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A minimum order quantity (or MOQ) is the smallest amount a supplier will let you buy in one order. It can be set as a number of units or a total dollar value. Suppliers use MOQs to make sure each order covers their costs and turns a profit. You can order more than the MOQ but never less, which makes it a cornerstone of wholesale and B2B buying.
An MOQ sets the entry ticket for buying from a supplier. It is most common in wholesale and manufacturing. Think of it like a group dinner with a minimum spend. The restaurant only takes the booking if the table orders enough to be worth it.
MOQs come in a few common forms. The right one depends on how a supplier prices and ships. Some are simple, with just one floor to clear. Others stack a unit rule and a value rule together.
The main reason is economies of scale. Producing more units spreads fixed costs over a bigger batch. So the cost to make each unit drops as the run grows. A tiny order would not cover setup, so the supplier loses money on it.
MOQs also filter for serious buyers. Small, one-off orders are expensive to pack and serve. That matters because keeping a buyer is cheaper than winning one. In fact, acquiring a new customer can cost five to 25 times more than retaining an existing one.
Suppliers rarely pick an MOQ at random. Several real costs shape where the number lands. Each one nudges the minimum up or down.
On WooCommerce, you can set a minimum order quantity for wholesale at the cart or product level. The store then blocks checkout until the buyer hits the minimum. You can even apply different minimums to different customer roles. Shopify offers similar quantity rules on its B2B plans.
This keeps the rule automatic and fair. Buyers see the minimum clearly, so there are no surprises at checkout. Meanwhile, you avoid the hassle of canceling orders that are too small. The whole flow runs without manual checks.
An MOQ is not free money for the buyer. Ordering in bulk ties up cash and warehouse space. Unsold stock can also age, get damaged, or fall out of style. So buyers weigh the lower unit price against the risk of overstock.
This is why payment terms matter so much on big orders. Most business buyers want to spread the cost over time. In fact, 61% of B2B buyers say trade credit or net terms is their leading way to pay. But sellers carry risk too, since about half of all B2B invoices are paid late.
A high MOQ can scare off a small shop. Luckily, buyers have a few proven ways to cope. None of them require a huge budget.
Not every model relies on an MOQ. Some sellers set the floor at a single unit. This suits stores that cannot risk holding stock. It also fits brand-new shops still testing the market.
Dropshipping and print-on-demand are the clearest examples. The supplier makes or ships each item only after a sale happens. So there is no batch to fill and no minimum to meet. The trade-off is a higher cost per unit and thinner margins.
Imagine a small ceramics maker called Riverstone Pottery. It sells mugs wholesale to independent gift shops. To cover its kiln, glazing, and packing costs, it sets an MOQ of 50 mugs per order. Anything smaller would cost more to make than it earns.
That minimum is not random. Below 50 mugs, a single firing run barely breaks even. The MOQ makes sure each order is worth the setup time. It also signals that Riverstone is a serious supplier.
A gift shop called Fern & Co wants to stock the mugs. At 50 units, the wholesale price drops to $8 each, or $400 total. Buying just 10 mugs would cost far more per unit. So the MOQ rewards Fern & Co with a much lower cost per mug.
That lower unit cost leaves more room for profit. If Fern & Co resells each mug at $20, the margin is healthy. The bigger the gap between cost and retail, the more the MOQ pays off. That spread is what funds the shop’s rent, staff, and growth.
But Fern & Co now has to sell all 50 mugs. If they sit on the shelf, they tie up cash and space. Slow sellers can also chip, fade, or go out of season. To ease the upfront hit, the shop asks for net-30 terms.
That request fits the norm, since most business buyers expect some trade credit. It lets Fern & Co start selling before the invoice is even due. Smart buyers match their order size to real, provable demand. A good forecast turns an MOQ from a gamble into a plan.
When the mugs sell, both sides win. Riverstone runs an efficient batch, and Fern & Co earns a healthy margin. Happy wholesale customers reorder, which is where the real value sits. Keeping them costs far less than chasing brand-new buyers.
MOQ has a close cousin called minimum order value, or MOV. They solve the same problem in different units. An MOQ counts items, while an MOV counts dollars.
An MOQ works best for products with steady per-unit costs. An MOV works better when items vary widely in price. Many stores use both together for tighter control over small orders.
The right choice depends on your catalog. A maker with one core product often leans on a unit MOQ. A store with mixed, uneven prices usually prefers a value floor. Either way, the goal is the same healthy minimum.
In wholesale, MOQ is the smallest order a supplier will accept. It can be a number of units or a dollar total. The buyer must hit that floor to place the order. This keeps small orders from eating into the supplier’s profit.
Suppliers start with their fixed costs per production run. Then they find the quantity needed to cover those costs and still profit. They also factor in storage, packing, and expected demand. The result becomes the minimum they will accept.
Often, yes, especially early in a supplier relationship. You might offer a higher price per unit to offset the smaller run. A trial order or a longer contract can also help.
Bundling several products into one shipment is another angle. It never hurts to ask politely.
An MOQ is where smart sourcing and healthy margins meet. It keeps suppliers profitable and rewards buyers who plan ahead. For any store moving into wholesale, understanding MOQs is the first step to pricing and stocking with confidence. Get the number right, and both sides of the deal come out ahead.
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