Chinese Tea Grades Explained for Buyers

Buyer Guide

Chinese Tea Grades Explained for Buyers

Tea grade is not a single universal standard. For buyers, the most useful approach is comparing grade, origin, season, processing, and consistency together.

What Tea Grade Usually Means

Grade can refer to leaf size, picking standard, processing level, appearance, aroma, or market positioning. The meaning changes by tea type and supplier.

  • Green tea often emphasizes tenderness and shape
  • Oolong tea may emphasize roasting, aroma, and cultivar
  • Pu-erh tea may emphasize material, region, age, and storage
  • Black tea may emphasize leaf style, sweetness, and clarity

Why Origin Still Matters

Origin affects cultivar, climate, processing tradition, and buyer expectations. But origin alone does not guarantee quality.

  • Ask for sample comparisons within the same origin
  • Compare harvest season and processing date
  • Check whether the supplier can repeat the same profile
  • Avoid choosing only by famous place names

How Buyers Should Evaluate Samples

Use a simple scorecard so your team can compare different samples with the same language.

  • Dry leaf appearance
  • Aroma before and after brewing
  • Flavor balance and aftertaste
  • Brewed leaf condition
  • Price, MOQ, and availability

Want to compare tea grades side by side?

Tell us your target market and tea category. We can help prepare a practical sample comparison.

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Next Step for Your Sourcing Project

Use these links to move from research into sample evaluation or a sourcing request.

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