What Alibaba Trade Assurance Actually Covers

Alibaba Trade Assurance is a free buyer protection program that covers two main categories of disputes:

Sounds comprehensive. But in practice, there are significant limitations that most buyers discover only after a dispute arises:

The Off-Platform Trap

The most common reason Trade Assurance claims fail is that the buyer paid outside the Alibaba platform. Suppliers often ask buyers to wire money directly to get a "better price" or "faster production." Once you pay off-platform, Trade Assurance coverage is void — and you are left with only legal remedies.

When Trade Assurance Works Well

Trade Assurance is most effective in these scenarios:

  1. Small to mid-size orders (under US$30,000) where the loss is within the coverage cap.
  2. Clear quality disputes with obvious defects that a third-party inspector can verify.
  3. Non-delivery cases where the supplier simply never shipped and stopped responding.
  4. Orders placed and paid entirely through Alibaba with all communication on the platform.

In these cases, Trade Assurance can provide a relatively fast refund — often within 2-4 weeks. The process involves submitting evidence through Alibaba's dispute center, and Alibaba's resolution team makes a determination.

When Trade Assurance Falls Short

Trade Assurance fails — or provides only partial recovery — in these common situations:

SituationWhy Trade Assurance Fails
Large orders (US$30,000+)Coverage cap means you recover only a fraction. The remainder requires legal action.
Deposit fraudTrade Assurance covers orders, not advance payments to personal accounts or off-platform transfers.
Supplier dissolvedIf the supplier has already deregistered their company, Alibaba cannot enforce a refund — there is no account to debit.
Subjective quality disputes"The color is slightly off" or "the material feels cheaper than expected" are hard to prove with third-party inspection.
Off-platform paymentDirect wire transfers outside Alibaba void the coverage entirely.
IP infringementTrade Assurance does not cover intellectual property disputes — counterfeit goods, unauthorized use of designs, trademark theft.
Contract disputesBreach of contract terms (delivery delays, payment schedule disputes, IP clauses) are outside Trade Assurance scope.

When Trade Assurance fails or falls short, legal action through CIETAC arbitration or Chinese court litigation provides several critical advantages:

Head-to-Head Comparison

FeatureTrade AssuranceLegal Action
Max recovery~US$30,000 per orderNo cap — full losses + damages
Speed2-6 weeks3-12 months
CostFreeFiling fees + attorney fees
Covers fraudPartially (non-delivery only)Yes — full fraud recovery
Covers IP disputesNoYes
Covers off-platformNoYes
Asset freezingNoYes — emergency orders
International enforcementN/A (Alibaba-internal)CIETAC: 170+ countries
Supplier consequencesAlibaba account suspendedPublic court record, asset seizure
Consequential damagesNoYes
Evidence requirementsModerateHigher — but broader admissibility

The best approach is not "either/or" — it is "both, simultaneously." Here is what we recommend:

  1. File a Trade Assurance claim immediately if your order qualifies. This is free, relatively fast, and may resolve the issue without legal costs.
  2. Simultaneously contact a PRC-licensed attorney to begin evidence preservation and assess legal options. Do not wait for the Trade Assurance result — every day of delay allows the supplier to move assets.
  3. Have your attorney send a demand letter while the Trade Assurance claim is processing. This signals to the supplier that you have legal counsel and are prepared to escalate.
  4. If Trade Assurance covers your full loss, great — case closed. If it covers only part or is rejected, your attorney is already prepared to file CIETAC arbitration or Chinese court litigation.
  5. Apply for asset preservation early in the legal process. This is the move that actually forces settlement — not the Trade Assurance claim, and not even the demand letter.

Do Not Wait for Trade Assurance Before Seeking Legal Help

The biggest mistake buyers make is waiting 4-6 weeks for a Trade Assurance decision before contacting a lawyer. By then, the supplier may have already dissolved the company, emptied bank accounts, and disappeared. File the Trade Assurance claim — but talk to a PRC attorney on the same day.

Frequently Asked Questions

I paid outside Alibaba — can I still file a Trade Assurance claim?

No. Trade Assurance requires that the payment be made through Alibaba's platform. If you paid by direct wire transfer, PayPal, or any method outside Alibaba, the order is not covered by Trade Assurance. However, you still have full legal remedies available — CIETAC arbitration or Chinese court litigation. Contact us for a legal consultation.

What is the maximum Trade Assurance payout?

The maximum payout depends on the supplier's Trade Assurance coverage level, which is set by Alibaba based on the supplier's transaction history and performance. Typical caps range from US$10,000 to US$30,000 per order, though some Gold suppliers may have higher limits. Check the supplier's Trade Assurance badge on their Alibaba store page for the specific coverage amount. For losses exceeding the cap, legal action is the only path to full recovery.

Can Alibaba ban the supplier if they refuse to refund?

Yes. If a supplier loses a Trade Assurance dispute and refuses to pay, Alibaba can suspend their account, remove their Gold Supplier status, and blacklist them on the platform. However, this does not recover your money — it only punishes the supplier. Many fraudulent suppliers simply create a new Alibaba account under a different company name. Legal action is necessary to actually recover funds.

Should I stop communicating with the supplier during a Trade Assurance claim?

No. Continue all communication through Alibaba's messaging system. Every message is evidence. If the supplier admits fault, makes promises, or threatens you, these messages strengthen both your Trade Assurance claim and any subsequent legal action. However, do not agree to any settlement or accept partial refunds without consulting an attorney — this can waive your right to pursue the full amount.