- Written by: joley gao
- 0 Comments
- April 16, 2026
For most office furniture wholesale projects sourced from China, the typical price range is $45–$180 per unit depending on product type (chairs, desks, workstations), with MOQ usually between 20–100 units per SKU. Standard lead time ranges from 15–35 days for production, plus 15–40 days shipping depending on destination.
To balance cost and risk, most project buyers achieve optimal pricing at 50–100 units per SKU, where factory efficiency improves without overstocking. Lower MOQs increase unit price by 10–25%, while higher volumes reduce cost but increase inventory and cash flow pressure.
Deep Dive: MOQ Strategy — The Key to Controlling Price and Risk
The biggest mistake buyers make is assuming MOQ is just a factory restriction. In reality, MOQ directly determines your unit price, production efficiency, and project risk.
Why MOQ Impacts Price So Strongly
Factories in China optimize production around batch efficiency. Below a certain quantity:
- Material purchasing cost increases
- Machine setup cost is spread over fewer units
- Labor efficiency drops
This is why MOQ is tightly linked to price tiers.
Typical MOQ vs Price Relationship
| Quantity per SKU | Price Level | Cost Impact | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20–30 units | High | +15% to +25% | Low inventory risk |
| 50–100 units | Optimal | Baseline | Balanced |
| 150–300 units | Low | -5% to -12% | Medium risk |
| 500+ units | Lowest | -10% to -20% | High inventory risk |
Real Example: Workstation Desk Project
A project buyer sourcing modular workstations:
- 30 units → $210/unit
- 80 units → $178/unit
- 200 units → $155/unit
Insight:
Increasing from 30 → 80 units reduces cost by ~15%, but going from 80 → 200 units only saves another ~13% while doubling inventory risk.
👉 The “sweet spot” is usually 50–100 units, not the lowest MOQ or the highest volume.
Supporting Section 1: MOQ Structure by Product Type
Different products have different MOQ logic:
| Product Category | Typical MOQ | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Office chairs | 50–100 pcs | Standardized production |
| Desks | 20–50 pcs | Flexible cutting sizes |
| Workstations | 20–40 sets | Project-based customization |
| Acoustic pods | 5–10 units | High value, low volume |
Key takeaway:
High-value products allow lower MOQ, while standardized products require higher volume for cost efficiency.
Supporting Section 2: Lead Time vs MOQ Relationship
MOQ also affects production speed:
- Low MOQ orders → Often delayed or inserted into production gaps
- Medium MOQ (50–100 units) → Standard scheduling
- Large orders (200+ units) → Priority but longer total production time
Typical timeline:
| Order Size | Production Time | Reliability |
|---|---|---|
| Small (<30 units) | 20–35 days | Unstable |
| Medium (50–100) | 15–25 days | Stable |
| Large (200+) | 25–40 days | Stable but longer |
Supporting Section 3: Hidden Cost of Wrong MOQ Decision
Choosing the wrong MOQ creates indirect costs:
If MOQ is too low:
- Higher unit price
- More frequent reordering
- Increased shipping cost per unit
If MOQ is too high:
- Overstock risk
- Cash flow pressure
- Warehouse cost
Example:
- 30 units shipped twice = higher freight per unit than 80 units shipped once
- Overstock of 100 extra desks can lock thousands of dollars in inventory
Scenario-Based Analysis
Scenario 1: Project Contractor (One-Time Fit-Out)
- Needs: exact quantity, tight timeline
- Strategy:
→ Choose MOQ close to real demand (30–80 units)
→ Accept slightly higher price to reduce leftover stock
Scenario 2: Furniture Distributor
- Needs: resale margin + stock rotation
- Strategy:
→ Order 80–150 units
→ Balance cost reduction with inventory turnover
Scenario 3: New Brand Startup
- Needs: low risk, market testing
- Strategy:
→ Start with 20–50 units
→ Negotiate mixed SKU MOQ with supplier
Comparison: China Supplier vs Local Supplier (MOQ Perspective)
| Factor | China Supplier | Local Supplier |
|---|---|---|
| MOQ flexibility | Medium (negotiable) | High |
| Unit price | Lower | Higher |
| Customization | Strong | Limited |
| Lead time | Longer | Shorter |
Insight:
China suppliers are better for cost optimization, while local suppliers are better for low MOQ and speed.
FAQ:
1. Can I negotiate MOQ with a China supplier?
Yes. Many suppliers allow mixed SKUs or trial orders, especially for first cooperation.
2. What happens if I order below MOQ?
Expect 10–30% higher price or additional setup fees.
3. Is higher MOQ always cheaper?
Not always. After a certain volume, price reduction slows, but risk increases.
4. How do I reduce MOQ risk?
- Combine multiple SKUs
- Choose standard materials
- Work with flexible factories
5. Does MOQ affect shipping cost?
Yes. Larger orders reduce per-unit shipping cost significantly.
6. What is the safest MOQ for first orders?
Typically 50–80 units per SKU for a balance of cost and flexibility.
If you’re planning an office furniture project, the key is not just finding the lowest price—but choosing the right MOQ strategy for your business model.
You can:
- Request a detailed quotation based on your project quantity
- Compare MOQ tiers and pricing scenarios
- Evaluate supplier flexibility before committing
A well-planned MOQ decision can reduce your total project cost by 10–20% while minimizing operational risk.

