native

Let's confirm everything in writing

A natural, professional phrase that Chinese businesspeople use when they want to move from verbal discussion to documented agreement. Neither defensive nor aggressive.

我们书面确认一下

wǒmen shūmiàn quèrèn yīxià

Let's confirm it in writing (to have a record)

LITERAL

We written confirm once

WHAT IT REALLY MEANS

Let's confirm it in writing (to have a record)

WHEN IT FITS

After a WeChat voice call to document what was agreedFollowing up on a verbal price or specification negotiationCreating a paper trail for changes to an existing order

A deal is not a deal in China until it is written down. This is not a matter of mistrust — it is a shared understanding that verbal conversations are for exploring possibilities, and written confirmations are for locking them in. The phrase 我们书面确认一下 (wǒmen shūmiàn quèrèn yīxià) is the bridge between these two modes, and it is spoken without awkwardness because everyone in the Chinese business world knows the ritual.

The most dangerous gap in cross-border supplier communication is the space between a WeChat voice call and what actually gets produced. Chinese suppliers, especially in smaller factories, operate heavily on verbal agreements internally. The boss tells the floor manager, the floor manager tells the workers, and by the time the product is made, the specifications may have drifted from what you discussed on the phone. Written confirmation is not about catching them in a lie — it is about giving them a reference document they can show their own team. Framing it this way when you ask is key: say 方便你们内部沟通 (fāngbiàn nǐmen nèibù gōutōng — convenient for your internal communication) rather than “I need a paper trail.”

The distinction between 文字确认 (wénzì quèrèn — text confirmation) and 书面确认 (shūmiàn quèrèn — written confirmation) matters in practice. The former means a WeChat message — fast, informal, and legally ambiguous but practically useful. The latter implies something more formal, perhaps an email or a document, that carries more weight. Many Chinese suppliers will happily 文字确认 on WeChat but hesitate at a formal 书面确认 because the latter feels like a prelude to legal action. Choose your level carefully. For routine order details, a WeChat text confirmation (文字确认) is the cultural norm and all you need. Reserve formal written confirmation for major changes, custom tooling investments, or situations where the relationship is already strained.

The magic framing, the one that gets written confirmation without raising defenses, is 免得后面搞错 (miǎnde hòumiàn gǎo cuò — to avoid mix-ups later). This phrase positions the written record as a tool for accuracy, not a weapon for blame. It is technically true — verbal details do get misremembered — and it is socially graceful. Everyone can agree that avoiding mistakes is a good thing. You are not saying “I don’t trust you”; you are saying “humans make errors, let’s prevent them.” This is the framing that Chinese professionals themselves use with each other, and it works.

HOW PEOPLE ACTUALLY SAY IT

刚才电话里说的,我们书面确认一下吧,免得后面搞错。

gāngcái diànhuà lǐ shuō de, wǒmen shūmiàn quèrèn yīxià ba, miǎnde hòumiàn gǎo cuò.

What we just discussed on the phone, let's confirm it in writing so there's no mix-up later.

After a phone or voice call discussion, transitioning to written record
价格和交期我再发一遍,你书面确认一下。

jiàgé hé jiāoqī wǒ zài fā yī biàn, nǐ shūmiàn quèrèn yīxià.

I'll send the price and delivery date again, you confirm it in writing.

Supplier asking the buyer to confirm key terms in writing

CHOOSE BY SITUATION

发个文字确认

fā ge wénzì quèrèn

Send a text confirmation

More casual, specifically asking for a WeChat text message confirmation rather than a formal document

微信上确认一下就行

wēixìn shàng quèrèn yīxià jiù xíng

Just confirming on WeChat is fine

When you don't need a formal document — a WeChat message confirmation is sufficient

能不能发个邮件确认

néng bù néng fā ge yóujiàn quèrèn

Can you send an email to confirm

You specifically want email confirmation rather than WeChat — often for external record-keeping