Your ePacket from AliExpress or DHgate shipped, and now the tracking sits quiet for days. ePacket is a cheap, tracked shipping service from China and Hong Kong, delivered by USPS once it reaches the United States — usually fine, just slow. Here is how to do ePacket tracking properly, read the number, and follow it all the way to your door.

At Package Tracker we follow parcels across 1,700+ carriers, and ePacket is one of the most-tracked services on cheap orders from China. The quiet stretch in the middle is normal — here is how to follow it clearly, including the USPS handoff.
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On this page
- What is ePacket?
- How to track an ePacket
- Where to find your ePacket tracking number
- Who delivers ePacket?
- How long does ePacket take to deliver?
- ePacket Light vs standard ePacket
- Why your ePacket tracking is not updating
- Is ePacket safe and reliable?
- What to do if your ePacket is lost or late
- Key takeaways
- Frequently asked questions
What is ePacket?
ePacket is a low-cost, tracked shipping service for small parcels (generally under 2 kg) sent from China and Hong Kong. It was created through an agreement between China Post EMS and USPS, which is why your parcel ships with China Post but is delivered by USPS in the United States. It is the standard cheap option on marketplaces like AliExpress, DHgate, and Wish.
Compared with the cheapest registered air mail, ePacket is faster and fully tracked, which is why so many sellers offer it as the default.
How to track an ePacket
- Find your ePacket tracking number in your order details or shipping email from the seller.
- Enter it once in Package Tracker. The app detects the carrier automatically, so you do not have to switch between the China Post and USPS sites.
- Follow live updates from China through customs to your door, with an alert on every status change.
That matters because an ePacket number passes from China Post to USPS partway through — a universal tracker follows both legs. For the full method, see how to track any package.
Where to find your ePacket tracking number
Your ePacket number is in your marketplace order — for example, your AliExpress or DHgate order details — and in the shipping confirmation email. If there is no number yet, the seller has not handed the parcel to China Post.
ePacket tracking number format
ePacket numbers follow the Universal Postal Union S10 standard: two letters, nine digits, and the country code CN, and they most often begin with L — for example, LX123456789CN. The same number works on China Post and, once it arrives, on the USPS site.

Who delivers ePacket?
ePacket is a two-part journey, which is the single most useful thing to understand about it.
Who is the ePacket carrier?
China Post EMS carries your parcel out of China and handles the international leg.
Who delivers ePacket in the US?
USPS delivers the final mile in the United States, so your ePacket number keeps working on the USPS site once the parcel lands. In the UK, Royal Mail usually handles delivery.
How long does ePacket take to deliver?
ePacket is economy shipping, so it is slower than express but faster than basic air mail. These are typical estimates, not guarantees — customs and peak periods can add time.
| Stage | Typical time |
|---|---|
| Seller processing in China | 1 to 3 days |
| International transit and customs | 5 to 12 days |
| USPS final-mile delivery | 2 to 5 days |
| Total, China to US door | About 10 to 20 days |
Stop switching between China Post and USPS
Package Tracker stitches the China Post leg and the USPS final mile into one timeline, and alerts you the moment your ePacket moves.
ePacket Light vs standard ePacket
Some sellers offer ePacket Light, an even cheaper version. The trade-off is tracking: ePacket Light often has limited or no end-to-end tracking, so updates can be sparse or stop after the parcel leaves China. If tracking matters to you, standard ePacket is the more reliable choice.

Why your ePacket tracking is not updating
- Just shipped. A new number can take several days for its first scan in China.
- Customs or the USPS handoff. Tracking often goes quiet during customs and as the parcel passes from China Post to USPS.
- ePacket Light. The cheaper variant may simply not scan in transit.
If the number will not load anywhere, here is the fix: tracking number not working. If it is scanning but stuck, see package stuck in transit.
Is ePacket safe and reliable?
Yes. ePacket is a legitimate, tracked postal service backed by China Post and USPS, not a scam. A few honest drawbacks are worth knowing:
- It is slow. Ten to twenty days is normal, longer during peak sales.
- No signature. ePacket usually does not require a signature, so parcels are left like normal mail.
- Quiet tracking. Sparse mid-journey scans are normal and do not mean the parcel is lost.
A genuine number matches the two-letters, nine-digits, CN format and eventually scans; one that never scans, or arrives outside your official order, may be fake.
What to do if your ePacket is lost or late
Check the last scan and the estimated date first, then allow extra time. A useful detail: ePacket includes a free return service for parcels that cannot be delivered, so undeliverable items are sent back rather than lost. If yours is well past the estimate or has had no scans for weeks, open a dispute through your marketplace — AliExpress, DHgate, and Wish all offer buyer protection that can refund a parcel that never arrives.
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Key takeaways
- ePacket is a cheap, tracked China Post EMS service, delivered by USPS.
- Numbers usually start with L and end in CN.
- Delivery is about 10–20 days to a US door.
- ePacket Light is cheaper but has limited tracking.
Frequently asked questions
Enter your ePacket tracking number in Package Tracker or on a tracking site. The app detects the carrier automatically and follows both the China Post leg and the USPS final mile.
China Post EMS carries your parcel out of China, then hands it to your national postal service — USPS in the United States — for delivery.
USPS delivers ePacket parcels in the United States, so your ePacket tracking number keeps working on the USPS site for the final leg.
ePacket usually takes about 10 to 20 days from China to a US address: a few days of processing, the international leg and customs, then USPS delivery. Peak periods add time.
It follows the UPU S10 format: two letters, nine digits, and CN, and it most often starts with L, such as LX123456789CN. The same number works on China Post and USPS.
Yes. ePacket is faster than the cheapest registered air mail and is fully tracked, though it is slower than paid express services like EMS or courier shipping.
No, ePacket normally does not require a signature. Parcels are delivered like regular mail, so they may be left in your mailbox or at your door.
Yes. ePacket is a legitimate tracked service backed by China Post and USPS. The main drawbacks are that it is slow and the mid-journey tracking can be sparse.
ePacket Light is a cheaper variant with limited or no end-to-end tracking, so updates can be sparse or stop after the parcel leaves China. Standard ePacket is better if tracking matters.
ePacket includes a free return service for undeliverable parcels, so they are sent back rather than lost. If yours never arrives, open a dispute through your marketplace's buyer protection for a refund.
Usually because it was just shipped and not scanned yet, it is in customs or the USPS handoff, or it is the ePacket Light variant that does not scan in transit.
ePacket mainly serves the United States, and is also available to a range of other countries including the UK, Canada, Australia, and much of Europe, depending on the seller.
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