The minimum order quantity is the first wall most new importers hit. You find the right supplier, the right product, the right pricing — and then the quote comes back with an MOQ of 5,000 units when you can realistically sell 800 in your first season.
The good news: MOQs are almost always more negotiable than they look. The bad news: most buyers approach the negotiation in ways that get them either rejected or quoted a steep price penalty that defeats the purpose. This article covers what actually works, based on dozens of successful MOQ negotiations across fashion, equestrian, and industrial categories.
Understanding why a supplier sets a particular MOQ is the foundation of any successful negotiation. There are usually three reasons behind it:
Each of these has a different solution. The tactics below address them directly.
If the MOQ is 3,000 units of a single SKU and you need 500 each across 6 colors, ask if they will accept 6 × 500 in one PO. This often works because the total volume justifies the line setup, even though each individual SKU is small.
Suggested approach: "We understand your 3,000 minimum. Can we discuss 3,000 total across 6 colors of the same product, with shared base materials?"
Sometimes the MOQ exists purely to amortize setup costs. Offer to pay those costs directly as a one-time fee, plus a slightly higher unit price. The supplier gets compensated, you get the volume you actually need.
Suggested approach: "If we order 800 units instead of 3,000, what setup cost would cover your investment? We can include it in the first PO."
Suppliers care about annual volume more than any individual PO. If you can credibly commit to 5,000 units over 12 months across 3-4 orders, many factories will accept 800 in the first PO as a starting point. The key word is "credibly" — they will not forget if you don't deliver on the forecast.
Suggested approach: "Our annual volume projection is 5,000 units across 4 quarters. Can we structure the first PO at 800 units with a forecast schedule?"
If the raw material MOQ is the blocker, see if another product in your range uses the same input. A 50 kg minimum on a specific yarn used for two different sweater styles becomes much easier than 50 kg for one style alone.
Custom-dyed fabric, custom-color steel powder coating, or custom packaging all carry their own MOQs. Choosing from the supplier's stock materials in the first order eliminates a major MOQ driver. You can introduce custom inputs in the second or third order, once volume justifies them.
For small orders, offering 100% upfront in exchange for a lower MOQ shifts the calculation in your favor. Use this only with suppliers you have qualified thoroughly.
Suggested approach: "Would 100% T/T upfront make a 500-unit first order workable on your side?"
Trading companies aggregate orders from multiple buyers, which lets them place larger combined orders with the factory. Their per-unit cost is higher than direct factory, but they can often accept MOQs that direct factories will refuse. For first orders or test runs, this is often the most practical path.
Some MOQs are real constraints that no negotiation will overcome. Recognize them:
In these cases, the right move is to either accept the MOQ, postpone the order until your volume justifies it, or pivot to a different product configuration.
The best MOQ negotiation is the one where the supplier feels you understand their constraints, and you've found a way to address one of them. Pure price pressure rarely works. Collaborative problem-solving almost always does.
Lower MOQs almost always mean higher per-unit prices. A factory accepting 500 units instead of 3,000 will typically price 15-30% higher per unit. This is normal and reasonable — the setup cost spreads across fewer units.
The question is whether the higher unit price still makes sense for your business. For a market test, often yes. For a commodity competition, often no. Run the math both ways before pushing the negotiation.
The framework we use internally before recommending any supplier. Covers legal verification, capability assessment, certifications, sampling, audits, and trial orders.
Read article →FOB, CIF, EXW, DDP — what each term really means in practice, who bears the risk, and how to choose the right one for your shipment.
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