MOQ is the first number you see on every supplier page — and the first one that scares buyers away. “500 units per SKU? I just want to test my market.”
Here’s what nobody tells you: MOQ numbers on Alibaba and Made-in-China are aspirational, not contractual. They’re set to filter out casual shoppers, not serious buyers. And they’re negotiable — if you know what to say.
This article covers real MOQ ranges for adult toys, what’s actually negotiable (and what isn’t), and how to have the conversation without getting laughed out of the WeChat.
See our Complete Import Guide for the full sourcing process from start to finish.
What MOQ Actually Means in Chinese Manufacturing
MOQ = Minimum Order Quantity. It’s the smallest number of units a supplier will produce or ship for a single SKU.
But “minimum” means different things to different links in the supply chain:
| Link | Their MOQ Logic | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Raw material supplier | 1 ton of silicone compound | They sell to factories, not brands |
| Factory | 500-1000 units/SKU | Production line setup cost. Under ~300 units, the labor to switch molds costs more than the order profit |
| Small/medium factory | 100-300 units/SKU | More flexible, smaller batches, but higher unit price |
| Trading company | 10-50 units/SKU | We consolidate orders from multiple buyers across factories |
| Logistics | Carton = 30-100 pcs (depending on product size) | Sea freight charges by volume; cartons are the smallest “unit” they’ll handle |
Translation: If a factory says “MOQ 500,” they mean “it costs us the same to make 50 as 500 thanks to setup overhead, and we’re not interested in your business unless you’re serious.”
That doesn’t mean you can’t get 50. It means you need a different partner — one who deals in small batches.
Real MOQ Ranges by Product Type
These are from the Shenzhen/Dongguan adult toy market, based on actual supplier quotes (not catalog claims):
| Product | Factory MOQ | Trading Co. MOQ | Custom Logo Add |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bullet vibrator | 100-200 | 10-20 | +100-200 |
| Rose-style suction toy | 100-200 | 10-20 | +100-200 |
| G-spot vibrator | 100-300 | 10-30 | +100-200 |
| Magic wand | 50-100 | 10-20 | +100-200 |
| Male masturbator | 100-200 | 10-20 | +100-200 |
| Couples toy (remote) | 100-300 | 10-30 | +100-200 |
| BDSM accessories | 100-500 | 20-50 | +200-500 |
| Lubricants | 500-1000 | Not usually sold individually | +1000+ |
The math: A first test order of 3 products × 20 units each = 60 units total. Direct from factory, impossible. Through a trading company, standard. This is why most first-time importers work through a sourcing partner.
What’s Negotiable vs What’s Not
Usually negotiable (within reason):
- Stock MOQ — A factory waving “500 minimum” might accept 200 if you frame it as a “trial order with potential for repeat business”
- Mixed carton — 100 units across 3-4 SKUs rather than 100 of one SKU (more common with trading companies)
- Sample orders — Almost everyone sells 1-5 samples. You should never pay full MOQ to test a product
Usually NOT negotiable:
- Custom mold — Making a steel mold costs $2,000-$8,000 regardless of order size. No factory waives the tooling fee.
- Custom color — Silicone minimums are set by the raw material supplier (1 ton batches). You can’t get 10 units in a custom Pantone.
- Custom packaging with new box design — Printing setup is the bulk of the cost. Small runs cost dramatically more per unit.
If you’re considering custom branding, Private Label vs White Label comparison explains when custom packaging is actually worth it.
How to Negotiate MOQ (Without Sounding Like a Time-Waster)
What NOT to say:
❌ “Can you do 50?” (You’ve given them nothing to work with) ❌ “Your MOQ is too high.” (They set it for a reason; complaining doesn’t change it) ❌ “I’ll place a big order later.” (They hear this 50 times a day from buyers who never come back) ❌ “Can you match this price I got from another supplier?” (Race to the bottom you’ll lose)
What TO say:
✅ “We’re a new brand entering [market]. We need to test 3-5 SKUs at small quantities first. If the sell-through works, we’ll be ordering monthly. What’s your trial order policy?”
This works because: you’ve explained why you want a small order, acknowledged it’s a trial, offered a commercial reason (market testing), and dangled repeat business. You sound like a business, not a window-shopper.
✅ “Can you add 30 units of to our existing sample order at a higher unit price?”
This works because: you’re volunteering to pay a premium for the convenience of a small batch. The supplier makes more margin per unit; you get your small run. Both sides win.
✅ “Do you work with any local trading companies that handle smaller orders?”
This works because: some factories will point you to their trusted trading partners. The factory doesn’t lose the business; the trading company handles the small batch; you get your products.
The Real Cost of Low MOQ
Small orders cost more per unit. That’s just manufacturing economics. Here’s the approximate premium:
| Order Size | Price Premium vs MOQ | Example (Bullet, FOB) |
|---|---|---|
| 500 pcs | Baseline (100%) | ~$3.50 |
| 200 pcs | +15-25% | ~$4.20 |
| 50-100 pcs | +30-50% | ~$5.00 |
| 10-20 pcs | +50-100% | ~$6.00-7.00 |
| 1-5 pcs (sample) | +100-300% | ~$8-12 |
Your margin at 50 units might be 45% instead of 65% at 500 units. But here’s the thing: if you can’t sell 50 units, you definitely can’t sell 500. Small-batch testing protects you from the worst outcome: a warehouse full of product nobody wants.
Learn the actual cost structure of import in our Shipping & Logistics Guide to budget your first order accurately.
Strategy: The Three-Phase Scaling Model
Phase 1 — Discovery (Month 1)
- Order 3-5 samples from different suppliers
- Test everything yourself
- Pick 2-3 winning products
Phase 2 — Validation (Month 2)
- Order 20-50 units of each winning product through a trading partner
- Sell via your existing channels
- Measure: sell-through rate, returns, customer feedback
Phase 3 — Scale (Month 3+)
- For products that sell, increase to 100-200 units per SKU
- Negotiate better pricing with volume
- Consider custom branding on your top 1-2 SKUs
This approach limits your risk to about $500-1,000 for the test phase. If a product bombs, you lose a few hundred dollars, not five thousand. If it takes off, you already have the supplier relationship and can scale fast.
Bottom Line
MOQ isn’t a wall. It’s a negotiation starting point. For first-time B2B buyers, the smart play is:
- Never pay factory MOQ for a product you haven’t sold before
- Use sample orders for testing, then trading partners for small-batch validation
- Scale to factory MOQ only after you’ve proven demand
Contact us if you want to start with mixed cartons from 10 pcs per SKU.
