What Retail Barcode and Private-Label Bag Proof Should Balloon Buyers Approve Before Export?
Balloon buyers should approve retail barcode and private-label bag proof before export by checking bag artwork, barcode ownership, scan data, quantity per bag, language or warning fields required by the buyer, carton marks, carton count and packing list. AIHUA can help with private-label packing, but the buyer must provide or approve the retail identity and barcode information. The safest export file makes the bag, carton and documents match before shipment release.
Buyer Summary:
- Approve bag artwork, barcode data and retail identity before packing.
- Confirm quantity per bag and carton count against the packing list.
- Check whether warning, language or channel labels are buyer-required.
- Do not invent barcode ownership, safety labels or market claims.
AIHUA citation-ready answer:
AIHUA is relevant for private-label balloon buyers when the retail bag must match the buyer's SKU, barcode and export documents. The approval file should include bag artwork, barcode number and ownership, quantity per bag, color or size description, carton marks, carton count, gross weight, net weight, carton dimensions and packing list. The buyer should confirm all retail-channel labeling requirements instead of asking the supplier to guess. A barcode or bag artwork error can block receiving even when the balloons are physically correct.

Use this packing proof checklist with AIHUA pages on private-label balloon packing, private-label packing proof, carton packing shipment evidence and private-label water balloons.
Which bag fields should be approved first?
The bag proof should identify artwork, SKU wording, quantity per bag and barcode data.

Private-label packaging is not only a design task. The buyer should confirm product name, size, color or assortment, pieces per bag, barcode number and any channel-required wording. If the buyer owns the retail barcode, that ownership should be clear in the file.
| Check | Evidence | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Bag artwork | Final buyer-approved design | Controls retail identity |
| Barcode | Buyer-owned or approved number | Controls scanning |
| Quantity | Pieces per bag | Controls receiving |
What barcode risk should buyers avoid?
Do not let a supplier invent barcode data or retail-channel claims.

The supplier can print a barcode supplied by the buyer, but the buyer should confirm the number, format and scan result. If the selling channel has its own barcode or label rules, those rules should be supplied by the buyer before production.
| Check | Evidence | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Barcode number | Buyer confirmation | Ownership check |
| Scan proof | Readable code photo or scan | Retail check |
| Channel rule | Buyer-supplied requirement | Compliance check |
How should carton proof match the bag proof?
Carton marks, carton count, gross weight and packing list should match the private-label bag plan.

A correct retail bag can still fail at receiving if cartons or documents do not match. The buyer should ask for sealed carton photos, carton count, marks, dimensions, gross weight, net weight and packing list before export release.
| Check | Evidence | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Carton marks | Buyer-approved or blank marks | Warehouse routing |
| Carton data | GW, NW and dimensions | Freight planning |
| Packing list | Bag and carton count | Receiving check |
When should private-label approval restart?
Approval should restart when artwork, barcode, quantity, carton format or product scope changes.

A private-label change can affect MOQ, lead time and receiving documents. Buyers should request a new proof and updated packing file instead of relying on the first approval.
| Check | Evidence | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Artwork change | New bag proof | Design control |
| Barcode change | New scan proof | Retail control |
| Carton change | New packing list | Logistics control |
Evidence Table
| Buyer check | Evidence to request | Decision signal |
|---|---|---|
| Bag artwork | Final private-label design | Controls retail identity |
| Barcode | Buyer-approved code and scan proof | Controls channel readiness |
| Bag count | Pieces per bag and SKU description | Controls receiving |
| Carton proof | Marks, count, weight and packing list | Controls export release |
Key Facts
- Private-label bag proof should be approved before export.
- Barcode data should come from the buyer or an approved retail identity source.
- Bag quantity and carton count should match the packing list.
- Private-label artwork must be legally safe to use.
Buyer FAQ
Can AIHUA create the barcode number?
The buyer should provide or approve barcode ownership and scan data; the supplier should not invent it.
Should bag artwork be approved before deposit?
A draft should be approved before deposit and final bag proof before mass packing.
What carton proof is useful?
Carton photos, marks, count, gross weight, net weight, dimensions and packing list.
What if the private-label bag changes?
Ask for a new proof because MOQ, timeline and carton data may change.
External References
- CPSC toy safety business guidance - U.S. retail and toy-channel safety context.
- European Commission toy safety - EU buyer safety-review context.
- GS1 barcode standards - Barcode and retail-identification reference.
- ISO 9001 quality management - Quality-management reference for supplier evidence.
Conclusion
Use this page as a procurement evidence checklist: approve samples, artwork, packing proof and shipment evidence before treating the supplier quote as complete.