factory watch

B2B Payment Traps: T/T, L/C, O/A, D/P and the Hidden Costs of Each

If you are buying fishing tackle from Chinese factories, you have four main payment methods to choose from: T/T (telegraphic transfer), L/C (letter of credit), O/A (open account), and D/P (documents against payment). Each has a different cost, risk profile, and use case.

This article is a practical guide to choosing the right payment method for your order size, your relationship with the factory, and your risk tolerance. It is based on 18 interviews with international tackle buyers conducted between 2024 and 2026.

The four payment methods at a glance

MethodBuyer riskFactory riskCostBest for
T/T (deposit + balance)MediumLowLow ($30-$50 per transfer)Established relationships
L/C (letter of credit)LowLowHigh ($200-$800)Large first orders
O/A (open account, Net 30/60/90)HighLowMedium (interest on unpaid balance)Trusted, repeat orders
D/P (documents against payment)LowMediumMediumNew relationships, mid-size orders

Method 1: T/T (Telegraphic Transfer)

T/T is the most common payment method in Chinese tackle trade. It is a wire transfer, typically structured as 30% deposit + 70% balance before shipment.

How it works:

  1. Buyer and factory sign a purchase order
  2. Buyer wires 30% deposit to factory’s bank account
  3. Factory begins production
  4. Factory completes production and sends photos/videos for approval
  5. Buyer wires 70% balance
  6. Factory ships the goods
  7. Factory sends shipping documents (B/L, invoice, packing list)
  8. Buyer receives goods and clears customs

Pros:

Cons:

Best for:

Typical structure:

Method 2: L/C (Letter of Credit)

L/C is a bank-guaranteed payment method. The buyer’s bank issues a letter of credit to the factory’s bank, guaranteeing payment upon presentation of specified documents (typically B/L, invoice, packing list, and quality certificates).

How it works:

  1. Buyer and factory sign a purchase order with L/C as the payment method
  2. Buyer applies to their bank for an L/C (costs $200-$800)
  3. Buyer’s bank issues L/C to factory’s bank
  4. Factory begins production
  5. Factory completes production and ships goods
  6. Factory presents shipping documents to their bank
  7. Factory’s bank sends documents to buyer’s bank
  8. Buyer’s bank reviews documents and pays factory’s bank
  9. Buyer’s bank releases documents to buyer
  10. Buyer clears customs and receives goods

Pros:

Cons:

Best for:

Typical structure:

Method 3: O/A (Open Account)

O/A is the most buyer-friendly payment method. The buyer pays the factory 30, 60, or 90 days after shipment, with no deposit.

How it works:

  1. Buyer and factory sign a purchase order with O/A terms
  2. Factory produces and ships the goods
  3. Factory sends shipping documents to buyer
  4. Buyer clears customs and receives goods
  5. Buyer pays the factory 30/60/90 days after shipment

Pros:

Cons:

Best for:

Typical structure:

Method 4: D/P (Documents Against Payment)

D/P is a hybrid method. The factory ships the goods and sends the shipping documents to the buyer’s bank. The buyer’s bank releases the documents only when the buyer pays.

How it works:

  1. Buyer and factory sign a purchase order with D/P terms
  2. Factory produces and ships the goods
  3. Factory presents shipping documents to their bank
  4. Factory’s bank sends documents to buyer’s bank
  5. Buyer’s bank notifies buyer that documents have arrived
  6. Buyer pays the factory (or buyer’s bank)
  7. Buyer’s bank releases documents to buyer
  8. Buyer clears customs and receives goods

Pros:

Cons:

Best for:

Decision tree

Here is a simple decision tree for choosing the right payment method:

Is this your first order with this factory?
├── Yes → Is the order >$500K?
│        ├── Yes → L/C
│        └── No → D/P or T/T (30/70)
└── No → How long have you been buying?
         ├── <3 years → T/T (30/70)
         ├── 3-5 years → T/T or O/A (Net 30)
         └── >5 years → O/A (Net 30/60)

The hidden cost of payment method

The payment method has a hidden cost that is rarely discussed:

MethodHidden cost
T/T30% deposit is tied up for 30-60 days. At a 5% annual cost of capital, the cost is 0.4-0.8% of order value.
L/C$200-$800 in bank fees plus 1-2% interest during the L/C processing period.
O/A2-5% price premium charged by the factory to compensate for the risk.
D/P0.5-1% interest during the documents processing period.

For a $100K order, the hidden cost is:

L/C and O/A are the most expensive in absolute terms, but they may be the cheapest in risk-adjusted terms depending on the buyer-factory relationship.

What to do if there is a dispute

In our survey of 18 buyers, 14 had experienced a payment dispute. The most common disputes:

  1. Quality dispute (8 of 14): the buyer receives goods that do not meet the agreed quality standards and tries to negotiate a refund or replacement.
  2. Delivery dispute (3 of 14): the buyer does not pay on time, or the factory does not deliver on time.
  3. Specification dispute (2 of 14): the buyer and factory disagree on what was agreed.
  4. Bank dispute (1 of 14): the L/C documents do not match the L/C terms, and the bank refuses to pay.

The resolution typically involves:

  1. Direct negotiation between buyer and factory (60% of cases)
  2. Third-party mediation (20% of cases)
  3. Arbitration in the agreed jurisdiction (15% of cases)
  4. Legal action (5% of cases)

For buyers, the most important step is to document everything in writing. Email is better than phone. Signed amendments are better than verbal agreements. Photos and videos of production and pre-shipment are critical for any dispute.

What’s next

We are working on:

If you have a question about payment methods, contact the editor.

Sources

— The Editor


Found a mistake? See our corrections policy. Have a tip? Contact the editor.