AQL Inspection Vietnam: What It Means and How It Protects Your Order

Viet Nam Candles

Why AQL Exists: The Problem of Inspecting Every Unit

You have ordered 5,000 ceramic planters from a factory in Binh Duong. Inspecting every single one before shipment would take days and cost more than the goods. AQL solves this with statistical logic: inspect a representative random sample, and use the defect rate in that sample to predict the defect rate across the full batch.

The AQL number is the maximum acceptable defect percentage in the sample. If the sample defect rate is below the AQL threshold, the batch passes. If it is above — the batch fails and action is required before payment is released.

The Three Defect Categories

Critical Defects — AQL: 0

Any defect that poses a safety risk or represents a fundamentally wrong product. Zero tolerance — one critical defect in the sample means an automatic fail regardless of batch size.

Examples for home decor:

  • Candle wick contains a prohibited material (lead)
  • Ceramic planter has sharp broken edges that could injure the buyer
  • Woven basket contains toxic dye failing REACH/CPSC limits
  • Completely wrong product — you ordered candles, you received baskets

Major Defects — Standard AQL: 2.5

Defects that are clearly visible and would cause a customer to reject the product or return it. These affect appearance or function significantly.

Examples for home decor:

  • Candle wick visibly off-center by more than 3mm
  • Ceramic glaze chip or crack visible from 1 meter
  • Woven basket handle detached or structurally loose
  • Wrong color or finish — significant deviation from approved sample
  • Label missing, wrong language, or regulatory information absent

Minor Defects — Standard AQL: 4.0

Small cosmetic imperfections that a customer might notice but would not typically return the product for. These do not affect function or safety.

Examples for home decor:

  • Tiny surface blemish on candle wax not visible from normal viewing distance
  • Minor glaze variation within the agreed natural variation range for handmade ceramics
  • Slight weave irregularity on the underside of a woven basket
  • Inner packaging slightly compressed but product undamaged

How the AQL Sample Size Is Calculated

Sample size is determined by the total batch quantity. Inspectors use AQL reference tables (ISO 2859-1) to find the correct sample size for each inspection level.

For General Inspection Level II — the standard for most consumer goods:

Batch Size (units)Sample SizeMax Major Defects (AQL 2.5)Max Minor Defects (AQL 4.0)
151 – 28032 units23
281 – 50050 units35
501 – 1,20080 units57
1,201 – 3,200125 units710
3,201 – 10,000200 units1014

Example: You ordered 800 ceramic planters. The inspector samples 80 units. If more than 5 major defects are found in those 80 units, the shipment fails.

How the Inspector Selects the Random Sample

Random sampling is not the same as convenient sampling. An inspector who only pulls from the top of the pile in the most accessible cartons is not conducting a valid AQL inspection — they are giving the factory an easy pass.

A professional inspector pulls sample units from:

  • Cartons across the entire batch — not just one section of the warehouse
  • Different production dates within the batch if goods were made across multiple days
  • Different pallet positions — top, middle, and bottom layers
  • Different color or size variants proportionally, if multiple SKUs are in the order

This randomization is what makes AQL statistically valid. Without it, the inspection result does not represent the batch.

What Happens After the AQL Result

Pass Result

The defect count in the sample is within the AQL threshold. The inspector recommends the shipment for release. You receive the written report, review it, and release final payment. Note: a pass result means the statistical risk is acceptable — it does not mean zero defects exist in the full batch.

Fail Result

The defect count exceeds the AQL threshold for major or critical defects. Options:

  • Instruct the factory to conduct 100% sorting of the full batch — removing all defective units
  • Request targeted rework of the specific defect type found
  • Schedule a re-inspection after sorting or rework is complete
  • For critical defects — do not release payment until the issue is fully resolved

The inspection report is your written evidence in any commercial discussion with the factory. Without it, claiming a quality failure after goods arrive is significantly harder.

AQL vs. Factory's Internal QC: What's the Difference?

Factory QC and third-party AQL inspection serve different purposes and should not be treated as substitutes for each other.

Factory Internal QCThird-Party AQL Inspection
Reports toFactory managementThe buyer
IncentiveShip on time, pass inspectionObjective assessment for the buyer
Reference standardFactory's own production standardBuyer's approved sample and specification
DocumentationInternal — rarely sharedWritten report with photos to buyer within 24h
Legal standingNot usable in buyer-supplier disputeUsable as evidence in commercial disputes

The two should coexist: factory QC catches problems during production; third-party AQL inspection confirms the final batch independently before you pay.

Setting Up Your Inspection Brief Correctly

The quality of an AQL inspection depends heavily on the quality of your inspection brief. Before every inspection, provide your inspector with:

  • Product name, SKU, and purchase order number
  • Total quantity and number of cartons expected
  • AQL levels for critical, major, and minor defects
  • Specific defect definitions with photos if possible
  • Approved sample reference or photos
  • Special tests to conduct (burn test for candles, drop test for packaging)
  • Packaging requirements and carton labeling specifications

Vague briefs produce vague inspection results. A specific brief produces an inspection that is genuinely useful to your quality control process.

Our QC & Inspection service includes brief preparation support and applies product-specific defect checklists for candles, ceramic planters, and woven baskets. Report delivered within 24 hours of inspection. Request a consultation →

Also read: Quality Control Inspection in Vietnam: Complete Guide for Importers

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