MOQ (Minimum Order Quantity) isn’t just a factory rule — it protects efficiency, cost, and risk across yarn, knitting, and finishing. Here’s how to plan orders intelligently.
Why Knitwear Needs MOQs
- Yarn supply: Mills typically sell full packs/batches.
- In-stock yarn: ~15 days lead time.
- Custom dye or non-stock yarn: 30–60 days.
- Production efficiency: Machine setup, sampling, and finishing require labor and time; very small runs struggle to amortize costs.
- Cost & risk: A baseline quantity covers waste, while helping brands manage inventory and cash flow.
Common MOQ Scenarios
- In-stock yarn bulk: ~100 pcs, ~15 days.
- Non-stock/custom dye: 100–150 pcs, 30–60 days.
- Ready stock wholesale: from 30-50 pcs to test fit and quality.
How to Plan Orders Scientifically
- Budget & demand: How many pieces cover fixed costs? Keep 10–20% buffer for testing.
- Yarn choice:
- In-stock = lower cost, shorter lead time.
- Custom = higher cost, longer lead time, stronger brand identity.
- Collaborate early: Share moodboard, budget, sales goals; request a profit breakdown (materials + processes + suggested retail).
- Stage your scale: Start with 10 pcs test, follow with 30–50 pcs light customization, then scale to 100–150 pcs standard bulk.
Our Flexible Pathways
- 30–50 pcs ready stock to test the market
- 100–150 pcs standard production → stable supply for scaling.
- Larger orders → partner factories for volume.
Conclusion
MOQ is a planning tool, not a barrier. Blend ready stock + light customization + standard production to reduce risk and still ship designs you’re proud of.
Pingback: How Small Brands Can Access Luxury Cashmere with Small Orders - Cawool Studio