EN April 14, 2026

Managing Quality Control When Importing Turkish Products

SenTurGo Yayınlanma April 14, 2026
Managing Quality Control When Importing Turkish Products

Every Dollar Saved Upstream Is Ten Dollars Lost Downstream

A defective container of Turkish goods discovered in Dakar costs, on average, 8 to 12 times what the same defect would have cost to fix in the Turkish factory. That is the governing economics of quality control on the Turkey-Senegal corridor. The distance — 5,600 km by sea, 7–10 days via Istanbul-Dakar direct shipping (CMA CGM West Africa network), 14–18 days via Tangiers transshipment — makes every QC shortcut a bet against time and cash. This guide gives you the inspection companies, the AQL standards, the costs, and the contractual clauses that keep your shipments defect-free.

The Four Inspection Companies That Operate Across Turkey

Pick one and write it into your supplier contract before production begins:

  • SGS Türkiye — Offices & labs in Istanbul (Güneşli), Ankara, Kocaeli, Mersin · sgs.com.tr. Largest network. Per-day inspection fee: USD 230–320 plus travel.
  • Bureau Veritas Turkey — Istanbul, Bursa, Izmir · bureauveritas.com.tr. Strong in textile and electronics. Fee similar to SGS.
  • TÜV Rheinland Turkey — Istanbul, Ankara, Kocaeli · tuv.com/tr. Dominant in automotive parts, electrical safety (LVD, EMC).
  • Intertek Turkey — Istanbul, Izmir · intertek.com. Best for hardlines, toys, and chemical testing.
  • COTECNA Istanbul (PVI mandatory for Senegal) — also does supplementary commercial QC at extra cost.
  • Independent QC freelancers via QIMA (ex-AsiaInspection): USD 409 per man-day in Zone B (Turkey), online booking at qima.com.

The Three Inspection Windows in Every Production Cycle

  1. IPQC — Initial Production Quality Control — conducted when 10–15% of the order is complete. Catches raw-material substitution, wrong colours, dimension drift early enough to fix cheaply. Cost: 1 man-day.
  2. DUPRO — During Production Quality Control — at 40–60% completion. Validates consistency, plating thickness, stitch density, assembly tolerance. Cost: 1 man-day.
  3. PSI — Pre-Shipment Inspection — when 100% of the order is produced and 80% is packed. This is the final inspection used for AQL sampling, carton drop tests, barcode checks, label verification. Cost: 1–2 man-days depending on volume.

AQL — The Sampling Standard That Stops Arguments

Write ISO 2859-1 / ANSI-ASQ Z1.4 sampling with declared AQL levels into your PO. Industry defaults for Turkey-to-Senegal consumer goods:

  • Critical defects: AQL 0 (zero tolerance — safety, legal)
  • Major defects: AQL 2.5 (functional problems, significant cosmetic)
  • Minor defects: AQL 4.0 (cosmetic, not affecting use)

Sample size table (General Inspection Level II):

Lot size Sample to inspect Max major defects at AQL 2.5
1,201–3,200 units 125 7
3,201–10,000 units 200 10
10,001–35,000 units 315 14

Specifications You Must Send the Turkish Supplier Before Production

  • Technical drawing with dimensional tolerances in mm (never inches)
  • Material specification — for textile: composition %, GSM, shrinkage target; for steel: grade (S235, S355), thickness; for plastic: resin type, food-grade if applicable
  • Golden sample — signed and sealed by both parties; kept at supplier factory and in importer’s Dakar office
  • Packaging artwork — French-language labels, nutrition facts per NS standard, batch/expiry placement
  • Performance tests required — drop test, salt-spray (for metal), wash-fastness (textile), dielectric (electrical)
  • Applicable certifications — CE, RoHS, REACH, ISO 9001, halal (HAK), OEKO-TEX (textile)
  • Barcode EAN-13 or GTIN registered under your Senegalese importer number (via GS1 Senegal, gs1.sn)

Testing the Critical Turkish Export Categories

  • Textile & apparel: GSM measurement, color fastness (ISO 105), shrinkage (ISO 6330), pilling resistance (ISO 12945). Lab cost at SGS Istanbul: USD 80–150 per sample.
  • Food & beverages: microbiological panel, heavy metals, pesticide residues. Recommended labs: BEL-SGS Gıda Kalite, Eurofins Turkey. USD 180–350 per composite sample.
  • Cosmetics: stability test 3 months, microbial (USP 51), preservative efficacy. USD 400–900 per SKU.
  • Electrical appliances: LVD (EN 60335), EMC (EN 55014), energy label verification. TÜV Rheinland typical EUR 900–2,500 per model.
  • Construction materials: compressive strength (cement), tensile test (rebar), EN standards or equivalent Turkish TS standards.

Contractual Clauses That Win Every Dispute

  • Payment structure: 30% deposit, 70% against inspection-pass certificate (not against B/L copy)
  • Inspection rights: “Buyer reserves the right to nominate an independent third-party inspection at IPQC, DUPRO, and PSI stages; supplier shall provide full access and samples at no extra cost”
  • Rework & replacement: defects above AQL thresholds trigger full rework at supplier cost; costs for re-inspection borne by supplier
  • Liquidated damages: 0.2% of order value per day of late delivery, capped at 10%
  • Jurisdiction & language: Istanbul Chamber of Commerce Arbitration Centre (ITOTAM) in English, or ICC Paris for bigger orders
  • Retention sample: supplier to keep 3 units of every production batch for 24 months

Pre-Shipment Inspection vs COTECNA PVI — Not the Same Thing

COTECNA PVI (mandatory under Senegalese law) verifies CIF value, HS classification, and basic quantity/quality — it is a customs compliance inspection, not a commercial QC. Always commission your own third-party QC through SGS, BV, TÜV, Intertek or QIMA before booking COTECNA. Typical overlap: 1–2 days. Combined cost: USD 500–900 per shipment — less than 1% of the average Turkish container value of USD 65,000.

The Five Most Common Turkey-Senegal QC Failures and How to Prevent Them

  1. Textile GSM 10–20% below spec → insist on lab-tested fabric sample before cutting; retest at PSI.
  2. Cartons crushed on arrival → require 5-ply corrugated minimum, specify stacking limit, carton drop test at PSI.
  3. Electronics failing Senegalese 220V/50Hz → specify ARTP-compliant voltage, include burn-in test.
  4. Food labelling in Turkish only → French-language labels as condition of payment release.
  5. Wrong HS code on Turkish invoice → have Senegalese broker confirm HS code before supplier ships; wrong HS triggers customs re-inspection and duty reassessment.

Bottom Line

Budget 0.8–1.2% of FOB value for third-party QC on every Turkish shipment. Write ISO 2859-1 AQL sampling into every PO. Use one of the four global inspection firms with Turkish offices, plus COTECNA PVI for customs. On a USD 65,000 container that is USD 600–800 of insurance against a potential six-figure loss — the best return on spend in the entire importer’s toolbox.

Yardım mı lazım?

Satıcıyla iletişime geç