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What material is this?

材料 is the word you use constantly in Chinese sourcing. The answer to this question — not price, not lead time — is what determines whether a supplier can actually make what you need.

这是什么材料?

zhè shì shén me cái liào

What material is this? — the fundamental sourcing question that determines product quality, price, and suitability. In Chinese factory communication, 'material' means composition, grade, and specifications.

LITERAL

This is what material?

WHAT IT REALLY MEANS

What material is this? — the fundamental sourcing question that determines product quality, price, and suitability. In Chinese factory communication, 'material' means composition, grade, and specifications.

WHEN IT FITS

Evaluating a product sample or listingComparing different factory quotes for the same productDetermining whether a product meets your market's quality standards

“This is really nice — what’s it made of?” is the most expensive question you can fail to ask in Chinese sourcing. 材料 (cái liào, material) is the foundation of every product’s cost, quality, and performance. Two products that look identical in a photo can differ in material composition by a factor of 3-5× in cost and a lifetime in durability. The Chinese factory will tell you the material if you ask — but you have to ask the specific question, not the general one.

The general question “What material?” (什么材料) will get you a general answer: “cotton,” “metal,” “plastic.” The specific question gets you actionable information: 具体成分 (specific composition) — “65% cotton 35% polyester, 200gsm jersey knit.” 有没有材料规格书 (is there a material spec sheet) — a document listing grade, thickness, treatment, and source. The difference is the difference between buying a product and understanding it. A buyer who asks for the material spec sheet can compare quotes from different factories on an apples-to-apples basis. A buyer who accepts “it’s cotton” is comparing prices without knowing if they’re comparing the same thing.

The material question is especially important when comparing quotes. A factory quoting 30% less than competitors is almost certainly using different materials — thinner fabric, lower-grade metal, cheaper plastic. The price difference is not magic; it’s material substitution. Asking 这个价格对应的是什么材料 (what material corresponds to this price) and 如果用更好的材料, 价差多少 (if we use better materials, what’s the price difference) gives you the upgrade path. The factory can produce at multiple quality levels. Your job is to define which level you’re buying, and material is how you define it. Without material specs, you’re buying promises. With them, you’re buying products.

HOW PEOPLE ACTUALLY SAY IT

这个款用的什么材料?面料成分发我一下。

Zhège kuǎn yòng de shénme cáiliào? Miànliào chéngfèn fā wǒ yīxià.

What material is this style using? Send me the fabric composition.

Material inquiry for textile products — asking for specific composition data
这个价格是用什么材料报的?如果换材料价格有变化吗?

Zhège jiàgé shì yòng shénme cáiliào bào de? Rúguǒ huàn cáiliào jiàgé yǒu biànhuà ma?

What material is this price based on? If we change materials, does the price change?

Linking material to cost — smart question during price negotiation

CHOOSE BY SITUATION

这个是什么成分?

Zhège shì shénme chéngfèn?

What is the composition? — more specific, asking for the breakdown of materials (e.g., 65% cotton, 35% polyester).

You want the specific material composition, not just the generic name

有没有材料检测报告?

Yǒu méiyǒu cáiliào jiǎncè bàogào?

Is there a material testing report? — asking for third-party verification of material claims.

Material composition is critical (e.g., for safety standards, import compliance, or premium products)