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Minimum order quantity (MOQ) is one of the first friction points founders hit in apparel manufacturing.

You ask:

“Can we do a smaller run?”

The factory responds:

“MOQ is 500 units.”

It feels arbitrary.

It’s not.

MOQ is how a factory protects:

  • Its efficiency
  • Its material costs
  • Its risk

If you understand how MOQs actually work, you can:

  • Evaluate factories more accurately
  • Negotiate intelligently
  • Avoid costly mistakes

What MOQ Actually Means in Apparel Manufacturing

MOQ is the minimum number of units a factory is willing to produce per style (and often per color).

But that number isn’t driven by a single factor.

It’s a combination of:

  • Fabric minimums
  • Production efficiency
  • Line setup costs
  • Factory capacity

The key insight:

MOQ is not fixed. It’s a reflection of how your product fits into the factory’s system.


Typical Clothing Manufacturer MOQ Ranges

MOQ varies by product type and region.

General ranges:

  • Basic cut-and-sew apparel: 300–800 units per style
  • Activewear / performance apparel: 500–1,500+ units
  • Swimwear: 300–1,000 units
  • Private label basics: 100–500 units (sometimes lower with stock fabrics)

What affects these ranges:

  • Fabric type
  • Number of colors
  • Customization level
  • Factory scale

The Real Drivers of Minimum Order Clothing Manufacturing


1. Fabric Minimums (The Biggest Driver)

Fabric mills often require:

  • Minimum yardage per order
  • Minimum dye lot sizes

Example:

Even if you want 100 units, the fabric mill may require enough material for 500.

Result:

Factory MOQ increases to match fabric minimums.


2. Production Line Efficiency

Factories run sewing lines.

Setting up a line for a small order is inefficient.

Why:

  • Time is spent setting up machines
  • Operators must be assigned
  • Output is limited

Result:

Factories prefer larger runs to justify setup time.


3. Cost Structure

Smaller orders increase:

  • Per-unit labor cost
  • Material waste
  • Overhead allocation

Factories set MOQs to maintain margin.


4. Factory Capacity and Prioritization

Factories prioritize:

  • Larger orders
  • Repeat clients

Smaller orders are:

  • Lower priority
  • Less attractive

MOQ helps manage this.


When Low MOQs Make Sense

Not all low MOQs are bad.

They can work in specific situations.


1. Stock Fabric Programs

If a factory uses existing fabric:

  • No minimum dye lot required
  • Lower MOQ becomes possible

2. Simplified Products

Basic garments with:

  • Fewer components
  • Standard construction

Can be produced in smaller runs.


3. Development or Sampling Runs

Some factories offer:

  • Small initial runs
  • Higher per-unit pricing

This is often a tradeoff.


When Low MOQ Is a Red Flag

Low MOQ sounds attractive.

But it often signals risk.


1. The Factory Is Filling Capacity Gaps

Factories with excess capacity may accept:

  • Very small orders
  • At the expense of consistency

Risk:

Your order is not part of a stable production system.


2. Corners Are Being Cut

To make small orders profitable, factories may:

  • Substitute materials
  • Reduce QC
  • Simplify construction

Result:

Lower quality and inconsistency.


3. No Real Production Structure

Factories offering extremely low MOQs may lack:

  • Organized sewing lines
  • Process control
  • Scalability

Impact:

They may struggle as your brand grows.


4. Pricing Becomes Unstable

Low MOQ often comes with:

  • Higher per-unit cost
  • Inconsistent pricing across orders

This makes margin planning difficult.


The Tradeoff: MOQ vs Cost vs Risk

You can’t optimize all three at once:

  • Low MOQ
  • Low cost
  • High consistency

You usually get two — not all three.


How to Work With MOQ (Instead of Fighting It)


1. Adjust Product Complexity

Simpler products:

  • Reduce production friction
  • Lower MOQ requirements

2. Use Stock Materials

Avoid custom fabrics early on.

This reduces:

  • Fabric minimums
  • Lead times

3. Consolidate SKUs

Instead of:

  • 100 units across 5 styles

Consider:

  • 500 units of 1–2 styles

4. Accept Higher Initial Cost

Smaller orders often require:

  • Higher per-unit pricing

This is part of early-stage production.


5. Plan for Scale

Choose a factory that can grow with you.

Even if MOQ is higher initially, it may be more stable long term.


What to Ask About MOQ

  • What drives your MOQ for this product?
  • Is it based on fabric or production?
  • Can MOQ change with different materials?
  • How does pricing change with volume?

These answers reveal how flexible the factory actually is.


The Biggest Mistake Founders Make

They treat MOQ as a barrier to negotiate down.

Instead of understanding:

  • Why it exists
  • What’s driving it

Negotiation without alignment leads to:

  • Production issues
  • Quality problems
  • Unstable partnerships

Final Thought

MOQ isn’t just a number.

It’s a signal.

It tells you:

  • How the factory operates
  • Where your product fits
  • What risks exist

The brands that succeed don’t chase the lowest MOQ.

They align their product, their volume, and their factory — so production actually works.


Need Help Navigating MOQ and Factory Fit?

We help apparel brands evaluate MOQ tradeoffs, align with the right manufacturers, and build production strategies that scale.

Talk to an Apparel Product Sourcing Expert