Most new clothing brands do not fail because they cannot find a factory.
They fail because they produce too much before they know what will sell.
I have worked with many buyers who came to us with strong ideas, good taste, and real ambition. But when they contacted factories, they were told to order 500 pieces per style, sometimes per color. For a new brand, that can turn one good idea into a cash flow problem very quickly.
At TrueKung, we help startups, boutique owners, online fashion brands, and growing labels produce custom clothing in smaller, more practical quantities. Our job is not only to make garments. Our job is to help you develop products you can actually sell, reorder, and grow from.
Low MOQ production is not magic. It still needs proper fabric planning, sampling, costing, production control, and inspection. But when it is handled correctly, it can help you test the market without locking too much money into inventory.
What Does Low MOQ Mean in Clothing Manufacturing?
MOQ means minimum order quantity. It is the smallest quantity a factory can accept for production.
But in real apparel manufacturing, MOQ is not one fixed number for every buyer and every product.
It depends on:
- garment category
- fabric type
- fabric color
- available stock fabric or custom fabric
- size range
- printing or embroidery
- labels, tags, and packaging
- production complexity
- delivery deadline
A simple blouse using available fabric may be possible at a lower MOQ. A custom dyed jacket with special lining, metal trims, embroidery, and five colors will need a different production plan.
That is why we do not like giving careless MOQ promises before checking the design. A serious factory should first understand your product, then explain where the minimum quantity comes from.
Who Is Low MOQ Production Best For?
Low MOQ clothing manufacturing is useful for buyers who need to test before scaling.
It is especially suitable for:
- startup clothing brands
- boutique owners
- Shopify and online fashion stores
- independent designers
- small batch fashion labels
- Amazon sellers testing new apparel products
- brands launching capsule collections
- buyers testing a new category or fabric
If you already have proven sales and stable repeat orders, larger batch production may give you a better unit price.
But if you are still testing your customer, your first goal should be learning fast without buying too much stock.
The Real Problem Low MOQ Solves
Many new buyers ask us, “Can you make 50 or 100 pieces?”
That is an important question, but it is not the only question.
The better question is:
Can this order help me learn what sells and still leave enough margin to continue?
A low MOQ order should help you test:
- which style gets attention
- which color sells first
- which size ratio is realistic
- whether your target price works
- whether your fabric quality matches your market
- whether customers reorder or complain
- whether your photos and product page convert
If your first order gives you this information, it has done its job.
The goal is not to look big on day one. The goal is to make the right product, sell it, and use the data to make a better second order.

Why Low MOQ Usually Costs More Per Piece
This is something every new buyer should understand before asking for a quotation.
Low MOQ usually has a higher unit price.
That does not mean the factory is trying to overcharge you. It means the same development work is spread across fewer garments.
Even for a small order, the factory still needs to:
- review your design
- source fabric and trims
- make or adjust patterns
- develop a sample
- check fitting and measurements
- arrange cutting
- prepare sewing instructions
- inspect finished garments
- press, pack, and prepare shipment
These steps take time whether you order 80 pieces or 800 pieces.
But low MOQ can still be the smarter choice.
If you order 100 pieces and sell 80, you learn and can reorder. If you order 1,000 pieces and sell 200, your lower unit price did not save you. It trapped your money in dead stock.
In apparel, profit is not made by getting the cheapest first quote. Profit is made by producing the right quantity of the right product at the right time.
What Affects Your MOQ Most?
Before we quote, we usually look at five things.
1. Fabric
Fabric is often the biggest MOQ factor.
If we can use available market fabric, small batch production is easier. If your fabric needs custom knitting, weaving, dyeing, printing, or finishing, the fabric supplier may have its own minimum quantity.
For a new brand, available fabric is often the best starting point. You can still make a strong product without forcing a high fabric minimum too early.
2. Color
Every extra color makes the order more complicated.
One style in one color is easier to manage than one style split into five colors. More colors mean more fabric planning, more cutting separation, more quality checking, and more leftover risk.
For a first order, we often suggest starting with one or two commercial colors. After you know what sells, add more colors in the reorder.
3. Size Range
A wide size range can reduce quantity per size too much.
For example, if you order 100 pieces across six sizes and three colors, each size/color combination becomes very small. That makes production less efficient and can increase cost.
Start with your most important size range first. Expand when your sales data supports it.
4. Workmanship
Some details look simple in a photo but take extra work in production.
Examples include:
- embroidery
- screen printing
- all-over printing
- pleating
- beading
- quilting
- special washing
- contrast stitching
- custom hardware
- complicated lining
These details can be valuable, but they must match your budget and quantity.
For a startup order, we help buyers decide which details are important for the product and which details can wait until the brand grows.
5. Labels and Packaging
Private label details are important, but they also have minimums.
Woven labels, care labels, hang tags, barcode stickers, custom polybags, and packaging all affect cost and production planning.
For a first order, we usually recommend clean, practical branding. Make the garment good first. Upgrade packaging after the product proves itself.
What Categories Can TrueKung Produce?
TrueKung works with many custom apparel categories, including:
- dresses
- blouses and shirts
- skirts
- pants
- knitwear
- hoodies and sweatshirts
- streetwear
- yoga and activewear
- kidswear
- maternity clothing
- uniforms
- abaya and modest wear
- boutique women’s fashion
- private label apparel collections
Not every category has the same MOQ. A basic knit item and a structured woven garment may need very different planning.
Send us your design or reference photo, and we can tell you what is realistic before you spend money on sampling.
Our Low MOQ Production Process
Step 1: Project Review
You send us your design, tech pack, reference photo, sample garment, or idea.
We check the style, fabric, workmanship, size range, branding needs, and target quantity. If something may push the MOQ higher, we explain it early.
Step 2: Fabric and Trim Sourcing
We look for suitable fabric and trims based on your target market and budget.
For low MOQ orders, we usually check available fabric options first. This helps reduce development time and avoid unnecessary fabric minimums.
Step 3: Sample Development
We make the sample so you can check fit, fabric, details, and workmanship before bulk production.
A sample is not just a photo prop. It is the place where problems should be found and corrected.
Step 4: Cost and Quantity Confirmation
After the sample direction is clear, we confirm the bulk quantity, size ratio, color plan, packaging, and production cost.
This step is important because a small change in color, size range, fabric, or trim can affect the final price.
Step 5: Bulk Production
Once the sample is approved, we arrange material preparation, cutting, sewing, finishing, pressing, packing, and production tracking.
Small batch orders need careful control because one mistake can affect a large part of the order.
Step 6: Quality Inspection
We check measurements, stitching, stains, loose threads, labels, packing, and order quantity before shipment.
A small brand cannot afford high return rates. Quality control is not optional.

Low MOQ vs Large Batch Production
| Item | Low MOQ Production | Large Batch Production |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Testing market, new styles, startup brands | Proven products and repeat orders |
| Upfront investment | Lower | Higher |
| Unit cost | Usually higher | Usually lower |
| Inventory risk | Lower | Higher |
| Flexibility | Higher | Lower |
| Speed to learn | Faster | Slower |
| Best use | Validate and improve | Scale what already sells |
Low MOQ is not always the cheapest way to make clothing.
But it is often the safest way to start.

When Low MOQ Is Not a Good Idea
I also want to be honest about when low MOQ may not work well.
Low MOQ may not be suitable if:
- you need a very low unit price from the first order
- your design requires custom fabric development
- you want too many colors and sizes in a small quantity
- the product has many special trims or techniques
- your delivery deadline is too short
- you have no clear target market or selling plan
In these cases, we may suggest simplifying the style, using available fabric, reducing colors, or increasing the order quantity to make production more realistic.
A good factory should not say yes to everything. A good factory should help you avoid expensive mistakes.
How to Make a Small Batch Order More Profitable
Low MOQ only helps if the order is planned carefully.
Here is what we suggest from factory experience.
Start With Fewer Styles
Do not launch too many styles in your first collection.
A focused collection of 3 to 6 strong styles is easier to produce, photograph, market, and reorder.
Use Fewer Colors
Choose your strongest commercial colors first.
If black, white, navy, beige, or one signature color fits your brand, start there. Add more colors after sales data proves the demand.
Control the Size Ratio
Do not split your quantity too thinly across too many sizes.
Use your target market data if you have it. If not, start with a practical core range, then adjust after the first sale cycle.
Choose Available Fabric When Possible
Available fabric can help reduce MOQ and shorten sampling time.
Custom fabric can come later when the brand has stronger volume.
Keep Branding Practical
You need professional labels and clean packaging, but you do not need to overspend on luxury packaging for a test order.
Customers first care whether the garment looks good, fits well, and feels worth the price.
Prepare Better Inquiry Information
Factories quote faster and more accurately when your information is clear.
A good inquiry should include:
- product photo or sketch
- fabric idea
- target quantity
- colors
- size range
- logo or label needs
- target market
- expected delivery time
- target price range if you have one

Example: How We Would Adjust a Startup Dress Order
A buyer wants to make a women’s summer dress.
Original idea:
- 4 colors
- 6 sizes
- custom floral print
- special buttons
- private label packaging
- 100 pieces total
This looks exciting, but production may be difficult. The quantity is split too thinly, and the custom print may require a higher fabric MOQ.
A better first order could be:
- 1 or 2 colors
- core sizes first
- available print or available fabric
- simple private label setup
- 100 to 200 pieces total
This version is easier to produce, easier to control, and easier to sell.
After the first order, the buyer can see which color and size sells best. Then the reorder can be larger and more confident.
This is how a brand should grow: not by guessing more, but by learning faster.
Why Work With TrueKung?
TrueKung is a custom clothing manufacturer in China supporting OEM, ODM, private label, sampling, small batch production, and export orders.
What we bring to a low MOQ project is not only sewing capacity. We bring production judgment.
We help you understand:
- whether your MOQ target is realistic
- how fabric choice affects cost
- how to simplify a design without making it cheap
- how to plan colors and sizes
- how to prepare for sampling
- how to avoid common production mistakes
- how to make the first order easier to reorder
If your design is ready, we can move quickly.
If your idea still needs work, we can help you organize the missing details.
Our goal is simple: help you produce clothing that can sell, not just clothing that can be made.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is your MOQ?
MOQ depends on the garment type, fabric, color, size range, and customization. Some styles using available fabric can support lower MOQ. More complex styles or custom fabric usually require higher MOQ.
Can I make clothing without a tech pack?
Yes. You can send reference photos, sketches, sample garment photos, or design notes. A tech pack is helpful, but it is not required for the first discussion.
Is low MOQ more expensive?
Usually yes. The unit price is higher because development, sourcing, cutting, sewing setup, and inspection costs are spread across fewer pieces. But the total inventory risk is lower.
Can you help with fabric sourcing?
Yes. We can source fabric and trims based on your design, quality target, and budget. For low MOQ orders, available fabric is often the most practical option.
Can you make samples before bulk production?
Yes. We recommend sample development before bulk production so you can check fit, fabric, workmanship, and details.
Can you do private label for small batch orders?
Yes, depending on the project. We can support labels, care labels, hang tags, packaging, and other branding details. For very small orders, we suggest practical branding options first.
Do you ship internationally?
Yes. We work with international buyers and can support export packing and shipping coordination for markets such as the USA, UK, Europe, Australia, and other regions.
What should I send to get a quote?
Send your product photo, sketch, tech pack, fabric idea, target quantity, size range, color plan, label requirements, and destination country. If you do not have everything ready, send what you have and we will help identify what is missing.
Ready to Start a Low MOQ Clothing Project?
If you are starting a clothing brand or testing a new collection, do not begin by producing too much.
Start with a clear product, a practical quantity, and a factory that tells you the truth before production begins.
Send TrueKung your design, reference photo, or product idea. We will review your style, check the possible MOQ, suggest fabric and production options, and help you plan a small batch order that gives your brand room to learn, sell, and grow.
Contact TrueKung today to discuss your low MOQ clothing manufacturing project in China.
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