Cherry Juice thumbnail

Cherry Juice Malaysia Market Overview 2026

Raw Materials
Fresh Cherry
HS Code
200989
Last Updated
2026-05-09
Key takeaways for search and sourcing teams
  • Malaysia Cherry Juice market intelligence page includes 0 premium suppliers.
  • 2 sampled export transactions for Malaysia are summarized.
  • 3 export partner companies and 0 import partner companies are mapped for Cherry Juice in Malaysia.
  • Wholesale sample entries: 0; farmgate sample entries: 0.
  • 5 export partner countries and 5 import partner countries are ranked.
  • Latest reference year in this page dataset is 2024.
  • Page data last updated on 2026-05-09.

Cherry Juice Export Supplier Intelligence, Price Trends, and Trade Flows in Malaysia

3 export partner companies are tracked for Cherry Juice in Malaysia. Use Supply Chain Intelligence company profiles and analytics to validate exporter coverage, partner quality, and route priorities.
Explore Cherry Juice export intelligence in Malaysia, including 2 sampled supplier transactions, monthly unit-price ranges, and partner-country trade flow patterns for HS Code 200989.
Scatter points are sampled from 100.0% of the full transaction dataset.

Sample Export Supplier Transaction Records for Cherry Juice in Malaysia

2 sampled Cherry Juice transactions in Malaysia include date, origin, and partner-country context to benchmark export prices and supplier trading patterns.
Cherry Juice sampled transaction unit prices by date in Malaysia: 2025-08-26: 3.69 USD / kg, 2025-08-26: 3.71 USD / kg.
DateReported ProductUnit PriceExporterImporter 
2025-08-26M70 ****** *** **** ******** **** ****** ****** ** ************ ***** ** ********** ****** *** **** ******** **** ****** ****** ** *********3.69 USD / kg (Malaysia) (India)
2025-08-26M70 ****** *** **** ******** **** ****** ****** ** ************ ***** ** ********** ****** *** **** ******** **** ****** ****** ** *********3.71 USD / kg (Malaysia) (India)

Top Cherry Juice Export Suppliers and Companies in Malaysia

Review leading exporter profiles and benchmark them against 3 total export partner companies tracked for Cherry Juice in Malaysia. Use Supply Chain Intelligence company profiles and analytics to shortlist sourcing and export partners faster.
(Malaysia)
Latest Export Transaction: 2026-04-07
Industries: Food Wholesalers
Value Chain Roles: Distribution / WholesaleTrade
(Malaysia)
Latest Export Transaction: 2026-04-07
Industries: Food Wholesalers
Value Chain Roles: Trade
(Malaysia)
Latest Export Transaction: 2026-04-07
Industries: Food Wholesalers
Value Chain Roles: Distribution / WholesaleTrade
Malaysia Export Partner Coverage
3 companies
Total export partner company count is a core signal of Malaysia export network depth for Cherry Juice.
Exporters and importers can open Supply Chain Intelligence company profiles and analytics to assess Cherry Juice partner concentration, capacity signals, and trade relevance in Malaysia.

Annual Export Value, Volume, and Supplier Market Size for Cherry Juice in Malaysia (HS Code 200989)

Analyze 3 years of Cherry Juice export volume and value in Malaysia to evaluate supplier market growth, seasonality, and trade volatility.
YearVolumeValue
202414,982,73014,800,676 USD
202312,237,79311,896,079 USD
202214,535,19414,349,399 USD

Top Destination Markets for Cherry Juice Exports from Malaysia (HS Code 200989) in 2024

For 2024, compare export volume and value across the top 5 destination countries for Cherry Juice exports from Malaysia.
RankCountryVolumeValue
1United States11,457,740.8810,209,562.963 USD
2China1,611,106.11,604,515.131 USD
3Singapore762,684.81,108,530.71 USD
4Vietnam523,637.5994,735.191 USD
5Thailand157,143.6176,286.833 USD

Cherry Juice Import Buyer Intelligence and Price Signals in Malaysia: Buyers, Demand, and Trade Partners

0 import partner companies are tracked for Cherry Juice in Malaysia. Exporters and importers can use Supply Chain Intelligence company profiles and analytics to analyze buyer demand, partner density, and downstream channels.

Annual Import Value, Volume, and Demand Size for Cherry Juice in Malaysia (HS Code 200989)

Track 2 years of Cherry Juice import volume and value in Malaysia to assess demand growth and market momentum.
YearVolumeValue
202410,824,28420,612,332 USD
202210,014,75919,180,893 USD

Top Origin Supplier Countries Supplying Cherry Juice to Malaysia (HS Code 200989) in 2024

For 2024, compare import volume and value across the top 5 origin supplier countries supplying Cherry Juice to Malaysia.
RankCountryVolumeValue
1Thailand4,737,746.054,957,595.074 USD
2Netherlands558,5104,040,445.065 USD
3United States791,502.362,931,492.847 USD
4Vietnam1,697,630.42,832,907.663 USD
5Italy144,262.11,132,991.053 USD

Classification

Product TypeProcessed Food
Product FormJuice (Beverage)
Industry PositionConsumer Packaged Food and Beverage

Market

Cherry juice in Malaysia is primarily a consumer beverage supplied through imports, as cherries are not a significant domestic crop. Market activity is shaped by compliance with Malaysia’s Food Act 1983 and Food Regulations 1985 for composition and labelling at point-of-entry and in-market sale. For ready-to-drink juices with higher total sugar, Malaysia’s sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) excise regime can materially affect pricing and route-to-market decisions. Demand is typically positioned toward premium/functional juice consumption in urban retail and e-commerce channels alongside mainstream juice categories.
Market RoleImport-dependent consumer market
Domestic RolePrimarily retail and foodservice beverage; often positioned as a premium or functional juice product within the broader juice category
SeasonalityYear-round availability is driven by import supply and shelf-stable distribution rather than local harvest seasonality.

Specification

Physical Attributes
  • Color stability (deep red to purple) and absence of haze/sediment are common buyer-visible quality cues for filtered products; cloudiness may be acceptable for juice-style products depending on positioning.
  • Packaging integrity (cap seal, tamper evidence) is critical for ambient distribution.
Compositional Metrics
  • Total sugar declaration is operationally important for Malaysia’s SSB excise treatment of ready-to-drink beverages.
  • Juice content and whether the product is not-from-concentrate (NFC) or from concentrate are common commercial differentiators.
Packaging
  • Ambient retail packs commonly include glass bottles, PET bottles, or cartons; case-pack and pallet stability matter due to weight and breakage risk.

Supply Chain

Value Chain
  • Overseas processor/bottler (or concentrate producer) → ocean freight to Malaysia → port clearance (customs + point-of-entry food controls) → local distributor/importer → modern trade/e-commerce fulfilment → consumer
Temperature
  • Typically ambient-stable in unopened retail packs; protect from excessive heat during storage and inland transport to reduce quality deterioration.
  • Once opened, products are generally handled under chilled storage per label instructions.
Shelf Life
  • Shelf life is formulation- and process-dependent (e.g., pasteurised vs aseptic); importer handling should align with manufacturer coding and FEFO inventory discipline.
Freight IntensityHigh
Transport ModeSea

Risks

Regulatory Compliance HighNon-compliance with Malaysia’s Food Regulations 1985 (labelling and food standards) can result in border delays, relabelling requirements, rejection, or in-market enforcement—especially for imported beverages positioned with functional/health narratives.Run a Malaysia-specific label and formulation compliance review (including additive permissions and claim substantiation) before shipment; keep batch-linked COAs and ingredient/additive specifications ready for inspection.
Tax MediumMalaysia’s sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) excise regime can increase landed cost for ready-to-drink fruit juices depending on total sugar thresholds and tariff heading treatment, affecting retail pricing and competitiveness.Model tax exposure early using the intended formulation’s total sugar; consider lower-sugar formulations or concentrate-to-local-pack strategies where commercially viable.
Logistics MediumBottled RTD juice is freight- and packaging-intensive; ocean freight volatility and breakage/leakage risk can disrupt supply and erode margins.Prefer robust secondary packaging and palletization; insure cargo appropriately; where feasible, evaluate shipping concentrate and local packing to reduce bulk freight exposure.
Food Safety MediumShelf-stable beverages can face enforcement risk if microbiological quality, preservative levels, or labelling declarations do not align with Malaysian standards and testing outcomes at point-of-entry or post-market surveillance.Maintain routine third-party testing with COAs per lot; align thermal process validation and preservative controls with the declared product category.
Documentation Gap LowInconsistent documentation across invoice, packing list, label, and COA (e.g., product name, juice content, sugar declaration) can trigger clearance delays and additional queries.Standardize product naming and specifications across all documents; use a pre-shipment document checklist aligned to importer and broker requirements.
Sustainability
  • Packaging waste and recyclability expectations (glass/PET/carton) for imported beverages
  • Carbon footprint sensitivity due to long-distance shipping for finished RTD products
Labor & Social
  • Halal integrity and consumer trust expectations in a Muslim-majority market
  • Marketing ethics and avoidance of misleading health claims for wellness-positioned beverages
Standards
  • HACCP
  • ISO 22000 / FSSC 22000
  • BRCGS Food Safety (retail-driven, where applicable)

FAQ

Which Malaysian laws and authorities typically matter for importing and selling cherry juice?Imported cherry juice must comply with Malaysia’s Food Act 1983 and the Food Regulations 1985, which are administered through the Ministry of Health’s food safety and quality functions including point-of-entry controls. Import clearance is handled through customs processes, and MAQIS provides import procedure guidance for food, including references to FoSIM-related materials.
Does Malaysia’s sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) excise affect cherry juice products?It can. Royal Malaysian Customs Department guidance describes SSB excise applying to ready-to-drink packaged beverages, including fruit juices under tariff heading 2009, based on total sugar thresholds, which can increase cost and affect pricing decisions.
Is halal certification required for cherry juice in Malaysia?Not for every product by default, but it is often commercially important in a Muslim-majority market and required if the product is marketed as halal or sold through halal-assurance channels. JAKIM provides halal status checking and halal directory information tied to Malaysia’s halal certification ecosystem.
What documents are commonly requested to clear imported cherry juice shipments?Commonly requested documents include the commercial invoice, packing list, bill of lading/air waybill, and product label details for compliance review. A certificate of origin is typically needed when claiming preferential tariff treatment, and a certificate of analysis is commonly used to support food safety and labelling declarations such as total sugar.

Other Cherry Juice Country Markets for Supplier, Export, and Price Comparison from Malaysia

Compare Cherry Juice supplier coverage, trade flows, and price benchmarks across countries related to Malaysia.

Related Cherry Juice Product Categories

Browse parent, sub, derived, and raw-material product market pages related to Cherry Juice.
Raw materials: Fresh Cherry
By clicking “Accept Cookies,” I agree to provide cookies for statistical and personalized preference purposes. To learn more about our cookies, please read our Privacy Policy.