A major shift in South Africa’s international trade landscape took effect this week as the South African Revenue Service (SARS) finalised the operational framework for the country’s inclusion in China’s unilateral zero-tariff export scheme. The framework, which became fully active on 1 June, allows specific local goods to enter the world’s largest consumer market duty-free.
While the non-reciprocal trade arrangement technically commenced in May, South Africa delayed its rollout to establish the necessary domestic legal mechanisms.
To bridge this gap, SARS has confirmed it will issue compliance certificates retrospectively to ensure local shipments dispatched during the pilot phase are not penalised.
The elimination of import duties presents a significant commercial opportunity for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in the agricultural processing and manufacturing sectors. However, customs trade specialists warn that navigating the strict compliance protocols required to unlock these benefits will test the capacity of smaller operators.
Legal structures and administrative protocols
The operational foundation of the framework relies on rule amendments gazetted under Section 46A of the Customs and Excise Act. Under these provisions, SARS serves as the sole designated issuing authority for the necessary Rules of Origin certificates, which verify that exported products are genuinely produced within South Africa.
To simplify access, the revenue service has introduced a standardised, printable digital certificate format that includes embedded security features verified by China’s Customs Administration.
SARS Commissioner Dr Johnstone Makhubu emphasised that the operational delay would not disadvantage early participants who moved goods before the June launch.
“We are introducing a simple, printable certificate format, allowing exporters to prove origin and claim the tariff preference straight away,” Makhubu said. “No qualifying exporter will be left behind.”
SARS indicated that exporters can temporarily lodge financial security with Chinese customs authorities for shipments currently in transit without documentation. This security will be released once the official SARS certificate is presented.
Compliance realities for small exporters
Despite the removal of financial tariffs, small business trade consultants caution that the agreement is not an open door for all goods. Certain product lines remain restricted by rigid tariff-rate quotas, meaning duty-free status is capped at specific volumes before standard tax rates apply.
Independent trade consultant Nhlanhla Gule noted that the primary operational barrier for smaller enterprises has shifted from financial cost to administrative precision.
“Eliminating tariff levels the playing field on price, but the actual bottleneck for an SME is proving compliance with international Rules of Origin,” Gule explained. “A small agro-processing business or specialised component manufacturer must maintain flawless documentation tracing every raw material to its source. If a single component cannot be legally verified, the shipment faces rejection or seizure at Chinese ports.”
The risk of administrative disqualification is a pressing concern for boutique producers trying to scale globally. Mandla Kheswa, who operates a specialised rooibos and honeybush processing cooperative in the Western Cape, stated that local producers require direct technical support to leverage the framework effectively.
“Access to a zero-tariff market is massive for our growth, but smaller cooperatives do not have dedicated compliance departments,” Kheswa said. “If the application process on eFiling becomes overly complex, the benefits will inevitably flow to larger commercial agricultural conglomerates rather than developing enterprises.”
SARS has urged businesses to verify product eligibility directly with their Chinese trading partners before dispatching stock. The revenue service has established a dedicated support channel to assist small operators navigating the initial application procedures.


























































