A practical 5-step framework for B2B buyers sourcing lighting products from China. Each step builds on the previous one — document request, database verification, company cross-check, lab validation, and product model matching. Use this guide before every order.
Buyers often jump straight to checking a certificate number without first confirming the supplier is real or the test lab is accredited. This creates a false sense of security — a valid certificate from a fraudulent company is still fraudulent. The 5 steps below are ordered intentionally: each step validates the foundation for the next.
Certification verification is a chain of trust with five links: the supplier's legal identity → the documentation they provide → the issuing body's database → the testing lab's accreditation → the product model match. If any link fails, the entire certification is invalid for your order.
Chinese certificate fraud follows predictable patterns. The most common: using a legitimate company's certificate numbers, fabricating reports under a real lab's name, and certifying one product model while shipping a cheaper variant. Each step in this guide targets a specific fraud pattern.
This guide covers the five certifications most critical for lighting products: CE (EU), UL (North America), RoHS (EU/China), FCC (US), and CCC (China domestic). Each has a specific database, verification method, and common forgery tactic.
Follow these steps in order. Each step builds on the previous one — skipping steps creates gaps that counterfeit certifications exploit.
Before verifying anything, you need the right documents. For every certification the supplier claims, demand:
• CE: EU Declaration of Conformity signed by the manufacturer's authorized representative, plus full EMC/LVD test reports referencing EN 55015, EN 61547, EN 60598.
• UL: UL file number plus the most recent Follow-Up Service inspection report showing the factory address.
• RoHS: Full IEC 62321 test report with section-by-section results for all 10 restricted substances (Pb, Hg, Cd, Cr6+, PBBs, PBDEs, DEHP, BBP, DBP, DIBP).
• FCC: FCC ID number (for products with radio transmitters) or SDoC with test report from an FCC-recognized lab.
• CCC: CCC certificate number with factory code and product model.
Red flag: A supplier who hesitates, offers only one-page summaries, or claims the test report is "confidential" is hiding something. Genuine certification holders provide full reports without resistance.
Take every certificate number and file number from the documentation and search the issuing body's public database:
• CE → EU NANDO: Look up the Notified Body's 4-digit number at ec.europa.eu/growth/tools-databases/nando/. Confirm the body is authorized for the specific directive (EMC 2014/30/EU, LVD 2014/35/EU, RoHS 2011/65/EU). A body authorized for machinery cannot certify lighting.
• UL → UL Product iQ: Search the UL file number at ul.com/database. Verify the certificate holder name matches the supplier's registered company. Check the product category code (UL 1598 for luminaires, UL 8750 for LED drivers).
• FCC → FCC OET: Search the FCC ID at fcc.gov/oet/ea/fccid. For SDoC products, confirm the testing lab is FCC-recognized.
• CCC → CQC: Verify the CCC certificate number at cqc.com.cn. Confirm the factory code on the certificate matches the actual production site.
Critical: If a certificate number returns "no results" in the official database, the certificate is fabricated — regardless of how professional the PDF looks. Official databases update within days of issuance.
A valid certificate number is meaningless if the company holding it is not a real legal entity. Before proceeding, verify the supplier's corporate identity:
• GSXT.gov.cn: China's National Enterprise Credit Information Publicity System. Search by the supplier's Chinese registered name (中文全称) or unified social credit code. Confirm: registered capital, incorporation date, business scope includes manufacturing, operating status is active.
• Qichacha (qichacha.com) / Tianyancha (tianyancha.com): Cross-reference for ownership structure, shareholder changes, litigation records, tax violations, and annual reports. Look for: recent ownership transfers (within 6 months), ongoing lawsuits, revoked licenses, or discrepancies between registered and claimed factory addresses.
• Certificate holder name match: The company name on every certificate must match the GSXT registered name exactly. A certificate issued to a different legal entity — even a subsidiary or trading arm — is not valid for your order.
Test reports are only valid if the testing laboratory holds independent accreditation. A common fraud: using a real lab's name and logo on a report the lab never issued.
• Chinese labs → CNAS: Verify accreditation at cnas.org.cn. Search the lab's CNAS accreditation number. Confirm the accreditation scope includes the test standard cited (IEC 62321 for RoHS, EN 55015 for EMC, GB 7000.1 for CCC).
• International labs → ILAC/ISO 17025: Verify at ilac.org. The lab must hold ISO 17025 accreditation with a scope covering the relevant test standards. Major labs (SGS, TÜV, Bureau Veritas, Intertek) maintain public directories.
• Direct confirmation: For high-value orders, email or call the lab with the report reference number. Ask: "Did your lab issue report [number] for product [model] on [date]?" A lab will confirm or deny within 1-2 business days.
Red flag pattern: Test reports from labs that are "in the process of accreditation" or "recognized by the manufacturer." Accreditation is binary — a lab either holds it or doesn't.
The most frequently skipped — and most expensive — step. Chinese suppliers commonly certify a high-spec model and ship a lower-spec variant. The certificate is genuine, but it doesn't cover your product.
• Check the full model string: Every character matters. "LED-P40-40W-4000K" is a different product from "LED-P40-36W-3000K." Confirm wattage, CCT, CRI, driver model, and LED chip brand match between the certificate and your purchase order.
• Check the rated specifications: The certificate lists rated voltage, current, power, and IP rating. These must match your product's specification sheet exactly. A certificate for a 40W fixture does not cover a 50W variant.
• Check certificate scope: Some UL listings cover a product family (e.g., LED-P40 series, 30W-50W). If the certificate lists a range, confirm your specific model falls within it — and demand written confirmation from the supplier.
• Re-verify before every order: UL listings require quarterly Follow-Up Service inspections. RoHS test reports older than 3 years should be renewed. Certifications expire or are revoked — never assume they're still valid from your last order.
Standards Referenced: EU 2011/65/EU (RoHS Directive), IEC 62321:2013 (RoHS testing methodology), UL 1598 (Luminaires), UL 8750 (LED Drivers), EN 55015:2019 (EMC for lighting), FCC Part 15 Subpart B, GB 26572-2025 (China RoHS), GB 7000.1 (Luminaires — China)
Databases Referenced: EU NANDO (ec.europa.eu/growth/tools-databases/nando/), UL Product iQ (ul.com/database), FCC OET (fcc.gov/oet/ea/fccid), CQC (cqc.com.cn), CNAS (cnas.org.cn), GSXT (gsxt.gov.cn), ILAC (ilac.org), Qichacha (qichacha.com), Tianyancha (tianyancha.com)
Data Verified: June 2026 — Compare2Best Lighting Team
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