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Overseas buyers dig China's mini excavators

Mighty little machines prove popular among customers in Europe, US

By Cheng Yu | China Daily | Updated: 2026-03-17 08:25
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A screen grab from a video uploaded by Norwegian YouTuber Frengen shows him trying out a mini excavator that he bought for less than $2,000 from Alibaba's international marketplace.

When the wooden crate finally arrived at the door of Norwegian YouTuber Frengen, he had anticipated something much closer to a toy than an actual tool.

Instead, as he pried open the box on camera and began assembling the parts, a small, but fully functional, excavator slowly began to take shape in his backyard.

What began as a curiosity-driven online order soon turned into a viral moment that drew over 4 million views and highlighted a growing trend: overseas consumers buying small construction machines directly from Chinese manufacturers.

Frengen first spotted the mini excavator while browsing Alibaba's international marketplace, where factories list products for global buyers. The price tag of less than $2,000 immediately caught his eye.

In Europe, a few thousand dollars would normally buy a premium lawn mower. Seeing a listing for a mini excavator at roughly the same price seemed almost too hard to ignore.

Assuming it might be a scale model or novelty item, he placed the order out of utter curiosity. What surprised him most was not simply that the excavator worked, but that it worked well.

The small machine featured fully functional hydraulic controls, metal tracks and a digging arm capable of handling real landscaping and construction tasks. In the video, Frengen tested the excavator by digging soil and moving debris, commenting that the performance appeared comparable — and in some cases superior — to certain entry-level models sold locally.

Many viewers said they owned farms, rural properties or large gardens and "had long wanted affordable machinery for digging trenches, clearing land or doing landscaping work".

Determined to find out more about his mighty little machine, Frengen traveled to East China's Shandong province, known for its clusters of manufacturers specializing in construction equipment. There, he visited the factory that produced his new machine, HUAYee Heavy Industry Group.

In the video that he made documenting the trip, automated welding machines can be seen joining together steel frames, while workers assemble hydraulic components along orderly production lines.

Suppliers from nearby industrial parks delivered parts ranging from engines to steel structures, illustrating how tightly connected manufacturing clusters help keep costs low.

The factory visit offered viewers an unusual behind-the-scenes look at how a machine priced at just a few thousand dollars could still deliver practical functionality.

According to HUAYee, overseas demand for its mini excavators has risen sharply in recent years, particularly among homeowners and small contractors. Orders placed through Alibaba's international platform grew more than 53 percent year-on-year in 2025.

The latest data from Alibaba's global marketplace showed that orders for construction machinery products on the platform increased around 40 percent last year, with strong demand from the United States, Canada, Germany, France and Italy — countries traditionally known for their industrial machinery manufacturing.

Unlike traditional excavator exports, which are typically sold in bulk to construction companies or distributors, mini excavators are increasingly being purchased by individual users — farmers maintaining land, homeowners reshaping their gardens or DIY enthusiasts tackling ambitious projects.

Wang Peng, a researcher at the Beijing Academy of Social Sciences, said the phenomenon highlighted how incremental innovation and a close reading of consumer demand can reshape traditional industries.

"These Chinese products are not necessarily based on cutting-edge breakthroughs. What matters is identifying new users and adapting existing products to meet their needs," he added.

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