delivered the opinion of the Court.
A foreign manufacturer sold its products in Texas through a Texas distributor. We must decide whether the use of that distributorship insulates the manufacturer from the reach of a Texas court when one of the products injures a Texas citizen. We hold that a manufacturer is subject to specific personal jurisdiction in Texas when it intentionally targets Texas as the marketplace for its products, and that using a distributor-intermediary for that purpose provides no haven from the jurisdiction of a Texas court. Because, in this case, personal jurisdiction comports with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice, we affirm the court of appeals’ judgment.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Spir Star AG (“AG”), a German corporation headquartered in Rimbach, Germany, manufactures high-pressure hoses and fittings for sale throughout the world. AG is owned by three German citizens: Werner Buchner, Gerhard Strobach, and Walter de Graaf. In 1995, AG decided that Houston would be the optimal location for a distributorship because the Texas coastal region’s numerous refineries were well suited for AG’s energy-related products. AG’s executives traveled to Houston, leased office space, and established a Texas distributorship, Spir Star Inc., now Spir Star Limited (“Limited”). AG’s directors gave Limited permission to use the trademarked “Spir Star” name free of charge. Although it sells products other than AG’s, Limited is AG’s exclusive distributor in Texas and North America.
AG manufactures hoses that are used primarily in the energy industry. Each month, Limited purchases a maritime eon-tainer full of AG’s products, which are then shipped to the port of Houston. Limited assembles the hoses using AG-provided training and tools and sells them to customers in Texas and elsewhere. Title to the hoses passes to Limited in Europe. The Texas distributorship accounts for thirty-five percent of AG’s annual sales, although Limited and AG do not share profits or finances with each other.
De Graaf, AG’s president, is also the president of Limited. He splits his time between Houston and Germany, and regularly conducts AG’s business in Texas. De Graaf and AG’s other two officers own seventy-five percent of Limited; twenty-five percent is owned by Limited employees.
In 2003, an AG high-pressure hose ruptured and seriously injured Louis Kimich. AG had sold the hose to Limited, which in turn sold it to Kimich’s employer. Kimich sued his employer and the premises owner, and later added claims against AG and Limited. 1
AG filed a special appearance, which the trial court and the court of appeals denied.
II. Applicable Law
To render a binding judgment, a court must have both subject matter jurisdiction over the controversy and personal jurisdiction over the parties.
CSR Ltd. v. Link,
Texas courts have personal jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant when (1) the Texas long-arm statute provides for it, and (2) the exercise of jurisdiction is consistent with federal and state due process guarantees.
Am. Type Culture Collection, Inc. v. Coleman,
If a defendant has never invoked the protections that a forum offers its residents, or has no purposeful contact with it, the forum court’s jurisdiction is confined. Personal jurisdiction over nonresident defendants is constitutional only when: (1) the defendant has established minimum contacts with the forum state, and (2) the exercise of jurisdiction comports with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.
Int’l Shoe Co. v. Washington,
Although this “fair play” and “substantial justice” test is well known to appellate courts, the expression is imprecise. It gains meaning, however, when viewed in light of the “minimum contacts” a defendant has with the forum.
Int’l Shoe,
A defendant’s contacts with a forum can give rise to either specific or general jurisdiction.
CSR,
*873 III. AG satisfies the “additional conduct” standard required for specific jurisdiction.
A court has specific jurisdiction over a defendant if its alleged liability arises from or is related to an activity conducted 'within the forum.
CSR,
The “touchstone of jurisdictional due process [is] ‘purposeful availment.’ ”
Michiana Easy Livin’ Country, Inc. v. Holten,
Notably, however, a seller’s awareness “ ‘that the stream of commerce may or will sweep the product into the forum State does not convert the mere act of placing the product into the stream into an act purposefully directed toward the forum State.’ ”
CSR,
AG relies on a different line of cases that reject jurisdiction “[w]hen a nonresident defendant purposefully structures transactions to avoid the benefits and protections of a forum’s laws.”
Am. Type Culture,
AG argues the same principles apply here, even'though this case involves a foreign corporation’s use of a Texas distributorship rather than a parent/subsidiary relationship. The issue is not, however, whether Limited’s actions in Texas can be imputed to AG. Rather, our concern is with AG’s own conduct directed toward marketing its products in Texas.
When an out-of-state manufacturer like AG specifically targets Texas as a market for its products, that manufacturer is subject to a product liability suit in Texas based on a product sold here, even if the sales are conducted through a Texas distributor or affiliate.
See Asahi,
[I]f the sale of a product of a manufacturer ... is not simply an isolated occurrence, but arises from the efforts of the manufacturer ... to serve directly or indirectly, the market for its product in other States, it is not unreasonable to subject it to suit in one of those States if its allegedly defective merchandise has there been the source of injury to its owner or to others.
World-Wide Volkswagen v. Woodson,
There are several limitations inherent in this rule. First, it is limited to the specific jurisdiction context, because stream-of-commerce analysis “is relevant only to the exercise of specific jurisdiction; it provides no basis for exercising general jurisdiction over a nonresident defendant.”
Purdue Research Found v. Sanofi-Synthelabo, S.A.,
Second, specific jurisdiction is limited to claims that “arise out of or relate to” a nonresident’s forum contacts.
Burger King,
Third, not every product claim against a foreign manufacturer is included; there must be a substantial connection. That similar products were sold in Texas would not create a substantial connection as to products that were not. Similarly, a nonresident that buys a Texas distributor might have no substantial connection with sales that occurred before that purchase.
See Commonwealth Gen. Corp. v. York,
Finally, the manufacturer must have intended to serve the Texas market.
CSR,
Many transactions can be structured to avoid any benefit from or availment of Texas law — but not all. A nonresident manufacturer does not avoid Texas law merely by forming a Texas affiliate or utilizing a Texas distributor to sell its products in Texas markets. Just as manufacturers cannot escape liability for defective products by selling them through a subsidiary or distributor, neither can they avoid jurisdiction related to such claims by the same means.
The question is whether AG has purposefully directed acts towards Texas or purposefully availed itself of the benefits and protections of Texas law. We conclude that it has.
A. AG marketed its products exclusively through Limited, a Texas distributor.
AG argues that its individual owners— rather than AG itself — established Limited. Even if that were true, by “marketing [its] product through a distributor who has agreed to serve as the sales agent in the forum state,” AG has met Asahi’s “additional conduct standard.”
Asahi,
AG also contends that, because it receives none of Limited’s profits and relinquishes title to the hoses before they reach Texas, AG does not benefit from Limited’s Texas connections. But AG reaps substantial economic gain through its sales to Limited, its largest distributor by far, responsible for over one-third of AG’s annual sales.
See Moki Mac,
Thus, it is not persuasive that title to the hoses passed in Europe, rather than in Texas.
See Renner v. Lanard, Toys Ltd.,
B. AG intended to serve the Texas market, and Kimich’s claim arose from AG’s purposeful direction of acts towards Texas.
Not only did AG market its products through a distributor in the forum state, AG directly targeted the Texas market. In
CSR,
we held that there was no specific jurisdiction over CSR, a foreign asbestos supplier whose product wound up in Texas: CSR’s knowledge that its buyer, a pipe manufacturer, had a plant in Texas was not determinative because that manufacturer also had plants in at least four other states, and CSR’s awareness that the stream of commerce may sweep the product into Texas “ ‘[did] not convert the mere act of placing the product into the stream into an act purposefully directed toward the forum State.’ ”
CSR,
This is consistent with federal authority holding that no specific jurisdiction exists over a manufacturer whose product just happens to end up in the forum state. For example, the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals recently held that a Danish jack manufacturer was not subject to specific jurisdiction in Indiana, because there was no evidence that the manufacturer had “an awareness or expectation that some of its products would be purchased in Indiana”:
In World-Wide Volkswagen, the Supreme Court held that personal jurisdiction was lacking because, in part, there was no evidence in the record that any products that the defendants distributed (in that case, automobiles) were ever sold to retail customers in the forum state. Similarly in this case, Jennings produced no evidence that any of AC Hydraulic’s products (including the jack at issue in this suit) were ever sold in Indiana. Jennings claims that an Indiana company purchased the jack, but even if we were to accept this unsubstantiated allegation as evidence, Jennings does not tell us in what state or from whom this company purchased the *877 jack. Additionally, Jennings established that AC Hydraulic sells some of its products to two distributors in Florida, but she did not present any volume information for these sales or provide us with information about where the distributors resell the products, so the scope of any alleged distribution in the rest of the United States, and whether any AC Hydraulic products have been distributed in Indiana, cannot be determined. The bottom line is that, relying on the sparse evidence that Jennings presented, we do not know how the jack in question got to Indiana, or if any other AC Hydraulic products have ever been sold there. It is possible that the “unilateral activity” of a third party, rather than the defendant’s distribution scheme, landed the jack in Indiana, which is the very scenario that doomed the plaintiffs’ case in WorldAWide Volkswagen.
Jennings v. AC Hydraulic A/S,
Contrast those cases with the situation here. AG’s board of directors created Limited because AG wanted to take advantage of “the biggest economy in the world.” Strobach testified that “the whole board ... decided that [Houston would be the best place for a distributor] because we knew that — we thought that would be the greatest need, because of the immediate vicinity of all the refineries.” Strobach traveled to Houston because “we wanted to establish an office in Houston.” The Board’s selection of a Houston office preceded by a few days the arrival of Walter De Graaf, president of both AG and Limited and an employee of each, who signed the documents that created Limited. De Graaf spends half the year working in Houston and is paid by both AG and Limited while there; his contract with AG authorizes him to act on its behalf no matter where he is.
After deciding to establish Limited, AG authorized Limited to use the “Spir Star” name, and Limited became AG’s exclusive distributor in Texas and throughout North America. According to one of AG’s directors, Limited has been “very successful indeed,” and it is AG’s largest customer by far. AG has sold millions of dollars worth of hoses to Limited; each month, AG sells Limited a maritime container full of reels of hose, which are shipped to the port of Houston. AG supplies Limited with crimping and assembly tools and written assembly standards, and AG personnel train Limited’s employees in hose assembly.
AG’s website, authored by one of its employees, states that:
In order to cover the world-wide market and provide quick service to our customers, office [sic] were opened in the following countries: SPIR STAR France, S.A.R.L. 1991 in Haguenau/France, SPIR STAR Inc. [Limited] 1995 in Housten [sic]/Texas (U.S.A.) and SPIR STAR Asia Pty. Ltd. 1999 in Singapore.
Limited’s website, which is written from AG’s perspective, states that “the decision was made that the company should expand its activities outside of Europe” and that “we ventured across the Atlantic and
*878
founded SPIR STAR, Ltd. in Houston, Texas.” The same website touts Limited as “the main link for our growing market share in North and South America.” Under the heading “Spir Star Companies,” four entities are listed: AG, Limited, Spir Star France, and Spir Star Asia, PTE Ltd. De Graaf, AG’s president, testified that he reviewed the content of both websites pri- or to their publication. The trial court could have believed, as Kimich argues, that AG, acting through its directors and officers, created Limited or that the website statements were admissions by AG. Or the trial court simply could have determined that AG “marketed [its] product through a distributor who has agreed to serve as the sales agent in the forum State.”
Asahi,
Finally, Kimieh’s claim arose from AG’s Texas contacts.
See World-Wide Volkswagen,
IV. Exercising jurisdiction over AG comports with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.
Because AG’s Texas contacts support specific jurisdiction, we must now determine whether jurisdiction is consistent with traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.
Retamco,
Requiring AG to defend Kimich’s claim in Texas would not pose an undue burden for the company. The fact that AG is headquartered in Germany cannot, by itself, defeat jurisdiction.
See id.
at 231 (“Nor is distance alone ordinarily sufficient to defeat jurisdiction: ‘modern transportation and communication have made it much less burdensome for a party sued to defend himself in a State where he engages in economic activity.’ ” (quoting
McGee v. Int’l Life Ins. Co.,
Moreover, Texas has a significant interest in exercising jurisdiction over controversies arising from injuries a Texas resident sustains from products that are purposefully brought into the state and purchased by Texas companies.
Cf. Asahi,
V. Conclusion
Under the appropriate standard of review, our task ends when, as here, some evidence supports the trial court’s denial of AG’s special appearance.
BMC,
Notes
. Limited has not challenged jurisdiction.
. The court did not resolve whether Justice O’Connor’s or Justice Brennan's
Asahi
standard should be applied, because the plaintiff failed to make even a threshold showing that AC Hydraulic had an awareness or expectation that some of its products would be purchased in Indiana.
Jennings,
. There is some confusion about a court’s need to evaluate the fourth and fifth considerations in cases involving a foreign defendant. In
Guardian Royal,
we held that in cases involving a foreign defendant rather than two "coequal sovereigns in our federal system, we
*879
need not consider the interstate judicial system's interest in obtaining the most efficient resolution of controversies or the shared interest of the several states in furthering fundamental substantive social policies,”
Guardian Royal,
. De Graaf has established a residence in Houston and obtained a "green card” in 2000.
