailand, Malaysia trade-data article illustrates how these nations are both partners and competitors. Vietnam’s rising green tea shipments to China for reprocessing and re-export complicate the data, while Malaysia’s role as a pu-erh storage hub continues to confound customs classifiers. At tea.report, we map these interconnected flows, linking raw data from China Customs with on-the-ground insights from our team and partners at tea.travel and tea.school, where enthusiasts can trace the very routes we quantify.
Ultimately, export flows are not just numbers on a manifest: they are the monetary manifestation of taste, policy, and heritage. By following the tea from bush to buyer, we equip the industry with the foresight needed to navigate tariffs, certification, and shifting consumer demand — ensuring that the next shipment lands exactly where it is most valued.