GZWL (Guangzhou Weiliang Logistics) is a mid-tier express courier service operating primarily from Guangzhou, one of China's major commercial hubs. The carrier specializes in domestic delivery across China and has expanded into international shipping routes, serving businesses and individual shippers who need reliable parcel delivery at competitive rates.
Founded to serve the Pearl River Delta region's booming e-commerce sector, GZWL has built its reputation on fast processing times and flexible service options. The company operates its own sorting facilities and delivery network, giving them control over shipment handling from pickup to final delivery.
GZWL tracking data updates frequently during transit, but keeping up with their status codes and delivery windows across multiple platforms gets tedious. Paxlo consolidates GZWL tracking into your phone, eliminating the need to log into different websites or remember tracking numbers.
Adding a GZWL shipment to Paxlo takes seconds. Copy your tracking number from your order confirmation email and paste it into the app. Paxlo syncs with GZWL's tracking system automatically, pulling fresh location and status data multiple times daily. You'll see updates in real-time as the package moves from the origin city to regional hubs and finally to your local delivery point.
The app handles the back-end parsing of GZWL's tracking system, so you don't see cryptic status codes. Instead, Paxlo shows you exactly what's happening, in clear English. If your package arrives at a facility, gets sorted, departs for the next location, or is out for delivery, you'll know immediately.
China's express delivery sector is dominated by giants like SF Express and ZTO, but GZWL occupies a competitive middle market. The carrier appeals to small and medium e-commerce sellers, cross-border shippers, and bulk retailers who value personalized service and flexible rate structures. GZWL's Guangzhou base gives it natural advantages in Pearl River Delta sourcing and regional Asian connections.
The company has invested in automation at key sorting facilities and partnered with last-mile delivery networks to expand coverage. This infrastructure investment means GZWL parcels typically reach provincial destinations within 2-3 days and international shipments within 7-15 days, depending on the route and customs processing.
Understanding how GZWL operates helps you set realistic delivery expectations. Most domestic shipments follow this pattern: pickup from sender on Day 1, overnight transport to the regional sorting hub, outbound scan on Day 2, and delivery on Day 3. International parcels take longer due to customs clearance, often sitting 2-5 days at origin while paperwork is processed.
Rural deliveries and remote provinces can add 1-2 extra days. If your package is heading to Tibet, Xinjiang, or other far-flung regions, expect 5-7 business days for domestic delivery. Paxlo tracks all these variations and gives you accurate ETAs based on GZWL's actual scan data.
During Chinese New Year, Singles' Day, and other major shopping events, GZWL experiences significant volume surges. Delivery times can stretch by 2-5 days during these periods. Paxlo's notifications keep you informed if your shipment is delayed due to high volumes, so you won't be left guessing whether the package is lost or just backed up in a sorting facility.
If you buy wholesale from Guangzhou manufacturers or manage multi-country inventory, GZWL handles both domestic Chinese routes and cross-border shipping. The carrier partners with customs brokers and international postal systems to move parcels to Europe, North America, and other regions. Tracking becomes critical on these longer routes because shipment visibility often drops when packages cross into foreign postal networks.
Paxlo bridges that gap by maintaining GZWL tracking until handoff and often picking up the receiving country's carrier data automatically. You get a complete journey view rather than losing track halfway through a 14-day international transit.
Paxlo's tracking timeline shows exactly where your package last scanned. If it hasn't moved in 2-3 days, you have evidence to contact GZWL customer service. A static 'In Transit' status for a week is abnormal and worth investigating. GZWL's customer service team, though not as extensive as major carriers, does respond to inquiries within 24-48 hours.
Keep your Paxlo tracking screenshot handy when contacting GZWL. It shows the exact timeline of scans and proves when and where the package was last detected. This documentation speeds up investigation if a package needs to be traced or a claim needs to be filed.
If you source from multiple Chinese cities or work with various suppliers, you'll end up with shipments from different carriers. Paxlo supports GZWL alongside SF Express, ZTO, EMS, and other major Chinese couriers. This means you can add all your incoming inventory to one app and track everything simultaneously, rather than jumping between five different tracking websites.
Bulk import is also available. If you have 20 GZWL tracking numbers from a recent purchase order, you can paste them all at once and Paxlo will add them to your tracking list. This workflow cuts hours out of manual order management.
Open Paxlo on your phone and tap the plus icon to add a new shipment. Paste your GZWL tracking number (you'll find it in your order confirmation email or seller message) into the tracking field. Select GZWL as the carrier if it doesn't auto-detect, and Paxlo will begin pulling live updates. You'll see the package location and status within seconds. Pin important shipments to your home screen for quick access.
First, confirm you have the complete tracking number, usually 10-13 digits starting with certain prefixes. Double-check for extra spaces or typos. If the number is correct but Paxlo can't find it, the shipment may be very new (GZWL sometimes takes 2-4 hours to enter tracking into their system after pickup). Try again in a few hours. If the number still doesn't work after 24 hours, contact your seller or GZWL directly, as the tracking number may be incorrect or the package may not have been actually shipped.
Domestic deliveries within China usually arrive in 2-3 business days for major cities and 4-5 days for provincial destinations. Remote areas like Tibet or Xinjiang can take 7-10 days. International shipments vary widely, typically 7-20 days depending on destination and customs clearance. During major shopping events like Singles' Day or Chinese New Year, add 2-5 extra days to these timelines. Paxlo shows an estimated delivery date based on your specific route, so check the app for a more precise arrival window.
Yes. Paxlo sends push notifications whenever your GZWL package reaches a major milestone, such as when it's picked up from the sender, arrives at a sorting facility, departs for the next location, and when it's out for final delivery. You can customize notification frequency in Paxlo's settings, adjusting between all scans, important updates only, or delivery confirmation only. This way you stay informed without getting overwhelmed by notifications.
GZWL uses Chinese status messages that Paxlo automatically translates to English. Common statuses include 'Collected from Sender' (package picked up), 'In Transit' (moving between facilities), 'Arrived at Local Facility' (at your area's delivery hub), and 'Out for Delivery' (driver has it today). Each update includes a timestamp and facility location. If you see a status you don't understand, tap it in Paxlo for a full explanation and location details.
No. Paxlo's free tier supports unlimited tracking across all carriers, including GZWL. You can track 5, 50, or 500 GZWL packages simultaneously. The app organizes them by status (active, delivered, stuck) so you can quickly find what you need. For business users tracking high volumes, Paxlo's team can also set up API integrations to automatically import tracking numbers from your e-commerce platform or order management system.