🏒1.Basic Company Legitimacy Existence

  Blog    |     February 14, 2026

Here's a curated list of the best free tools for verifying suppliers, categorized by verification type. While paid services offer deeper insights, these free resources are essential for initial due diligence:

  • Government Business Registries: The most reliable starting point.
  • Google Search & Maps:
    • Search the exact company name, address, and key personnel.
    • Use Google Maps Street View to verify the physical address matches a plausible business location (not a residential building or PO box). Check for signs, industrial parks, etc.

πŸ” 2. Reputation & Reviews

  • LinkedIn:
    • Verify the company exists, check employee count, connections, and profiles of key personnel (look for inconsistencies).
    • Search for the company name + "scam," "review," or "complaint."
  • B2B Review Platforms:
    • Alibaba Supplier Reviews: While not foolproof, reviews on Alibaba can offer insights (look for patterns, not just single reviews).
    • Thomasnet.com: Some supplier profiles include user reviews (US focus).
    • Kompass International: Basic company info and sometimes reviews (free registration often needed).
  • General Web Search:
    • Use advanced search operators: "Company Name" + scam, "Company Name" + fraud, "Company Name" + review, "Company Name" + complaint site:.com. Check forums like Reddit or industry-specific boards.

πŸ“Š 3. Financial Health & Background (Limited Free Data)

  • Credit Reports (Free Options - Use with Caution):
    • UK: Companies House offers free basic financial statements for UK companies.
    • USA: Dun & Bradstreet (D&B) sometimes offers a basic free report lookup (may require registration, data is limited).
    • Other: Free credit reports are rare internationally. Focus on registries above for basic existence.
  • News Searches:

    Use Google News or local news sites: Search company name + "bankruptcy," "lawsuit," "investigation."

πŸ›‘ 4. Compliance & Sanctions Screening

  • Sanctions Lists (CRITICAL):
  • Customs & Trade Data (Limited Free Access):
    • Panjiva (Free Reports - Limited): Offers basic company profiles and some trade data (search company name, free registration often needed for details).
    • ImportGenius (Free Sample - Limited): Provides limited free views of shipping records (good for seeing if they actually export).
    • Trade Map (UN Comtrade - Aggregated Data): Trade Map - Shows country-level trade statistics, not specific company data.

πŸ§ͺ 5. Product-Specific & Industry Compliance

  • Regulatory Databases:
    • USA - FDA: FDA Registration & Listing Database (Check registration for food, drugs, devices, cosmetics).
    • EU - REACH/CLP: ECHA (Search substances, check compliance for chemicals).
    • Industry-Specific: Search for your industry + "regulatory database" (e.g., "toy safety database," "textile compliance database").
  • Certifications (Verify Claims):
    • ISO Certification Search: ISO Online Browsing Platform (Verify if a company holds claimed ISO standards - search by standard number or company name).
    • Other Certs: Many certification bodies (e.g., FSC for wood, Fair Trade) have online public databases to verify claims.

πŸ’‘ Key Considerations & Best Practices

  1. Layer Your Verification: NEVER rely on a single tool. Combine multiple sources (Registry + Google Maps + LinkedIn + News + Sanctions Check).
  2. Verify Physical Address: Google Maps Street View is crucial. A PO box or residential address is a major red flag.
  3. Check Key Personnel: Verify names and titles on LinkedIn vs. the company registry. Inconsistencies are bad signs.
  4. Look for Consistency: Information should match across registries, website, LinkedIn, and maps. Discrepancies = risk.
  5. Sanctions Screening is Non-Negotiable: Always check major sanctions lists (UN, OFAC, EU, UK) for both the supplier and key individuals.
  6. Beware of "Too Good to Be True": Extremely low prices, pressure to pay quickly, vague answers, or reluctance for communication are red flags.
  7. Request Documentation: Ask for Business License, Tax Registration Certificate, and any claimed certifications (then verify them!).
  8. Start Small: Order samples first. Evaluate communication, quality, and responsiveness.
  9. Understand Free Tool Limitations: Free tools provide surface-level checks. They cannot replace:
    • On-site factory audits.
    • Third-party inspection reports (paid).
    • Comprehensive financial background checks (paid).
    • Deep supply chain mapping.
    • Intellectual property checks (paid).

🚫 Important Free Tools to Be Wary Of

  • "Free" Supplier Databases Requiring Payment: Many sites lure you in with "free" searches but demand payment for essential contact details or reports. Be cautious.
  • Unverified Online Reviews: Reviews on supplier's own sites or platforms they pay for can be fake. Look for independent sources.
  • Generic Company Info Sites: Sites aggregating basic registry data are useful, but often don't add significant value beyond the official registries themselves.

Conclusion: Use the free government registries, Google Maps/Street View, LinkedIn, targeted web searches, and mandatory sanctions checks as your powerful first line of defense. They will filter out a significant number of obviously fraudulent or high-risk suppliers. However, always supplement free checks with requesting documentation, ordering samples, and be prepared to invest in paid services (like inspections or deeper audits) for critical or high-value suppliers. Due diligence is an ongoing process, not a one-time check.


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