When a lawyer's letter makes sense
A lawyer's letter is useful when the supplier has ignored repeated messages, delayed a refund without a real explanation, changed agreed terms after payment, delivered defective goods, or refused to discuss a reasonable settlement. It is not a magic document, but it changes the commercial situation. The dispute is no longer just a disappointed buyer complaining from overseas.
For many foreign buyers, a lawyer's letter is the most proportionate first legal step. It is faster and less expensive than arbitration or litigation, but more serious than another email written by the buyer.
What the letter should contain
- The buyer's identity, supplier's legal name, and background of the transaction.
- The agreed terms: product, price, delivery, payment, shipping, quality, and refund promise.
- The supplier's breach or bad-faith conduct, supported by evidence.
- A specific demand: refund, replacement, shipment, compensation, or written settlement.
- A deadline and warning of further steps if the supplier refuses to cooperate.
How I prepare it
I first review the documents and identify the correct Chinese legal entity. This matters because many disputes involve mismatched names: one company appears on the quotation, another receives the payment, and a third controls the factory. The lawyer's letter should be addressed to the correct entity and, when appropriate, copied to relevant managers or platform accounts.
After the evidence review, I prepare a clear letter in a professional tone. The goal is not to sound dramatic. The goal is to make the supplier understand the claim, the evidence, the deadline, and the commercial/legal consequences of ignoring the matter.
What happens after sending
Some suppliers respond quickly and try to negotiate. Others deny responsibility or offer a partial settlement. Some remain silent. Each reaction gives information. A useful lawyer's letter creates a written record that can support the next step, including platform complaints, arbitration, litigation, or police reporting if the facts suggest fraud.
What to send me
- Contract, invoice, quotation, or purchase order.
- Payment proof and receiving bank account.
- Supplier's company name and contact details.
- Complete message history showing agreement and breach.
- Your preferred remedy and acceptable settlement range.