Pricing Strategy
Getting Your Wholesale Pricing Right
Pricing is the most critical decision in wholesale. Get it right and you build a sustainable business. Get it wrong and you'll be working for free.
The Keystone Rule (and When to Break It)
The traditional wholesale pricing formula is simple: wholesale price = retail price ÷ 2 ("keystone markup"). This gives retailers a 50% margin and, assuming your COGS is ~30-40% of wholesale, gives you a healthy brand margin too.
But the keystone rule is a starting point, not a law. Here's when to adjust:
- Luxury brands often wholesale at 40-45% of retail (giving retailers 55-60% margin) because the brand cachet justifies it
- Value brands may need to wholesale at 55-60% of retail if retailer margins are thin
- DTC-native brands entering wholesale need to recalculate — your retail price may need to increase to support wholesale margins
Calculating Your Margins
Before setting wholesale prices, know your costs:
- Cost of Goods Sold (COGS) — materials, labor, manufacturing, packaging
- Landed cost — COGS + duties, freight, warehousing
- Overhead allocation — design, sampling, sales, marketing per unit
Minimum healthy margins:
- Brand gross margin (wholesale price − COGS): 55-65%
- Brand net margin (after overhead): 15-25%
- Retailer gross margin: 50-60%
If your margins fall below these thresholds, either your pricing is too low or your costs are too high. Don't try to make it up on volume — that rarely works in fashion.
Buyer Tier Pricing
Not all buyers are equal, and your pricing can reflect that:
- Tier 1 (Key accounts) — Major department stores, flagships. May receive 5-10% better pricing for large volume commitments.
- Tier 2 (Growing accounts) — Multi-door independents, strong online retailers. Standard wholesale pricing.
- Tier 3 (New accounts) — New boutiques, first-time buyers. Standard pricing with possibly higher minimums.
Tier pricing should be based on annual volume commitments, not one-time orders. Platforms like FashionFlo let you set buyer-specific pricing automatically, so the right price shows when each buyer logs in.
Setting Minimums
Minimum order quantities (MOQs) protect your profitability:
- Per-style minimum — e.g., 6 units per style (ensures production efficiency)
- Per-order minimum — e.g., $500 or $1,000 wholesale (ensures orders are worth processing)
- Opening order minimum — Higher minimum for first orders (e.g., $2,000) to filter serious buyers
- Reorder minimum — Lower minimum for repeat orders (e.g., $300) to encourage replenishment
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I offer volume discounts?+
Selectively. A small discount (3-5%) for large commitments can incentivize bigger orders. But aggressive discounting erodes your margins and trains buyers to wait for deals. Focus on value, not discounts.
How do I handle pricing for international buyers?+
Many brands set pricing in USD or EUR and let international buyers handle currency conversion. Alternatively, you can set region-specific pricing. FashionFlo supports multiple price lists per buyer group.